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The England Thread

tooextracool

International Coach
He was still passable enough here, while not being anywhere near good enough to justify a place.

He wasn't as utterly woeful as he has been in his last 12 games. It's only then that he's been as utterly dreadful as he always has in ODIs.
thats besides the point. G.jones was never passable for the simple reason that he was picked FOR HIS BATTING. as such averaging in the mid 20s and less in every series in his first year in international cricket isnt exactly passable for most countries in the world, let alone one which had far superior keepers playing cc in england.
 

tooextracool

International Coach
So you're prepared to acknowledge Ealham as one of the better ODI bowlers England have had in the modern era now...?
consider the options? you can count the number of quality England bowlers in ODI cricket history on one hand.

Robin Smith was certainly Test-class for a time, even if he went downhill.
Robin Smith was never test class, not when you consider that he couldnt plant his front foot out with any sort of confidence against spin. He may have had a successful test phase, but the fact is that plenty of players do so before getting found out. Doesnt change the fact that he was a quality ODI batsman, especially as an opener.
 

tooextracool

International Coach
Id much rather have a bowler take 3/ 60 than 0/40. Look at todays odi, dalrymple and panesar both bowled economically, then the seamers come back and get put away (albeit the game was over by then) but if panesar and dalrmple had taken a few wickets each it would have been a different game...
Err how does this prove your argument? On the one hand you talk about how we need wicket taking spin bowlers and then you say 'had dalrymple and panesar taken more wickets we might have won'.
The point is that unless you're playing on an absolute dustbowl, which is quite unlikely on a first day ODI wicket, spin bowlers that arent murali and warne dont win games. As long as Englands fast bowling stocks bowl like they are, England wont bowl sides out, thats just the way it is. Its not Panesar or dalrymples fault.
 

tooextracool

International Coach
The point of the arguement was whether one should have an attackibng or defensive spinner in the odi side. Obviously spinners dont often roll over sides in odis but a few wickets in the middle overs mean everything.. new batters come in to face the seamers afterwards and dont score as quickly..
except that panesar and dalrymple did take wickets, they took one each, which is about as much as they are likely to take more often than not on flat wickets.
Look if you're fast bowlers are going at 7 an over before the spinners come on, it really gives them no hope cause they are bowling against set batsmen who are quite easily going to milk them for singles and 2s.you seem to have the roles reversed, you're expecting spinners to take wickets and fast bowlers to contain, which defies all cricketing logic.
 

tooextracool

International Coach
You have too much time on your hands mate! Anyway ......
I deliberately said "consistently successful". I'm talking about sides who have done well over a period of time, or even gone on to win WC's. The Sharjah win was fun but it was a oneoff. IIRC the same bunch of players then went to WI and were slaughtered. And, IIRC, haven't there have subsequently been questionmarks over the Sharjah tourny in terms of match fixing? Maybe I'm remembering that wrong..
I think you've completely misread my post. I never said that either of those sides were brilliant, infact ive argued otherwise(IIRC with you wasnt it?) in the past. The point i was making was that they got the disciplines right, they just didnt have the talent to be supremely succesful for consistent periods in ODI cricket. At the end of the day, theres no replacement for good fielding, good running and disciplined bowling and that side if anything should be hailed for accomplishing so much with so little talent.

As for the 1992 side, there are those who would argue that Hick & Knight should have had decent test careers if they had been handled properly..
Id be interested in hearing how many people thought nick knight would have a successful test match career, despite having a clear technical flaw outside his off stump.Nor did he for that matter take any part in the 1992 world cup for that matter.

Beyond that, most of the players were a regular part of our test side, even if they didn't do very well in that format. That's just a reflection on the standard of players we had, I think. And the policy of the selectors not to give players a decent run in the test side. The exceptions, off the top of my head, were Fairbrother, Reeve & Pringle, which is exactly what I was saying re. 8 out of 11.
Cant really remember a time in the 90s when we had a core of test and ODI players tbh. there were plenty of ODI specialists that came and went, from Irani to Ealham and everyone else. You could argue that they didnt have much success, but if you did a count, youd find that there were as many if not more successful ODI specialists than there were those who succeeded in both forms playing for England over the last decade.

Of course, the bigger picture comes from looking at every side that has won a WC or just been consistently good over a period of time. They are not dominated by oneday specialists. Quite the reverse, even if batting positions are different. It's possible that England are the exception though. Looking at the performances of too many of our test side, I can well understand the temptation to look beyond them, even if the worldwide picture sends a completely different message.
The reason for this situation as ive said so many times before is the quality of domestic cricket. Just watching Strauss bat you have to wonder how anyone can look to score runs merely by hitting boundaries rather than taking singles. The england batting has no sense of taking singles, look at the last ODI for example how more than half of them managed to come in and get bogged down, slowed the scoring rate and got themselves out. These test match players are not being taught the disciplines of taking quick singles, of running fast between the wickets and taking the first run quickly, their fitness levels are poor and they are unable to bowl without conceding extras. Which is precisely why you pick players that might not be as talented, but who have these basic disciplines engrained within them either on their own or from someone else at a very early age.
 

tooextracool

International Coach
Oh, come on! How could they have been handled better?
Err in Hicks case, not being dropped everytime he had one poor series? And of course denying him the chance of scoring his first and what would have been only Ashes century and leaving him in tears couldnt have helped his career could it?
 
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tooextracool

International Coach
No Tresco, Jones or Gough - we almost certainly will never see the latter 2 playing for England again - HOORAY!

Batsmen: Ian Bell (Warks), Ravi Bopara (Essex), Alastair Cook (Essex), Ed Joyce (Middx), Mal Loye (Lancs), Kevin Pietersen (Hants), Owais Shah (Middx), Vikram Solanki (Worcs), Andrew Strauss (Middx), Michael Vaughan (Yorks)

All-rounders: Rikki Clarke (Surrey), Paul Collingwood (Durham), Jamie Dalrymple (Middx), Andrew Flintoff (Lancs), Michael Yardy (Sussex)

Wicket-keepers: Paul Nixon (Leics), Matt Prior (Sussex), Chris Read (Notts)

Bowlers: James Anderson (Lancs), Stuart Broad (Leics), Glen Chapple (Lancs), Ashley Giles (Warks), Matthew Hoggard (Yorks), Amjad Khan (Kent), Jon Lewis (Glos), Sajid Mahmood (Lancs), Graham Onions (Durham), Monty Panesar (Northants), Liam Plunkett (Durham), Chris Tremlett (Hants)
Once again the English selectors outdo themselves really. One wonders if there is ever any thinking that goes on in compiling these teams in terms of stats and video highlights, or whether they just pick the same players that have been tried, tested and failed over the last 5 years.Out of those 30 players there are i think 5 players(Loye, Bopara,A.Khan, Onions and Chapple) who have never played for England before, while the rest have either been complete rubbish or barely good enough
 

tooextracool

International Coach
have to say the selection of Amjad khan fills you with so much to look forward to when you look at his career list A record- 32.46@5.17
 

marc71178

Eyes not spreadsheets
Once again the English selectors outdo themselves really. One wonders if there is ever any thinking that goes on in compiling these teams in terms of stats and video highlights, or whether they just pick the same players that have been tried, tested and failed over the last 5 years.Out of those 30 players there are i think 5 players(Loye, Bopara,A.Khan, Onions and Chapple) who have never played for England before, while the rest have either been complete rubbish or barely good enough
So who should they have selected then?
 

Benny2k1

U19 12th Man
My thaughts

Batsmen: Ian Bell (Warks), Ravi Bopara (Essex), Alastair Cook (Essex), Ed Joyce (Middx), Mal Loye (Lancs), Kevin Pietersen (Hants), Owais Shah (Middx), Vikram Solanki (Worcs), Andrew Strauss (Middx), Michael Vaughan (Yorks)

Solanki aside i think this is probably the best batting lineup we could have put together


All-rounders: Rikki Clarke (Surrey), Paul Collingwood (Durham), Jamie Dalrymple (Middx), Andrew Flintoff (Lancs), Michael Yardy (Sussex)

How does Rikki get selected?! will we ever learn? other wise i cant argue.

Wicket-keepers: Paul Nixon (Leics), Matt Prior (Sussex), Chris Read (Notts)

No arguments, Jones has had his chance, Read is the best keaper in england imo

Bowlers: James Anderson (Lancs), Stuart Broad (Leics), Glen Chapple (Lancs), Ashley Giles (Warks), Matthew Hoggard (Yorks), Amjad Khan (Kent), Jon Lewis (Glos), Sajid Mahmood (Lancs), Graham Onions (Durham), Monty Panesar (Northants), Liam Plunkett (Durham), Chris Tremlett (Hants)

This is englands week area, Saj, Plunkett have done NOTHING to convince me, Lewis only seems to thrive in Swingin conditions, Giles should not play as Dalrymple could be the backup spinner, Hoggy deserves another go in ODI + we can do with an experiance head, Broad and Chappel are the names i an happy to see.
 

tooextracool

International Coach
So who should they have selected then?
Is there a point in selecting players who have been proven to be useless in ODIs before? Solanki, Plunkett, Mahmood etc have been given so many opportunities, yet they are pencilled in instead of giving some young unproven quantity the chance of representing England. This is exactly the problem with the English selectors, they are completely predictable. I mean would a side with Sajid Mahmood and Vikram Solanki at the world cup fill you with any sort of hope or would you rather pick a few youngsters that have made an impression in domestic cricket recently. Looking purely at List A stats, ive selected a few players who look to be quite capable and surely couldnt be worse than the current lot:
Chris Taylor- Batting Average-51, 17 List A games, 21 years
Chris Benham- Batting Average-48.70, 12 List A games, 23 years
Billy Taylor-Bowling Average-24.94@4.34,111 List A games, 30 years
Tom Smith-Bowling Average-25.53@4.34, 12 List A games,21 Years(represented England at the academy)
Dimitri Mascarenhas-Bowling Average-24.14, 181 List A games, 29 Years

Moreover all of those players had good last seasons in List A cricket. Yes a few of them are inexperienced and really they could be absolutely abysmal given that ive never watched them play before, but again how could they be worse than players like Solanki etc who have been rubbish in ODI and list A cricket? If we really wanted to try failures from the past then where in the blue hell is ramprakash considering he is batting like a god in domestic cricket these days?
 

tooextracool

International Coach
Broad and Chappel are the names i an happy to see.[/B]
Broad Why? Does a List a record of 41@5.59 from 12 games really fill you with confidence?
If i was picking a 15 man squad for the world cup tomorrow it would look something like this:

Ian Bell
Michael Vaughan©
Mark Ramprakash
Kevin Pietersen
Andrew Flintoff
Dimitri Mascrenhas
Jamie Dalrymple
Chris Read (w)
Chris Tremlett
Jon Lewis
Glen Chapple

Chris Taylor
Mal Loye
Tom Smith
Bill Taylor
Ive picked several of these players based on stats, but i honestly think that if you were going to pick someone who has played 12 OD games, why on earth would you pick Broad averaging 41@5.59 when you could pick Tom Smith averaging 25@4.34? Baffling really.
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
thats besides the point. G.jones was never passable for the simple reason that he was picked FOR HIS BATTING. as such averaging in the mid 20s and less in every series in his first year in international cricket isnt exactly passable for most countries in the world, let alone one which had far superior keepers playing cc in england.
We did?

Where on Earth were there these superior wicketkeeper-batsmen in the domestic game? I think we can now fairly safely say Prior is patently not superior, he's even worse, and Davies (who I'm hoping will be superior) has only been playing the last 2 seasons, and I highly doubt anyone with any sense was thinking seriously of picking 19 or 20 (depending on 2005 or 2006) year-olds for Tests.

Jones did enough in the first period to keep his place - he patently did not in the second, and was quite rightly dropped. Averaging 28 is disappointing for someone with his ability, but people have had not-so-great starts to their Test careers before now. I thought, right up to that Pakistan tour, that Jones had potential, and was worth persevering with. Now, I don't think he does, and I hope he's played his last Test, because I can't see a fault which has been around for such a long time being coached out of him now.

But please, God, don't let Matthew Prior play 12 Tests!
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
consider the options? you can count the number of quality England bowlers in ODI cricket history on one hand.
In all previous correspondance you said Ealham was pretty average because you thought (wrongly) that he'd never had his figures damaged by bowling in the last 10 overs and so should have had an economy-rate of under 4. Yet I then showed quite clearly that if you knock-out overs in the last 10, he DID have an economy-rate under 4. Had he been handled better, he'd probably be not too far behind Gavin Larsen's class.
Robin Smith was never test class, not when you consider that he couldnt plant his front foot out with any sort of confidence against spin. He may have had a successful test phase, but the fact is that plenty of players do so before getting found out. Doesnt change the fact that he was a quality ODI batsman, especially as an opener.
Smith wasn't that much worse against spin than Stewart. Are you saying he wasn't Test-class because he was pretty poor against spin (especially when first coming in)? Smith, in any case, was good enough to succeed against average spinners and there were few top-quality in his day so it's hardly surprising that he had a (relatively lengthy) successful period.
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
Err in Hicks case, not being dropped everytime he had one poor series? And of course denying him the chance of scoring his first and what would have been only Ashes century and leaving him in tears couldnt have helped his career could it?
That was a poor decision, no doubt about it, though I can understand Atherton's reasons, but ironically, of course, it had no immidiate effect - he was still playing well for another year.

How on Earth was Hick being dropped for a poor series such a terrible decision? You can hardly argue that leaving him out at the tail-end of 1991 and 1992 was a bad decision - you can't just go on picking and picking players who're averaging in the teens. Nor can you argue that being dropped (and Illingworth's words) was a bad decision in 1995, as he responded with a brilliant century.

Nor do I really think his run in 1996 merited anything other than the axe - and thereafter he was rarely if ever a first-choice, and like Solanki now, that's the price you pay for past failures. Even when Duncan Fletcher backed him to the hilt (despite, at the end, Vaughan's case being overwhelmingly superior - I was positively tearing my hair out in Sri Lanka) he still couldn't deliver.

IMO nothing else could've been done with Hick - for a series of reasons, he just did not have what Test cricket takes. That didn't stop him being probably our 2nd-best ODI player of the modern era.
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
Looking purely at List A stats, ive selected a few players who look to be quite capable and surely couldnt be worse than the current lot:
Chris Taylor- Batting Average-51, 17 List A games, 21 years
Chris Benham- Batting Average-48.70, 12 List A games, 23 years
Billy Taylor-Bowling Average-24.94@4.34,111 List A games, 30 years
Tom Smith-Bowling Average-25.53@4.34, 12 List A games,21 Years(represented England at the academy)
Dimitri Mascarenhas-Bowling Average-24.14, 181 List A games, 29 Years

Moreover all of those players had good last seasons in List A cricket. Yes a few of them are inexperienced and really they could be absolutely abysmal given that ive never watched them play before, but again how could they be worse than players like Solanki etc who have been rubbish in ODI and list A cricket? If we really wanted to try failures from the past then where in the blue hell is ramprakash considering he is batting like a god in domestic cricket these days?
I'm not completely convinced about the batsmen but it's utterly baffled me why Taylor and Mascarenhas (along with Robin Martin-Jenkins) have seemingly NEVER been considered, it makes no sense at all (especially given that Mascarenhas and RMJ can bat a bit too). Tom Smith I'm certain will get a chance, though honestly I'm not too sorry he didn't get it right now, he seemed to be sort of running-out of steam at the end of last season having started brilliantly. Hopefully a time at the Academy might put some real stamina in him and hopefully he might go well all season this coming year.

The reason why the England selectors have never picked the likes of Mascarenhas and RMJ is pretty simple IMO - they hate the "bits-and-pieces" idea (despite the fairly recent selections of the likes of Jeremy Snape and Tim Bresnan, albeit the latter after a catalogue of injuries but still - ahead of infinately better-qualified candidates) and these players are, ludicrously, considered as such. Also, there's this obsession with "wicket-taking bowlers" ahead of "bowlers that do a job" or some other stupid description of what's basically "bowlers who bowl economically".

This is stupid enough in itself, but when the bowlers who're picked because everyone wants wickets aren't even good enough to take wickets, never mind bowl economically, it becomes stupid beyond belief.

And while that attitude is engrained, even if there were more Afzaals, Mascarenhases, etc. England will still never get anywhere. I don't see that a change of CoS, coach, etc. will help either because it's an attitude which is engrained in many other high-ranking spots (ie pressmen), too.

That attitude is almost as much of a problem as the relative lack of quality one-day cricketers around the circuit (batsmen for reasons you've mentioned - there are so few who can escape reliance on boundaries - and bowlers possibly because they're infected with the you-must-take-wickets-and-taking-wickets-is-in-opposition-to-bowling-economically mindset).
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
but i honestly think that if you were going to pick someone who has played 12 OD games, why on earth would you pick Broad averaging 41@5.59 when you could pick Tom Smith averaging 25@4.34? Baffling really.
Very simple. Broad's "a wicket-taker" (even though his record shows quite clearly that he's to date been nothing of the sort). Smith is already stereotyped as "nagging" (read his CricInfo profile) and while plenty of good judges have also described him as "promising", no-one seems anywhere near as excited about him as Broad. Broad has, indeed, taken more wickets in First-Class cricket, but due to his inaccuracy his record isn't that much better.

And as countless cases demonstrate, England selectors (and pressmen) routinely struggle to differentiate between First-Class and one-day domestic cricket.
 

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