aussie
Hall of Fame Member
Well considering that I was in England for the summer of 2005, and have been in England for roughly 19 months of the last 22...
How uncool of you to make such bold presumptions. I'm not one to talk out of my arse.

Well considering that I was in England for the summer of 2005, and have been in England for roughly 19 months of the last 22...
How uncool of you to make such bold presumptions. I'm not one to talk out of my arse.
OMG i can't believe this is even an argument, under no circmstances could Mark Ealham be EVER considered a better batsman than Craig White.Doesn't matter what you thought of the batting of the individuals. As far as performance goes - which is really the thing that matters in cricket - White was not superior. You don't get points for style in cricket.
How do Test hundreds factor into this? I'm talking about ODI cricket. And neither player ever showed up with the bat in ODI cricket. Poor form to mix genres.OMG i can't believe this is even an argument, under no circmstances could Mark Ealham be EVER considered a better batsman than Craig White.
We talking a man who scored test hundred in IND againts & Harbhajan & Kumble & whose all-round batting & bowling contribution in that 2000/01 winter was so superb looking back i don't know what ENG would have done without him. Now you are suggesting to me some little county biffer is better ODI batsman than him because of what the stats say (plus that doesn't hide that White probably batted a bit too low in the ODI team). White in case you didn't know has since retiring in 03 has been opening the batting for Yorkshire fairly well, don't think Mr.Ealham would ever be entrusted with opening duties at any time in his career.
Poor stuff son, if i was wrong to attack you unfairly just now. I guess we are even now..
Craig White did nothing with the bat at ODI level. Yes, he was a better Test batsman, by far, but the simple truth of the matter is that he wasn't a better ODI batsman. If you think he was, you're mixing-up the two game-forms.Oh dear another stats round-up does anyone rate players on what they see anymore?
I know what i saw of White as an batsman & i know what i saw of Ealham i know who was the better batsman regardless of that stats say.
Plus the man said "Remind me what Craig White ever did with the bat in international cricket" i found that stunning for obvious reasons...
Pretty certain he's batted up the order (maybe opener, maybe three) for Kent at some point in his career.White in case you didn't know has since retiring in 03 has been opening the batting for Yorkshire fairly well, don't think Mr.Ealham would ever be entrusted with opening duties at any time in his career.
He wasn't, though. He played a tiny handful of games. He had a bit of a problem with left-armers, but that was the closest thing to a recurring fault you'd have seen. Certainly played well enough that if he was younger he'd still be very much in the picture now.Yea i know, but regardless none of that doesn't change the fact that he was shown to be technically inept despite his ability to improvise & hit the ball well.
No, Loye is unquestionably far better than both Prior and Mustard. And that would have shown had he got more of a ODI chance.A job yes that even if picked since 05 preferably wouldn't have lasted long anyway. This job he would have done that you are suggesting would be no better than the job Prior or Mustard could do @ the top currently or what Ian Bell had done as partner to Trescothick.
Not really. Read has shown his one-day excellence with the bat at domestic level for a good few seasons now. Even if he wouldn't do much at the ODI level (which I doubt myself) then he'd do better than anyone else.Not debating this, just saying picking him @ 7 in a ODI team regardless of his ability to finish an innings once he is given a license 7 times out of 10 would be our tail starting from 5 wickets down.
Well I have seen plenty of him. FYI, I've actually seen him bowl at a batsman as good as Ricky Ponting who scored an absolutely flawless innings in exceptionally difficult conditions that day. And despite the fact Killeen did not threaten him, Ponting never looked like getting him away. And this was during a Powerplay period, to boot.This again goes back to my point to the average structure of the domestic OD competition hear given what Ealham did in his time in international cricket. He wasn't like James Hopes who you doesn't really look anything special but one could say yea you know this bloke can handle himself at this level. I never got that impression with Ealham despite his bowling being fairly economical at times & for the selectors too. So for me that fact that he has still been able hold his own in (division 1 or 2?) for whatever county shows how average our OD domestic structure is.
AFAIC even if Ealham was picked again he wouldn't have lasted long.
Same reasoning i feel applies for Killeen, now straight i'll admit i don't watch too many domestic matches on Sky unless Lanc have a major game or i want to view some some domestic OD player who i feel should maybe get into the national ODI set-up & i only have two recollection of this Killeen i.e last year domestic OD final & once in a 20/20 i went to watch @ OT & this man never came across to me as a potential at no point in time. Again being economical in domestic cricket here doesn't really always translate to success on the international stage.
Silly thing is, Anderson's performances have got worse, not better. If you take-out the games he was too young to have been playing, his record actually gets less good.So even though Anderson was picked wayyyyyyy before his time (people seem to forget this when speaking & ridiculing Mr.Anderson) & can be expensive on occassions i doubt whether some of the top spells he has produced at ODI level this Killeen fellow would have been able to do.
Indeed, of course he couldn't have. However, nor could Harmison (and probably Jones too). Harmison's good ODI bowling in the summers of 2004 and 2005 was simply a flash-in-the-pan. Mostly he was capable of doing nowhere near that well.And even though Test form doesn't always translate to ODI success what Harmo did in 04 & 05 & the little promise Simon Jones showed in 05 i bet on gramps grave that Killeen couldn't have bettered that as well.
That's due to commentators' ignorance, not Killeen's lack of performance.Unlike your Afzaal suggestion which i agree with it, at least i know at times i've heard him been suggested by commentators, not Killeen
It is. But it could be far better if nonsense like Anderson was excluded.Lol, that too BIG of a flaw to just forget about. Again the squad that you picked their is basically what you reckon would be the best side ENG could have put out but it wouldn't have made much of a difference to our fortunes.
Fact remains the current crop of players is the best potential ODI side we have since the winter of 2000 & the 2002 period. So you might as well start backing them.
Couldn't argue much with your analysis, apart from preferring to look at Anderson's performances over the last 2 years rather than 5. Anyway, where does it leave us? Once Colly's ban is finished, the definites/probables are:Anyway let's try to work-out... who out of the squad for this NZ series is likely to be in the picture for the next series this summer, against South Africa.
Although Moores probably still fancies Wright at the top of the order, with Ambrose or another wk at 7.Flintoff should obviously come back provided he doesn't manage some other injury sometime this season.
Sadly, that means he'll probably replace Wright and Wright will then have the Mustard effect of despite the fact he's obviously rubbish and does nothing at domestic level, people think there was something in one or two performances that meant he deserved to stay in the side, so he'll be first picked next time instead of someone who might actually deserve it.