Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
Of course we do - everything since that Sharjah tournament immidiately after WC2003 should not be classed Test or ODI where they're concerned.Do we exclude Zimbabwe tests since they became bad, then?
Of course we do - everything since that Sharjah tournament immidiately after WC2003 should not be classed Test or ODI where they're concerned.Do we exclude Zimbabwe tests since they became bad, then?
It does nothing of the sort and you know it.Actually, a more accurate stat than those you've presented that highlights exactly how awful MacGill is, is the fact that if you take away all of his wickets apart from the best ball he's ever bowled, but leave the runs the same, he averages 5387 - that's woeful!
I called them "antics" because it was the first word that came into my head.Which is why you called them 'antics'
Somehow I doubt you'd forgotten about it, because you still haven't realised that reading a good description about something is little different to watching it.God...so many memories...I'd forgotten the part where you knew more than people who had actually done/played something cause you'd read about it.
That wasnt my argument. You need natural talent to begin with but you also need systems that identify players with the potential to become international cricketers and the systems in place to develop those players so that they can make the most of their natural abilities.No amount of hard work will turn a poor bowler into a good one.
Otherwise anyone who wanted to and worked hard enough would be a Warne.
Yes, the systems in place now are better than they used to be but if having a good-quality talent-spotting scheme was the only requirement for success South Africa would be unparralleled in recent history.
And my point is that players with that talent are exceptionally rare, so even if you scour the country you can't spot what doesn't exist.That wasnt my argument. You need natural talent to begin with but you also need systems that identify players with the potential to become international cricketers and the systems in place to develop those players so that they can make the most of their natural abilities.
The south africa argument is very weak. My argument was promoting a wholistic view to talent identification and development. With development being the key. South Africa hasnt done that as well as other countries and has suffered because of it. Talent isnt everything and thats my point it needs to be combined with hard work (and cricket asutralia has set up a very good framework to facilitate that in young players)
Nobody knows when another player as talented as Warne will come along, my argument is that with the strong foundation cricket australia has built since the 80's we are far more likely to spot that player and far more likely to get the best out of them than we were in other era's.
Err, yes, that's what stats are about. You pick out the stats, then you form your ideas based on them.What a load of crap Richard. You have selectively picked out stats that would support your arguements.
Yes, I have, because I believe (and I'm most certainly not the only one) that I know better than I$C$C on the important matters of status of cricket matches. They don't - they routinely twist important traditions to suit their immidiate purposes.You have put yourself above the ICC when determining who is worthy.
No, it's not, the past never ceases to be relevant. As I've said, talent-identification, Academies and coaches are no use without something to work with. And those who possess the skills of Warne and Benaud are rare indeed.Bringing up past eras in times of talent identification, cricket academys and coaches is irrelevant.
I don't touch vodka, I hate the stuff neat.Maybe you should spend more time looking at the mirror (England's recent performances) rather than looking at the crystal ball when drinking your bottle of voka.
And my point is that players with that talent are exceptionally rare, so even if you scour the country you can't spot what doesn't exist.
Of course talent isn't everything, I've argued that 50 times a day, but equally hard work won't get you anywhere at all without talent.
Have you personally seen White, Cullen, Hauritz and Casson in action? Unless you have, how can you be so sure that they will never be test-class bowlers?No amount of maximising of talent is likely to make Cameron White, Daniel Cullen, Nathan Hauritz or Beau Casson, for instance, into Test-class bowlers.
Without the talent to work with, it doesn't matter how sophisticated the development programs are - and it's pretty basic fact that those with Warne's talent are rare. Not neccessarily that it'll take 40 years for the next one, but probably quite a while (a decade at the very least).
I agree Australian cricket is in the dark ages. No tallent and with Warne gone things are just going to get worse, mark mine are Richards words, Australian cricket is going to get even worse than it is now and it will never get better. While the rest of the countries are all going great Australia is just terrible.I've seen Hauritz and he's utterly rubbish (could tell that by the fact that he's played Aussie domestic cricket for ages and never done anything of note, even being dropped from his side last season).
I've never seen Cullen but seriously - aside from Ashley Mallett have Australia ever had a particularly good fingerspinner, even before WWII? His last 2 seasons suggest that is likely to continue.
I've seen White once or twice but, like Hauritz, he's played for a while now and never done anything of note with the ball, and despite not spinning it much he still seems to struggle to hit a length consistently.
I've never seen Casson but I've seen Chris Schofield and all indications are that the two are about equal.
I rated Tim May fairly highly. Many of Shane Warne's early wickets were attributable to May's ability to tie up one end, testing batsmen's patience who'd eventually try & create something against Warne and get out. I understand we are not traditionally as flexible as those spinners from the sub-continent, eg Murali, Mushtaq, Singh, etc, but fingerspin has still been revolutionised, and it may be possible for one to master the craft in Australia and given your total disregard to actually watching a player before forming an opinion who are you to say Cullen won't be that person.I've seen Hauritz and he's utterly rubbish (could tell that by the fact that he's played Aussie domestic cricket for ages and never done anything of note, even being dropped from his side last season).
I've never seen Cullen but seriously - aside from Ashley Mallett have Australia ever had a particularly good fingerspinner, even before WWII? His last 2 seasons suggest that is likely to continue.
I've seen White once or twice but, like Hauritz, he's played for a while now and never done anything of note with the ball, and despite not spinning it much he still seems to struggle to hit a length consistently.
I've never seen Casson but I've seen Chris Schofield and all indications are that the two are about equal.
It's always a good one to use when bowlers aren't good enough to get wickets: "he takes wickets at the other end".I rated Tim May fairly highly. Many of Shane Warne's early wickets were attributable to May's ability to tie up one end, testing batsmen's patience who'd eventually try & create something against Warne and get out.
Murali - fingerspin?I understand we are not traditionally as flexible as those spinners from the sub-continent, eg Murali, Mushtaq, Singh, etc, but fingerspin has still been revolutionised, and it may be possible for one to master the craft in Australia and given your total disregard to actually watching a player before forming an opinion who are you to say Cullen won't be that person.
It's always a good one to use when bowlers aren't good enough to get wickets: "he takes wickets at the other end".
Unless you can take wickets in your own right, you aren't good enough.
Murali - fingerspin?
Fingerspin hasn't been revolutionised (Saqlain and Harbhajan, with their Doosra, were merely resurrecting an old art - Eripalli Prasanna bowled the same ball 30 years previously), it's just had a new trick well-publicised. And that new trick doesn't make the style into something that's somehow more bowlable than it was 10 years ago. Fingerspinners (Doosra-bowlers included) still need help from the pitch (as demonstrated by Saqlain and Harbhajan's records on helpful and unhelpful surfaces) and there are no more regular fingerspin-friendly pitches in Australia now than there were in 1954.
So therefore it's pretty logical to deduce that Cullen's unlikely to have much of a career.
It does exactly that, don't belittle the minutes I spent researching that numberIt does nothing of the sort and you know it.
(YES, I AM PERFECTLY WELL AWARE THAT YOU WERE EXAGGERATING THERE)
You're right, I've read countless descriptions of a previous game in the paper and not thought "What the hell are these people talking about, that sounds nothing like what actually happened!" The only way an article is a decent substitute for watching the game is if you have no idea about the game in the first place. You don't write for a paper by any chance do you?Somehow I doubt you'd forgotten about it, because you still haven't realised that reading a good description about something is little different to watching it.
I don't think you did.I called them "antics" because it was the first word that came into my head.
"Deeds" might, and only might, have left less room for comments like that.