Not with Bond, no. It's fair for you to say, after watching on the England series, to judge on the NZ are a "very weak team".Richard said:In a word, yes - very.
yes the same middle order that needed protection against those amazing bowlers like dillon,cuffy,blignaut and the likeRichard said:And really, how often has the middle-order needed protecting from mighty bowlers such as Sami, Butler, Tuffey, Bracken, Williams and Lee? Not very often, I'd guess.
no the fact is that there are players who have had poor starts to their test career, yet have improved to make their record a lot better. in the same way why should chopra be dropped when he has impressed technically.Richard said:Flintoff was recalled twice during that time - all right, he didn't play as consistently as Rhodes but I have no doubt had he done so he would have failed even more abysmally than he did in any case.
There are other examples of players who got long terms without seemingly doing much to merit it - Stephen Waugh for instance.
i dont know how highly you rate williams,tuffey etc but the fact is that they are still far far better than the bangladeshi and zimbabwian attacks that das seemed to do so very well against!Richard said:Those other openers who have cashed-in against some of the weak attacks they have faced, instead of failing miserably like Chopra has
yes so being one of the most economical bowlers in the 2nd game doesnt count does it?and im sure 3/51(10) in the 4th game were poor figures too especially considering that he was bowling in the death.Richard said:He got good figures in the last 2 South Africa ODIs, not in the preceding ones. As I said, each game must be taken individually. By the sounds of things the last game, at least, was played on a seaming track.
you said "There is no point in playing fingerspinners outside the subcontinet." i think that pretty muich sums it up.....Richard said:Wristspinners can turn the ball dangerously on anything. Fingerspinners can turn the ball dangerously only on wickets that are very dry. These wickets regularly occur only in the subcontinent, and sometimes in West Indies.
I have never said "fingerspinners are useless outside the subcontient", maybe you've tried to misinterpret something I said to suit yourself and try to make it look like I've said something and gone back on it.
so vettori getting 12 wickets in NZ against australia was also an anomaly then?fact is that almost every wicket all over the world provides something for the 'quality' finger spinner on the last couple of days. and can you even spell subcontinent??Richard said:Fingerspinners are useless when the pitch does not suit fingerspin. Mostly these wickets occur only in the subcontient and sometimes in West Indies. That is all I will have said, because it is true.
There is no point in playing fingerspinners outside the subcontinet.
lighting quick reflexes doesnt make you a brilliant batsman either....see jonty rhodes...Richard said:Safe hands, many have, lightening quick reflexes will make your batting better. The fact is, Bradman's eyes and reflexes weren't exceptional - what made him an exceptional batsman was his concentration.
so what would you call the ball that got richardson out in the 2nd inning at headingly(off hoggard)....would every batsman have got out to that? or was it not a wicket taking delivery at all?Richard said:No, it shows that there are times when good balls don't take wickets. A wicket-taking ball has to take a wicket - otherwise it is simply something that could have been a wicket-taking ball.
no the point is that they you could place that short leg anywhere else on the field, but the fact is that a batsman who has been vulnerable at short leg is more likely to get out at forward short leg early on in the innings than in any other position on the field.Richard said:Good players are never so vulnerable to the short-ball that they'll regularly get caught at short-leg..
you dont bat him in the wrong position because of that......Nnanden said:...and what about yuvraj?? are you saying its fair to drop a guy who averages 51 from 6 tests???? compared to chopras amazing stats...![]()
yet alot better than the attacks that das and ramesh were succesful against...Richard said:And he has faced three weak attacks in his career - out of all the bowlers he's faced, there are two decent ones - Shoaib and Gillespie, both of whom were sub-par in the respective series.
yes im sure that is something to be proud about......lets see they beat a woeful ODI team and another very ordinary ODI outfit.Nnanden said:WEAK?? you have to be kidding!! Natwest series ANYONE? kiwis won it i might recall...
look at it in context....most of those bowlers didnt play in india and the pitches that they played on were so dead that any fast bowler would have made to look inneffective.Mingster said:Not with Bond, no. It's fair for you to say, after watching on the England series, to judge on the NZ are a "very weak team".
Butler (whom you rate below all of the Bangladeshi bowlers), Bond, Tuffey, Franklin, Oram is potentially an attack that is above very weak. the.
Did you watch NZ during the summer series against PAK and SA? I guess not then.
Yuvraj's omition wouldnt be a dropping, because he was in to fill a space left becuase of injury.Nnanden said:...and what about yuvraj?? are you saying its fair to drop a guy who averages 51 from 6 tests???? compared to chopras amazing stats...![]()
No, I didn't, and how many of the bowlers covered themselves in glory then, eh? Martin for 2 Tests, anyone else? Oram averaged 32.83 in those two series; Butler took one 6-for and averaged 71 besides; Tuffey averaged 39.75.Mingster said:Not with Bond, no. It's fair for you to say, after watching on the England series, to judge on the NZ are a "very weak team".
Butler (whom you rate below all of the Bangladeshi bowlers), Bond, Tuffey, Franklin, Oram is potentially an attack that is above very weak. the
Did you watch NZ during the summer series against PAK and SA? I guess not then.
Indeed? I don't think so, personally.tooextracool said:yet alot better than the attacks that das and ramesh were succesful against...
I think not.tooextracool said:yes the same middle order that needed protection against those amazing bowlers like dillon,cuffy,blignaut and the like
err what?you think the likes of manjural islam,blignaut etc were as good as akhtar,williams,lee,gillespie and sami?Richard said:Indeed? I don't think so, personally.
strange isnt it how they underperform when the openers fail and then suddenly perform brilliantly when they succeed?Richard said:I think not.
Somehow I think they just underperformed.
No-one needs protection from those bowlers. Not if they're batsmen worth their salt.
Das and Ramesh have played one Test each against Bangladesh, neither performing exceptionally.tooextracool said:err what?you think the likes of manjural islam,blignaut etc were as good as akhtar,williams,lee,gillespie and sami?
Just having a good technique doesn't matter if you haven't got the shot-selection, for instance Daren Ganga.tooextracool said:no the fact is that there are players who have had poor starts to their test career, yet have improved to make their record a lot better. in the same way why should chopra be dropped when he has impressed technically.
As I've said, Das scored 50 for once out in his only Test against Bangladesh - that won't have had much impact on his average. So it doesn't matter that they're a bit better than the Bangladeshi bowlers.tooextracool said:i dont know how highly you rate williams,tuffey etc but the fact is that they are still far far better than the bangladeshi and zimbabwian attacks that das seemed to do so very well against!
Well, not sorry to disappoint you, but no mess exists.tooextracool said:yes so being one of the most economical bowlers in the 2nd game doesnt count does it?and im sure 3/51(10) in the 4th game were poor figures too especially considering that he was bowling in the death.
oh wait what about the 2/28(10) against pakistan in the first ODI in NZ?or the 2/28(10) against pakistan in the last ODI in NZ when pakistan scored 303? or his 2/33(10) in the 1st ODI in pakistan when pakistan scored 292 in 48 overs?or in the 2nd ODI when he had an E/R of 4.22, pakistan scoring 281, or the 5th ODI where he went for 23 runs of 6 overs, pakistan scoring 277(btw he only played 3 matches in that series so he was pretty consistent too),or his figures in the world cup?
i look forward to seeing how you get out of this mess, probably by calling all of them anomalies.......
There is no point playing fingerspinners outside the subcontient - mainly. Because no rule is without exceptions.tooextracool said:you said "There is no point in playing fingerspinners outside the subcontinet." i think that pretty muich sums it up.....
Can't you spell subcontinent? (see above) Can't you even spell "much"? (also see above) Until your spell-checking is anything like as good as mine you've got no grounds to quibble about irrelevancies such as that anyway. Now corrected, incidentally.tooextracool said:so vettori getting 12 wickets in NZ against australia was also an anomaly then?fact is that almost every wicket all over the world provides something for the 'quality' finger spinner on the last couple of days. and can you even spell subcontinent??
Jonty Rhodes' reflexes were no better than any other good batsman. What made him as good a fielder as he was was doing the basics all but perfectly, superb anticipation, athleticism almost unrivalled and of course fantastic hands.tooextracool said:lighting quick reflexes doesnt make you a brilliant batsman either....see jonty rhodes...
They might have done, they might not have done. No delivery is ever certain to get a wicket. The fact is, however, Richardson got out to it and you couldn't blame him for doing so, so it was a wicket-taking ball.tooextracool said:so what would you call the ball that got richardson out in the 2nd inning at headingly(off hoggard)....would every batsman have got out to that? or was it not a wicket taking delivery at all?
Rubbish. Any half-decent batsman is always far more likely to get out caught slip to a seamer than short-leg, at any stage in any innings.tooextracool said:no the point is that they you could place that short leg anywhere else on the field, but the fact is that a batsman who has been vulnerable at short leg is more likely to get out at forward short leg early on in the innings than in any other position on the field.
then you my friend, are WHACKED!!Richard said:Das and Ramesh have played one Test each against Bangladesh, neither performing exceptionally.
The bowlers against which they scored their runs were far stronger than routine Bangladeshi standards.
And yes, I don't believe Lee, Sami, Williams, Bracken, Tuffey or Butler are any better than Blignaut.