McKanga
School Boy/Girl Captain
Harsh. Symonds is there and thereabouts and developing well as a One Dayer. His taste for the dramatic shot is his problem.......Point emphasized when symonds scored runs.
Harsh. Symonds is there and thereabouts and developing well as a One Dayer. His taste for the dramatic shot is his problem.......Point emphasized when symonds scored runs.
All of them missed out at least one test in the series. Kallis missed the first test at the WACA, Ntini didnt play in Sydney, Nel was injured in the last inning of the last test at the wanderers, and Pollock missed the first test at Newlands. Add that to the fact that Dale Steyn would have been an incredibly useful addition to that side.To be fair, 4 of that 6 played in the home and away series' 12 months ago and didn't do a lot better.
Symonds can do whatever he wants in ODIs. In tests his technique and temperament wont let him succeed for a consistent period against any side.Harsh. Symonds is there and thereabouts and developing well as a One Dayer. His taste for the dramatic shot is his problem.
Fair enough mate - the attack wasn't 100% so I take your point, though SA have arrived in Australia with fully fit attacks that looked good and still been owned. SA did look the better side for most of Sydney, just as England did for most of Adelaide, so I think it says something that when it mattered Australia won both of them. And it could be said that Australia were in the driving seat in Perth but for Rudolph's fantastic last day salvage operation.All of them missed out at least one test in the series. Kallis missed the first test at the WACA, Ntini didnt play in Sydney, Nel was injured in the last inning of the last test at the wanderers, and Pollock missed the first test at Newlands. Add that to the fact that Dale Steyn would have been an incredibly useful addition to that side.
Given that the Ashes series was down under, i thought SA competed quite valiantly against SA, the 3rd test at Sydney was a farce as it stands given that SA were probably the better side, 1-0 in Australia would suggest that it was a pretty tight series.
1 - 5-0How would the other teams have done in this series against the Aussies?
1) West Indies
2) New Zealand
3) India
4) Pakistan
5) Sri Lanka
6) South Africa
My opinion...
1) 5-0 Aus
2) 3-1 Aus
3) 2-0 Aus
4) 2-0 Aus
5) 3-0 Aus
6) 3-1 Aus
Or maybe they didn't play half as well because they hasn't spent 18 months preparing for the series? South Africa's pace attack is probably better than England's minus Simon Jones, but the gap isn't anything like as big as you seem to be making out, nor did England bowl all that badly. Hoggard bowled better than he did in the 2005 Ashes, while Harmison had two horrible tests and three where he wasn't that bad at all. Flintoff bowled well at times too, as did Panesar. Obviously they all have pretty bad series records, but they faced some fantastic batting, particularly in Brisbane and Perth. The fourth seamer and Giles when he was in the team were terrible, and England's attack didn't operate particularly well as a unit, but they certainly challenged the Australian batsmen enough that no other team would have got close to making 400+ in all tests bar one.Maybe they didnt play half as well because they arent very good? Theres no point talking about the quality of Australian batting in the Ashes, because the fact is even a chimpanzee would have made batting look easy when batting against Hoggard, Harmison, Giles, an injured Flintoff and Anderson for most of this series.
Point emphasized when symonds scored runs.
The West Indies sides of the 80s would have given them a decent run.How would the other teams have done in this series against the Aussies?
1) West Indies
IMO even a wound up cricket doll could have bowled better than England did at Brisbane.Or maybe they didn't play half as well because they hasn't spent 18 months preparing for the series? South Africa's pace attack is probably better than England's minus Simon Jones, but the gap isn't anything like as big as you seem to be making out, nor did England bowl all that badly. Hoggard bowled better than he did in the 2005 Ashes, while Harmison had two horrible tests and three where he wasn't that bad at all. Flintoff bowled well at times too, as did Panesar. Obviously they all have pretty bad series records, but they faced some fantastic batting, particularly in Brisbane and Perth. The fourth seamer and Giles when he was in the team were terrible, and England's attack didn't operate particularly well as a unit, but they certainly challenged the Australian batsmen enough that no other team would have got close to making 400+ in all tests bar one.
And of course, Australia's team makeup was better this year, with Clarke back in the side and batting well, and Stuart Clark added to the bowling attack, along with McGrath bowling much better than the stuff he sent down last year and Gilchrist playing decently again. I find it pretty hard to believe that anyone who watched both series could believe that Australia didn't play better cricket this year against England than they did against South Africa last year.
Perth: 258 and 8/528 decAs far as the SA pace bowling attack is concerned, im sure you watched the series in Australia last winter, and im pretty sure that you would have noticed that Nel, Ntini and Kallis had most of the Australian batting wrapped around the fingers for most of that series, and certainly looked far more dangerous than the England bowling has looked in this series.
Averages:Perth: 258 and 8/528 dec
Melbourne: 355 and 7/321 dec
Sydney: 359 and 2/288
Those were Australia's scores in the Tests against South Africa in Australia 12 months ago. Not as consistently dominant as this Ashes series granted, but mate if our batsmen can be "wrapped around the fingers" of opposing attacks with numbers like this in every series we ever play, I'll cop that.
I really hate it when people do that to prove a point. Without anyone's highest score, their average will be lower - especially if you are talking about averages over a short period. His 203 was against a quality attack and deserves to be recognised. The fact that he was poor without it is fairly irrelevant because he scored it - hence he had a good series.tooextracool said:Hodge: 77( without the 203, it was 26.25)
Fair pointI really hate it when people do that to prove a point. Without anyone's highest score, their average will be lower - especially if you are talking about averages over a short period. His 203 was against a quality attack and deserves to be recognised. The fact that he was poor without it is fairly irrelevant because he scored it - hence he had a good series.
Despite what? Langer had one good test match, easily the game in which England bowled worst in the entire series and even in that game he had an incredible amount of luck that it beggered belief. At the end his average was quite obviously boosted by being 100 not out. Arguably Langer was the worst batsman on both sides this series, unless you count Geraint Jones.As for Hayden being largely "all at sea" and Langer being "as hopeless as Cook or any other England batsman"... I'll grant you neither performed at their best, but Haydos averaged 51 and Langer 41 despite this.
I'll say again mate - try to give some credit where it's due. Right now it just sounds like a whole lot of sour grapes.
Jacques played one Test. If we're doing that, Bracken played one Test too and he averaged 24. Lee also averaged 24 over the 3 Tests.Averages:
Gilchrist: 27
Symonds: 24
Hodge: 77( without the 203, it was 26.25)
Langer:32
Jacques: 15
Cant say those are exceptional averages. Hayden, Ponting, Hussey carried the side through the series, while the rest of the batting was feeble.
Exactly.I really hate it when people do that to prove a point. Without anyone's highest score, their average will be lower - especially if you are talking about averages over a short period. His 203 was against a quality attack and deserves to be recognised. The fact that he was poor without it is fairly irrelevant because he scored it - hence he had a good series.
That's a massive overstatement as far as I'm concerned. Nel and Ntini certainly bowled well in that series, but they certainly didn't have Australia's batting wrapped around their fingers. Ponting scored three centuries, Hayden and Hussey had good, consistent series, Hodge scored a double century, and Australia made good scores in every match. Given that two of the wickets did a bit off the seam, I don't think two bowlers that averaged 29 had dominant series at all, they merely did reasonably well in the face of some good batting. Gilchrist and Symonds were obviously pretty poor throughout the series, but Gilchrist also struggled against the West Indies, which says a lot about the sort of form he was in at the time.As far as the SA pace bowling attack is concerned, im sure you watched the series in Australia last winter, and im pretty sure that you would have noticed that Nel, Ntini and Kallis had most of the Australian batting wrapped around the fingers for most of that series, and certainly looked far more dangerous than the England bowling has looked in this series.