Me too.PY said:Honestly, you make my day when you open your yap.![]()
BingLeeElectric said:Disgrace to see the great Richards name being tarnished alongside that of a lucky rookie upstart who happened to come along at the right time & take advantage of one of the weakest periods of pace bowling ever. Infact, the topic title makes me physically sick
If Richards had worn a helmet in his day and played on these lifeless, batsman friendly roads we're seeing around the world, then you can add another 10 to his average at least.
Viv also didn't look umpires in the eye & tell umpires to give him not out during appeals, unlike Pietersen. He stuck to intimidating the bowlers.
The next phase for you will be one of enlightenment.PhoenixFire said:I've gone past the point of getting pissed off at your posts, and I just find them amusing now.
Right on, well said.Thought I'd dig this thing up, seeing as though KP will, sadly, be leaving our shores this weekend. I think he has been magnificent this Summer. In my view, given the rampant attack he has come up against (including two of the all-time greats) he has been the batsman of the Summer so far (yes, above Hussey and Ponting).
At the start of the Summer, Ponting said that Pietersen could be the next superstar of world cricket. Well, I think he's there. He's lean and hungry. World cricket needs young marque players like this. Youngish guys who can handle the fame and success. Young guys who are ultra-talented and invariably show up ready to play.
Fair play, KP.
Hear, hear. It's one thing to bash runs all over the place when your team is on top like KP did for the majority of his early Test career, but it's quite another to watch the rest of your side collapse around you and yet still have the skill and heart to stand up and do your part. There's nothing stopping him from becoming the best batsman in the world IMO - quite remarkable for someone who started off as a bowler.Thought I'd dig this thing up, seeing as though KP will, sadly, be leaving our shores this weekend. I think he has been magnificent this Summer. In my view, given the rampant attack he has come up against (including two of the all-time greats) he has been the batsman of the Summer so far (yes, above Hussey and Ponting).
At the start of the Summer, Ponting said that Pietersen could be the next superstar of world cricket. Well, I think he's there. He's lean and hungry. World cricket needs young marque players like this. Youngish guys who can handle the fame and success. Young guys who are ultra-talented and invariably show up ready to play.
Fair play, KP.
Reminds me of Tendulkar in the nineties, hah.but it's quite another to watch the rest of your side collapse around you and yet still have the skill and heart to stand up and do your part.
I don't personally think it's that bad an idea, but until recently we had Trescothick up there who could do his fair share of damage, so we didn't really need him there. Plus Fletcher's experiments in ODIs only usually extend to the cunning use of rubbish players instead of good ones.Why doesn't he open in ODI's? Your best, most destructive batsman should be at the top in ODI's IMO. Sachin, GIlly, etc.