No I wouldn't, but it doesn't mean that Bell deserved his number 4 slot because he, in theory, sheltered Flintoff from the new ball.
I wasn't, actually, suggesting that, merely being as facetious as the notion that England effectively played with ten men and a sub fielder in the first and last two Tests.
Bell was not up to requirements in 2005 (though he did get some damn good deliveries) but that does not for a second mean that anyone
should have been expecting him not to be. An Ashes series is rarely a very good time to introduce a new player, but for that reason and that reason only could it be said to have been a mistake to pick Bell in 2005 (and the mistake, if it was one, was bringing him in against Bangladesh, not Australia, because once he played against Bangladesh he was always going to have scored heavily enough to force himself to be a certainty against Australia). The idea that anyone could have predicted how badly he was going to go in The Ashes is not one that has any merit, IMO.
I don't know. He seemed to have a very decent knack of getting off the mark post-ashes 05, perhaps better than any other English batsman, but then simply get out.
I can't see that, by the textbook at least, his shot selection is any worse than that of Pietersen's
There is no textbook for shot-selection - it depends on both your own strengths (defensive technical strengths, attacking strengths, and strengths of leaving the ball) and the delivery in question. Shot-selection is an individual matter, and it is this respect that Bell has always lacked.
I don't see any merit whatsoever in the comparison to Mark Ramprakash that some are so fond of. Bell has shown many times that he can capitalise against moderate Test bowling, that the intensity of the top level is not a problem for him. He simply struggles against the best bowling - and this is as evident at domestic as international level. Ramprakash on the other hand had a completely watertight game which at domestic level scored him shedloads of runs, but he could not keep this game together because he was crushed by the intensity of international cricket.