New Delhi:Merely a couple of minutes into the post-match media interaction, Australia captain Aaron Finch was taken aback by the line of questioning around David Warner, his opening partner and most importantly, the chief architect of his team's maiden T20 World Cup win.
Finch had already answered what is considered in journalistic parlance, a "warm-up question" on the toss factor and he seemed ready for a question on 'Player of The Tournament' Warner, the comeback hero.
But what he wasn't perhaps ready for, was the manner in which the questions were articulated.
"I'm asking about David Warner. How did you back him? No one expected that he would be the Man of the Tournament," a scribe said, a remark that was as much a statement as a question.
"You didn't expect that? I certainly did," Finch had a wry smile as he retorted but it was his way of saying things as they were.
The questions couldn't be faulted, in the last two months, Warner's life has come full circle.
Read: Watch: Australian team celebrates after winning maiden T20 WC title
The land of Emirates, which seemed like a living hell after he was left high and dry by his IPL franchise Sunrisers Hyderabad, suddenly became somewhere straight out of a fairytale on Sunday night when he walked up to the podium to receive his 'Player of the Tournament' medallion in the T20 World Cup.
It was an honour well deserved. He had amassed 289 runs, including a half century in the high-pressure final, and the word "poetic justice" must have crossed his mind.
While Justin Langer watched in appreciation when Warner sent the New Zealand bowlers on a leather hunt, his mind must have gone back to a conversation with Finch when the maverick opener was sidelined by the SunRisers Hyderabad coaching staff.
"Without a word of a lie, I promise you, I called Justin Langer a few months ago and said, 'Don't worry about Davey, he'll be Man of the Tournament'," Finch claimed later.
Finch didn't want to dwell on the IPL chapter as he wasn't actively a part of what Warner went through but as a sportsman, he fully understands what a 'Champions' Ego' means.
"...he's (Warner) a great player. He's one of the all-time great batters. And he's a fighter. He's someone who when his back is against the wall, that's when you get the very, very best of David Warner.
"It was a special finish to the tournament for him, the last couple of knocks," said Finch, who personally felt that Adam Zampa, for his brilliant control during middle overs, could also have been a contender.
One could understand the anger and hurt in wife Candice's cryptic tweet, "Out of Form, Too Old, Slow!." Those were some of the criticisms that were directed at Warner after a few below-par games.
It wasn't the most easy two months for a man, who is considered a contemporary legend in white ball cricket and especially T20s where he has dominated the scene for years.
It was one bad leg in India and two bad games for SunRisers in the UAE that made some of the established names in world coaching write his epitaph.
Sacking him from captaincy mid-season could still be justified because of the team's performance, but what many couldn't wrap their heads around was how the team management comprising Tom Moody, Trevor Bayliss and Muttiah Muralitharan messed up the entire Warner stint.