• Welcome to the Cricket Web forums, one of the biggest forums in the world dedicated to cricket.

    You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join the Cricket Web community today!

    If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

Does anyone think Australia's situation is not actually that dire?

Cooky Monster

U19 12th Man
Typically selective Pommy memory. It's getting pretty hard to point to an Englishman in your Rugby team these days, and let's face it, complaining about Southern Hemisphere nationalities has been England's only way of getting through 30 years of turgid, godawful rugby. Your post is such a tired, cliched pile of steaming turd that I think it was originally released on Shellac at 78rpm; if not wax cylinder.
Chill out Skippy, no need to get so bent out of shape over it.

I wonder how you rate posts that are full of ****?, im just pointing out an undeniable fact.
 

Cooky Monster

U19 12th Man
This is very off topic, but you don't seem to understand the difference between "pillage" and "geography".

The people "pillaged" who are very good at rugby are not "South Sea Islanders". "South Sea Islanders" are largely Melanesians (primarily Solomon Islanders) who have been living in Australia for >80 years.

Pacific Islanders represent a very good playing pool. New Zealand is a Pacific Island. In fact, Maori are Pacific Islanders indigenous to New Zealand. Auckland, the largest city in New Zealand, has the largest population of Pacific Islanders in the world.

Australia also has a very large population of Pacific Islanders. There are more Maori in Perth than there are in Hamilton.

This is not pillage.

It is geography.
 

Flem274*

123/5
Lol you muppets. You quite clearly said "lolololol Aus and NZ get all their rugby players from the Pacific Islands" and when you were proven wrong and your own backyard was questioned you threw your toys because MIGHTY ENGLAND.

Go play in the traffic.
 

HeathDavisSpeed

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
You are the one who made the dumb comment that you struggle to count an Englishmen in the team. Why would I care about the All Blacks, who brought them into the conversation?

Oh and Tawera Kerr-Barlow, champ.
One. And, in fact Tawera Kerr-Barlow was born in Australia of Kiwi parents, went to school in NZ. Yeah, he could have played for Australia too, but that's becoming more and more common with a huge and ever growing New Zealand diaspora in Australia.

And why, indeed, were the All Blacks brought into this conversation? Well, you can ask Cooky Monster to explain that one:

Seeing the amount of south sea islanders that have played/play for your rugby teams it must be a bit of a shame for Oz (and NZ) that the south sea islanders don't play cricket to the level that they play rugby.
So, in reality, England have more Pacific Islanders (Tuilagi) playing for them than the All Blacks. For the record, I have no problem with Tuilagi playing for England - he pretty much grew up there, went to school there, learnt his rugby there. However, I do disagree with people stating things as fact when they're speaking out of their jacksie.
 
Last edited:

Son Of Coco

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
I disagree with him saying it's nobody's fault. While we were the best in the world over a 15 year period I'd like to bet there were some people in the CA set-up dining out on the success while having absolutely no succession plan once all our great players retired. Zero thought was put into it, people were happy to take the money they were being paid to look good. Then everyone retired and the fruits of doing nothing came home to roost.

There are useless ****wits in every organisation. CA wouldn't have been an exception...in fact, they still seem to be there.
 
Last edited:

Top_Cat

Request Your Custom Title Now!
No, you're either talented or you're not and we just don't have enough talent in the country at the moment. Just ride it out, all will be well.
 

Dan

Hall of Fame Member
Here's our good mate Theo, courtesy of tumblr:




Shield Cricket: Demise or Decline?

@TheoDrop

As a guy who has been in state systems for 8 years (granted I didn’t play as much as some) this is purely my opinion, nothing more.

The first test at Trent Bridge gave the Australian public a renewed sense of pride in their cricket team after a narrow loss. The emergence of debutant Ashton Agar buoyed a nation. Philip Hughes, Steve Smith and Brad Haddin all played innings of character, which we associate with our Australian side and our fast bowlers were those angry, intimidating men we’ve grown fond of. This series would live up to the hype after all.

This hype seemed short lived and people have been vocal in the media after Australia’s poor showing in the second test at Lord’s. There have been many excuses; changing the coach 3 weeks before the series began, unsettled team, batting order structure and disciplinary issues, which are all potentially valid. One excuse however, holds less merit than the aforementioned; the emergence of T20 cricket as a format on the domestic and international stage.

I can already hear your comebacks.

Yes, the shield season has been shuffled to accommodate the BBL, however the 10 game season has remained constant. Players need to adapt and invest time in their own game. (Something Chuck has been correctly vocal about.)

Yes, Australian players now play in various T20 leagues all over the world, IPL, BPL, SLPL (defunct), WIPL, UKT20 and even in the New Zealand T20 competition. But how many of the Australian players have missed Test matches (or any international fixture) to represent their T20 franchises? Tait? Dan Harris? They chose those leagues over grade cricket, and if you were them, why on earth wouldn’t you?

England invented the T20 game, India further developed it into their own league and both countries are respectively ranked 2 and 3 in Test match cricket.

Another excuse, perhaps the most pertinent, is that the strength of Sheffield Shield cricket is declining. I would take it one step further and bring it back to grass roots, structure, pathways and the talent management below Shield cricket.

For me, the introduction of the Futures League competition to replace State 2nd XI was the first major issue. This setup is akin to pulling the lower slates out of a Jenga tower and expecting it to remain tall and sturdy.

Age restrictions, which initially required that 7 out of 11 players are under 24 years old, (it has now been revised to 6/12) turns what was once a strong competition comprising senior fringe State players, sprinkled with the odd teenager (think S Marsh, Ferguson, Paine) into a glorified juniors competition.

By introducing these age restrictions, the likelihood of older (players over 30) state players playing grade cricket, in an attempt to regain a 2nd XI or state spot, diminished considerably. Think of the calibre of players we might have had, still playing. Not only do these players add to the quality of competition around, but also, they rapidly accelerate development of the odd teenager who has earned his place in the 2nd XI side.

Now, in recent times, players like Dan Harris (potential Australian T20 representative), Ben Laughlin (who represented Australia in ODIs), Cameron and Jason Borgas, James Smith and (from perhaps 2-3 years ago) guys like David Bandy are no longer featuring as much in these competitions (and I’m sure the list goes on and on in other states.) You’re telling me, these players are no longer needed because they’re on the wrong side of 24? At game where Mike Hussey didn’t debut for Australia until he was 30? A Rabbi walks into a bar with a pig under his arm…

When I first started playing grade cricket, fringe WA players like Rob Baker, Kade Harvey, Gavin Swann, Michael Clark, Darren Wates and Mark Atkinson were all still playing. Matthew Nicholson was (unjustly) in the 2nd XI along with a young up and coming 25-year-old player like David Bandy. Throw into the mix, a young Shaun Marsh (granted, a genius) and the 2nd XI was one that could challenge a Shield team. Shaun’s development must have been accelerated facing similar opposition players as opposed to kids his own age.

You answer me; would a kid aged 18 develop quicker if he is forced to face (in a 2nd XI) Gary Putland coming back from injury, Peter George, Jake Haberfield and Kane Richardson (if not in shield side) or four 21 year old bowlers? (Those players were selected on an absolute random basis – first 4 to come into my head)

If CA want another tier in which to inspect young talent, (aside from the 15s, 17s, 19s) pathways, an implementation of a state under 21s/23s tournament (2 week carnival like the rest) should be an option while abolishing any age restrictions on 2nd XI competitions. Why not make every level of competition, as strong as it could possibly be? You don’t build a house on a foundation of balsa wood.

The bottom slates of the Jenga tower have been removed and now that we are minus the household names of Ponting, Hussey, Gilchrist, Martyn, Langer, Hayden from the magical era, the tower is, unfortunately for us passionate supporters, starting to wobble.
 
Last edited:

Flem274*

123/5
No, you're either talented or you're not and we just don't have enough talent in the country at the moment. Just ride it out, all will be well.
Is this sarcasm? Kinda doesn't seem like the sort of thing you would post...

Australia have plenty of raw talent. It's the techniques and testicles that are the issue, and techniques can be whatever a player is comfy with. Balls are another issue. You don't need to have crazy hand eye to be a test batsman anyway, just find a way to make it work. Mark Richardson springs to mind.
 

Spikey

Request Your Custom Title Now!
Someone like Top_Cat is better placed to confirm whether this is true, but along with all the players getting younger, it feels like domestic coaches have got younger too.
 

Dan

Hall of Fame Member
Yeah, I still think T20 has some influence - but that is hardly endemic to Australian cricket; any negatives from T20 are spread across the board.

The restructuring of our domestic system, into something no other country has ever done (let alone done successfully) definitely has had a big impact.
 

Cooky Monster

U19 12th Man
Lol you muppets. You quite clearly said "lolololol Aus and NZ get all their rugby players from the Pacific Islands" and when you were proven wrong and your own backyard was questioned you threw your toys because MIGHTY ENGLAND.

Go play in the traffic.
 

Cooky Monster

U19 12th Man
So so weird some of the reactions, i merely pointed out that NZ and Oz rugby teams have been looting the best rugby talent from the likes of Samoa, Fiji, Tonga etc for decades, i hadn't mentioned or defended Englands overseas poaching, that wasn't the point.

I wasn't expecting to see this mouth throthing, bloody funny though.
 

Adders

Cricketer Of The Year
The point is, people in glass houses shouldn't be throwing stones.
FMD, well that's a big LOL....you should practise what you preach fella.

I've got no idea about the background of AU's rugby players so I'm not going there but what I do know is that Australia doesn't give a second thought to importing talent and claiming them as their own in just about every facet of life. Not just sport but music, movies, commerce, **** even politics...........So to say your extremely boring fascination in our couple of South African cricketers is hypocritical in the extreme would be a massive understatement. People in glass houses indeed mate.

You've had 20 odd years of relentlessly taking the piss out of English cricket, now this is all you've got left:blink:
 

Top