That truly shows how **** Sharma is.
You are being way too nice classifying our team in its present state as "good".The test number 1 ranking is more clear cut when someone is some distance ahead... at the moment there's three good teams (England, India, South Africa) and Pakistan and Sri Lanka are also pretty dangerous at home. It just means the ranking will get passed around for a while I reckon.
Not all that surprising seeing as you don't know what you're talking about either.
I agree with HB there. India have been dismal of late (for almost a year now). Can't see them as a good team in this state tbhOne thing rankings never tell you is who the best is now. What they do (with greater or lesser degrees of accuracy) is to tell you how good teams have been in the fairly recent past, ie the period over which the performance is measured. 6-12 months ago England may have been the best team in the world. Not now. Same with India immediately before them. Takes a while for the ratings to catch up.
You see, this line of argument really ****s me off. I don't mean to single you out here, because you are far from the only person who believes this.I think the quality of cricket has generally deteriorated. The present state of teams makes for exciting cricket, pulsating cricket, but I'm not sure I'd put it on the same page as Ind-Aus '01 or the Ashes '05. The bowling has stepped up a peg or two as compared to the previous decade when there were 5 all-time greats dominating the game. Batting has surely plummeted, even fielding seems to be experiencing a bit of a downturn; traditionally strong fielding sides like Australia seem to be mucking up far too often these days.
I don't remember what that ground was like in 2002, but if it was green, only the very best teams in history ever would. If it was flat, then wheel the ****ing thing out against a current mid-table side and watch the runs flow.I think declining batting standards are fairly easily quantifiable. How many teams can pile on 600 runs on a Headingley '02 sort of opening day pitch/conditions anymore? Teams are hardly getting past 50 overs in testing conditions, so bowler endurance, patience, etc isn't exactly being put under examination.
Or basically what I saidYou see, this line of argument really ****s me off. I don't mean to single you out here, because you are far from the only person who believes this.
If every person who said what you have said was right, then cricket was at its peak in the 1700s and has declined ever since. It's rose tinted glasses and nostalgia, and nothing more. The Ashes 2005 featured Ashley Giles ffs.
You know how you just said bowling has improved but batting has gotten worse? They're directly related to each other. You cannot get periods where every batsman averages 40-50 and every bowler 30-20. The maths doesn't work. Someone has to win and someone has to lose. The batting is currently **** because ****s like Philander are walking all over them. In the 00s, batsmen walked all over bowling attacks.
International cricket was, is, and always will be, cyclic and ever changing. Just like individual matches, and series in isolation, sometimes bowling will dominate a period and sometimes batting. Sometimes they will be fairly even, in which case you get a whole pile of batsmen averaging in the late 30s and bowlers in the low 30s with a few stand outs in each side. You know what people will say then? They will say everyone sucks and Ponting/Marshall would destroy the bowlers/batsmen in that era.
It's just blatant crap. I've been waiting for someone to point to this mythical pinnacle of cricket standards for some time. Some point me to the 80s, others the 90s, but in those eras there were some very **** teams, **** players and on the flipside there were some very dominant players, who were part of dominant teams.
Someone has to win, and someone has to lose.
true.....Can't win, can they? Batsmen score lots of runs = must be a road, batsmen aren't that good. Bowlers do well = batsmen must be ****, bowlers aren't that good.
I get what you're saying, and I'm not for rose-tinted glasses myself, but modern batsmen, be it a result of more slap-dash cricket or whatever, definitely seem ill-equipped to handle the challenges of Test match cricket. Taking nothing away from Philander's spectacular achievements, but I 'm just saying: Rahul Dravid batted 263 balls (from memory) for his 95 on debut at Lord's in 1996. How many Michael Clarke/Kane Williamson style counter-attacking/grinding, ass to the wall knocks are we seeing today?You see, this line of argument really ****s me off. I don't mean to single you out here, because you are far from the only person who believes this.
If every person who said what you have said was right, then cricket was at its peak in the 1700s and has declined ever since. It's rose tinted glasses and nostalgia, and nothing more. The Ashes 2005 featured Ashley Giles ffs.
You know how you just said bowling has improved but batting has gotten worse? They're directly related to each other. You cannot get periods where every batsman averages 40-50 and every bowler 30-20. The maths doesn't work. Someone has to win and someone has to lose. The batting is currently **** because ****s like Philander are walking all over them. In the 00s, batsmen walked all over bowling attacks.
International cricket was, is, and always will be, cyclic and ever changing. Just like individual matches, and series in isolation, sometimes bowling will dominate a period and sometimes batting. Sometimes they will be fairly even, in which case you get a whole pile of batsmen averaging in the late 30s and bowlers in the low 30s with a few stand outs in each side. You know what people will say then? They will say everyone sucks and Ponting/Marshall would destroy the bowlers/batsmen in that era.
It's just blatant crap. I've been waiting for someone to point to this mythical pinnacle of cricket standards for some time. Some point me to the 80s, others the 90s, but in those eras there were some very **** teams, **** players and on the flipside there were some very dominant players, who were part of dominant teams.
Someone has to win, and someone has to lose.
And Philander/Steyn/Broad/Anderson etc aren't bowling well?true.....
I do agree with a lot of what you say but I also do believe that if you watch cricket (and not just glance at scorecards) you can tell if the level of cricket being played is good or bad. There must be a middle ground somewhere
When the 2 Ws used to bowl I knew I was watching some high quality pace bowling. When Ambrose and Walsh were bowling I could see that it wasn't easy for the batsmen to hit them around the park. With McGrath's bowling line and length (and the bounce he would get off a good length) you knew that it was just good bowling.