Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
Then - not surprisingly - you're guessing wrong.social said:Richard,
How many of these games did you actually see?
Im guessing none.
I've seen every single game he's played in 2004\05.
No, he hasn't - almost all his ODI career he's bowled mostly rubbish, and sometimes he's been hammered, sometimes he's got 3 or 4 for 40-odd, every now and then 2 or 3 for 20-odd, and occasionally he's bowled well and deserved the good figures he's got.If that is the case, you would not have a clue as to whether Lee bowled well, averagely or poorly in those games.
Given the fact that he is still in the team, and being consistently praised for his performances, wouldnt you think that it's fair to say that these performances were, at worst, anomalies in an otherwise very good ODI season to date?
The point remains that Brett Lee has, in ODIs, improved markedly this year. Whether this translates into improved test performances is yet to be proven.
This season has conformed to EXACTLY the same pattern.
Which suggests that precisely nothing has changed.
Wrong, it shows a rather better understanding than those who assume pace is a must and if you've got pace you must be successful.However, TO COMPARE HIM TO ORDINARY MEDIUM PACERS FROM ALL POINTS OF THE GLOBE SHOWS COMPLETE IGNORANCE AS TO BOTH HIS ABILITIES AND OF WHAT IT TAKES TO BE SUCCESSFUL IN INTERNATIONAL CRICKET.
Apart from the fact none of those I compared with are medium-pacers, they're all far more accurate than him - so therefore they all have a better chance of being successful than he does.