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***Official*** South Africa in England

Should Freddy be included in team for the second Test?


  • Total voters
    44

Langeveldt

Soutie
More than you would think. There are places in the Cape and Natal which are solely made of British expats and how many Africans 'emigrate' to South Africa each and every day? Hundreds?
Thousands.. But economic refugees from Zimbabwe don't really count.. There are loads of Brits in South Africa, but in general more whites leave SA than move there.. Economic reasons/Crime, etc. Think many are on one year working visas elsewhere..
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
I am simply saying based on what i say of VDW for SA in ODI's & McLaren for kent this season even if they have solid FC records also, i don't see why they wouldn't make good ODI player.
Because their longer-term OD records are poor, and van der Wath was poor in the ODIs he played.
Again have to disagree based on what i've seen of them.
Well you can't disagree that their records are poor - that's just the way things are. You can say you think what you happen to have seen is more important, but I think that's a dangerous game as you well know - the whole is a far more reliable thing than odd selected points.
Yes he got smashed but that doesn't mean he looked awful as a bowler, some of those pitches i.e the now famous Jo'Burg deck wasn't that bowler friendly. Plus his batting is destructive the perfect ODI player IMO.
His batting doesn't often come-off though. And it's not like every game was loaded against bowlers. van der Wath went around the park far too often.
Son are you wack?. Give me a good reason why?
Because there were any number of better all-rounders at the time he played - Pollock, Klusener, Boje, Hall, to name a few.
True, but i'd say if it weren't for this Kolpak worries he would still be in the SA ODI side & would not have been dropped until he really lost it, whether it be 2 years, 1 year or 5 months before WC 2011.
Well as I've said several times for mine that's bad selection policy. If I pick a ODI side I pick it with the next World Cup in mind, as if a player disappears 1 year before the tournament that gives you less time than if he goes 2 years before.
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
If you held everyone to that standard, though, those two would be the only two death bowlers to ever hold their places.

Andrew Hall was a good death bowler. He wasn't one of the best of all time, but you don't have to be. When you see the likes of Nel and Morkel having to bowl at the death - and even Steyn, really - it's obvious that Hall has been missed.
Trouble with Hall was that while he was better-than-average at the death, he was often quite poor in the middle - a time that should be far easier to bowl at. It's a double-edged sword. Yes, I'd much prefer him (and Langeveldt) bowling at the end than Nel or whoever else, because Nel and Ntini are capable of bowling well at the start and in the middle. But there's only so many places you can afford.
 

SpaceMonkey

International Debutant
Trouble with Hall was that while he was better-than-average at the death, he was often quite poor in the middle - a time that should be far easier to bowl at. It's a double-edged sword. Yes, I'd much prefer him (and Langeveldt) bowling at the end than Nel or whoever else, because Nel and Ntini are capable of bowling well at the start and in the middle. But there's only so many places you can afford.
Halls death bowling in that final over vs Lancashire in the 2003 C&G Trophy semi-final is still something i rememeber as if it was only yesterday. :notworthy

Yes, Lancashire helped a bit by losing their heads, but a double wicket maiden? With a run-out also? I dare anyone to beat that! :cool:
 

fredfertang

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Halls death bowling in that final over vs Lancashire in the 2003 C&G Trophy semi-final is still something i rememeber as if it was only yesterday. :notworthy

Yes, Lancashire helped a bit by losing their heads, but a double wicket maiden? With a run-out also? I dare anyone to beat that! :cool:
Such a cruel reminder so long after the event
 

aussie

Hall of Fame Member
Because their longer-term OD records are poor, and van der Wath was poor in the ODIs he played.
Well you can't disagree that their records are poor - that's just the way things are. You can say you think what you happen to have seen is more important, but I think that's a dangerous game as you well know - the whole is a far more reliable thing than odd selected points.

So basically you are saying because their domestic records aren't fantastic nothing you have seen of them suggest they would make competent ODI players.

His batting doesn't often come-off though. And it's not like every game was loaded against bowlers. van der Wath went around the park far too often.
Yes he went around the park, but never once while he was bowling it seemed to me if he if weren't for the situation in SA he wouldn't make a good ODI bowler. AFAIC he just ran into a Aussie batting line-up in tremendous form, i can't believe this is a debate you are way too picky this is a man that would make almost every ODI in the world ATM.

Because there were any number of better all-rounders at the time he played - Pollock, Klusener, Boje, Hall, to name a few.
During the 2005/06 season SA's best ODI was something like:

Smith
Dippenaar
Kallis
Gibbs
De Villiers
Kemp
Boucher
Pollock
Hall
Ntini
Nel/Boje/VDW/Botha

Nel's place rotated around with those blokes, VDW i believe was flown to AUS as a replacement for someone came on to bowl during a super-sub & bowled well in a game at the MCG, and as i just said just ran into some power Aussie bats, but never looked out of his depth.

Klusener haha, he was by no means in SA's reckoning back then. Surely you know that

Well as I've said several times for mine that's bad selection policy. If I pick a ODI side I pick it with the next World Cup in mind, as if a player disappears 1 year before the tournament that gives you less time than if he goes 2 years before.
Not really. A new player could suddenly find form before the WC & have a great tournament. Look at AUS Martyn left the crucial #4 spot 6 months prior to the WC & Clarke came up & well the rest is history.

No need to do a ENG like in 99 when Stewart was rendered useless since they felt he was too old then 4 years later he was a crucial member. Fact is you need to build momentum for the WC as well & even if a man may not last until the WC, Hall would do a huge job for SA not if Kolpaks weren't in place.
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
So basically you are saying because their domestic records aren't fantastic nothing you have seen of them suggest they would make competent ODI players.
I'm saying that their long-term domestic records are far more important than the fact I might have once or twice seen them bowl well. Because though I happened to catch 2 occasions when they bowled well, the majority of time things have been different.
Yes he went around the park, but never once while he was bowling it seemed to me if he if weren't for the situation in SA he wouldn't make a good ODI bowler. AFAIC he just ran into a Aussie batting line-up in tremendous form, i can't believe this is a debate you are way too picky this is a man that would make almost every ODI in the world ATM.
Not even close. If he did, he'd get slapped round the park and wouldn't be in such a side for very long. It's not like van der Wath only got hit by Australia - he went around the park against everyone he bowled at.
During the 2005/06 season SA's best ODI was something like:

Smith
Dippenaar
Kallis
Gibbs
De Villiers
Kemp
Boucher
Pollock
Hall
Ntini
Nel/Boje/VDW/Botha

Nel's place rotated around with those blokes, VDW i believe was flown to AUS as a replacement for someone came on to bowl during a super-sub & bowled well in a game at the MCG, and as i just said just ran into some power Aussie bats, but never looked out of his depth.

Klusener haha, he was by no means in SA's reckoning back then. Surely you know that
Maybe he wasn't, but he should've been if van der Wath was - he's always been a far better cricketer than van der Wath in the one-day game and that remains the case even now. I can't believe anyone can suggest van der Wath is fit to lace Klusener's boots as a batsman and while Klusener's bowling has been disappointing for years, it's not like van der Wath's has ever been much better.
Not really. A new player could suddenly find form before the WC & have a great tournament. Look at AUS Martyn left the crucial #4 spot 6 months prior to the WC & Clarke came up & well the rest is history.

No need to do a ENG like in 99 when Stewart was rendered useless since they felt he was too old then 4 years later he was a crucial member. Fact is you need to build momentum for the WC as well & even if a man may not last until the WC, Hall would do a huge job for SA not if Kolpaks weren't in place.
So you're saying that it's preferable to hope that things click into place rather than giving maximum chance for them to be put into place? :wacko: No, I prefer to play percentages myself.

Stewart, BTW, always felt himself capable of playing to 2003 - and sure enough, he did. However, after that one he abdicated himself, because this time he knew that his time was done in ODIs.
 

grapedo

Banned
I'm saying that their long-term domestic records are far more important than the fact I might have once or twice seen them bowl well. Because though I happened to catch 2 occasions when they bowled well, the majority of time things have been different.

Not even close. If he did, he'd get slapped round the park and wouldn't be in such a side for very long. It's not like van der Wath only got hit by Australia - he went around the park against everyone he bowled at.

Maybe he wasn't, but he should've been if van der Wath was - he's always been a far better cricketer than van der Wath in the one-day game and that remains the case even now. I can't believe anyone can suggest van der Wath is fit to lace Klusener's boots as a batsman and while Klusener's bowling has been disappointing for years, it's not like van der Wath's has ever been much better.

So you're saying that it's preferable to hope that things click into place rather than giving maximum chance for them to be put into place? :wacko: No, I prefer to play percentages myself.

Stewart, BTW, always felt himself capable of playing to 2003 - and sure enough, he did. However, after that one he abdicated himself, because this time he knew that his time was done in ODIs.
Van Der Wath is in england now under the kolpak ruling. And he was a good batsman but crap bowler
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
Strange that you'd dig this thread to post that, as I (and I imagine most people) are well aware of the fact van der Wath has been playing over here in the previous season. Also, his batting is no more than decent lower-order stuff, he's never going to be a specialist batsman.
 

grapedo

Banned
Strange that you'd dig this thread to post that, as I (and I imagine most people) are well aware of the fact van der Wath has been playing over here in the previous season. Also, his batting is no more than decent lower-order stuff, he's never going to be a specialist batsman.
Gees ... sorry richard I was just trying to join into a conversation I didn't deserve to be spoken to like that. Obviously you shouldn,t be a moderator if you speak like that
 

TT Boy

Hall of Fame Member
South Africa would kill for van der Wath at the moment. Good bowler for mine, swings the ball at pace and is an excellent death bowler. Unlucky not to earn many more caps. ****s on the likes of Johan Louw...
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
Gees ... sorry richard I was just trying to join into a conversation I didn't deserve to be spoken to like that. Obviously you shouldn,t be a moderator if you speak like that
I'm not a moderator. I don't think I was "speaking like that" either really TBH. As for joining in a discussion, it's just a bit strange for someone with 50-odd posts to be digging a thread that hasn't been posted in for 3 months to say that. If it was a thread whose last post was a week ago, less odd.
 

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