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Player Ratings thread

Woodster

International Captain
I take a fair bit of confidence from Anderson and Broad in this game, yes they didn't run through the Aussie line-up at all, but they were consistent and both looked in decent rhythmn, this is a long series and if they stick to their disciplines again when certain pitches are a little more responsive they will get their rewards and be able to attack more than they were able to at the Gabba.
 

TheJediBrah

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You seem to be missing the point, Bancroft and Warner faced 21 overs from anderson and broad in the second innings and you think they bowled well, but you also think that it was easy for Warner and Bancroft to see them off.

I can see that you make assumptions so I have to factor that in.
He actually has a point here. Thinking they bowled really well, yet rating Vince and Stoneman ahead of Bancroft and Warner, doesn't really make sense.
 

Spark

Global Moderator
He actually has a point here. Thinking they bowled really well, yet rating Vince and Stoneman ahead of Bancroft and Warner, doesn't really make sense.
Australia definitely bowled better as a unit, but Anderson and Broad were excellent as individual bowlers. But on this pitch, because you can just sit on individual bowlers who you judge as threatening, it's the collective performance that matters more than individual ones.

Mitch Starc's figures show why bowling figures =/= performance.
 

Spark

Global Moderator
Also re: Bancroft and Warner there is a (maybe unfair) perception that there was quite a bit of, well...

 

TNT

Banned
Also re: Bancroft and Warner there is a (maybe unfair) perception that there was quite a bit of, well...

Its a no win situation, score the runs and its downhill skiing , dont score the runs and they blew it.

But what they did do is crush england and if it was downhill skiing then that is because the opposition was pathetically weak.
 

Woodster

International Captain
Its a no win situation, score the runs and its downhill skiing , dont score the runs and they blew it.

But what they did do is crush england and if it was downhill skiing then that is because the opposition was pathetically weak.
:laugh::laugh: Obviously!
 

S.Kennedy

International Vice-Captain
Broad and Anderson had no support whatsoever from Woakes, Ball and the spinner. They bowled impeccably given the circumstances. If you want to blame anyone, blame the other three.

Also, If you look at this match nobody got more than three.
 

NotMcKenzie

International Debutant
To stay scorecard-bound and simplistic, let's look at economies:

Australia:

Starc: 2.75, 3.18
Hazelwood: 2.51, 2.87
Cummins: 2.83, 1.81
Lyon: 2.16, 2.79
Smith: 2.66


England:

Anderson: 1.72, 2.45
Broad: 1.96, 2.00
Ali: 2.46, 5.75
Woakes: 2.79, 4.18
Ball: 4.27, 4.75
Root: 2.22, 2.83

Don't forget the large Stoneman/Vince partnership in England's first innings, or that Vince's innings was ended by a run out. Looking at the fall of wickets in the first innings of both teams might also prove an instructive exercise.

And of course we get to perception time. I reckon that Cummins generally looked more threatening than Starc or Hazelwood (although I did not see the start of England's 2nd innings) but he picked up fewer wickets than the former and the same number as the latter. I also reckon that much of the time, other than Lyon's overs, we were more trying to 'wish' the batsmen out, and we didn't exactly run through them with a ruthless attack; our spinner appeared by far the most threatening, in contradistinction to England's in spite of Ali bowling on the same turning pitch. Some wickets, such as Stoneman being bowled in the 1st innings, or both of Bairstows, seemed to just come out of the blue or through poor choices by the batsman.

In my opinion, on that pitch, we spent a good amount of time either waiting for wickets to come along or employing very obvious tactics to dismiss batsmen that rely very much on pace. England went about their attack in a similar vein from what I saw, but does not have an attack capable of Shane Warne's favoured tactic. Broad and Anderson bowled much better than the rest of their attack, and in the Aus. first innings looked as threatening in their opening spells as our opening bowlers did in England's first innings. The difference was that the rest of England's attack was not as threatening, allowing the batsmen to score with less pressure once they were off. In Australia's second innings, they still were, going on economy rates, much more difficult to score off than the rest of the English attack whilst defending a small total.

Both times England batted, some of their players were able to ride out our attack, — which was more consistantly threatening than England's — for considerable periods: does that mean our bowlers bowled poorly during those periods? My answer is no. It is possible to bowl well and not pick up wickets. Factors beyond a bowler's performance in isolation can affect how many wickets a bowler takes.
Take that often-quoted scenario: tie a batsmen down at one end, so he might go for risks against another. One could argue that the first bowler is bowling better, but he doesn't get a wicket for it if that situation occurs. A bowler can be gifted wickets through indiscipline on the batman's part, and dead pitches will only produce so many threatening deliveries, after which drying up runs and forcing mistakes becomes the tactic; but if more than half your attacks is poor, it is difficult to dry up runs. And with only ten wickets an innings to share between generally at least four bowlers, one may miss out through bad luck. Did all of other England's bowlers bowl poorly at Manchester in 1956 because collectively, they only picked up one wicket whilst Laker got nineteen?

All these factors, and others, might just coincide as well. It is easy to say that, 'Bowler X should take more wickets,' 'Bowlers Y and Z need to step up and dictate terms,' [by bowling tightest and most threateningly of their attack?] without actually proposing anything specific.
 
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S.Kennedy

International Vice-Captain
I would rate the bowlers,

1/ Lyon
2/ Cummins (but only for that devastating spell, the final twenty minutes of day 3)
3/ Broad
4/ Anderson
5/ Hazlewood

The rest of the bowlers were poor.
 

stephen

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Cummins was clearly the best quick from either side and it wasn't even close. He was the only quick who came on and made you think a wicket was likely.

Anderson and Broad were both very good and were better than Haze or Starc in some ways and worse in others.

Haze was crap in the first innings. He was bowling a lot better in the second. Starc seems to have reverted to bowling filth combined with the occasional jaffa like he was doing two years ago.

Anderson threatened the edge more than any bowler and Broad bowled well. But the pitch was such that no quicks outside Cummins looked like they were consistently threatening.

Lyon was a hundred times more potent than Ali.
 

Woodster

International Captain
Cummins was clearly the best quick from either side and it wasn't even close. He was the only quick who came on and made you think a wicket was likely.

Anderson and Broad were both very good and were better than Haze or Starc in some ways and worse in others.

Haze was crap in the first innings. He was bowling a lot better in the second. Starc seems to have reverted to bowling filth combined with the occasional jaffa like he was doing two years ago.

Anderson threatened the edge more than any bowler and Broad bowled well. But the pitch was such that no quicks outside Cummins looked like they were consistently threatening.

Lyon was a hundred times more potent than Ali.
Hard to disagree with any of that!
 

Furball

Evil Scotsman
I take it at no point did Starc improve from the absolute junk he was sending down day 1?

That Starc picked up any wickets after the Cook one was shameful.
 

Cow

Banned
Starc needs to see a dermatologist or change his diet. He needs to eat more low glycemic-index foods. Fruit, vegetables etc.

If anyone from Cricket Australia or NSW cricket club are reading this thread they are more than welcome to PM me for free dietary advice to pass on to Mitchell.
 

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