Langeveldt
Soutie
Replace 20/20 with ODI cricket, and I'm afraid you'd have a pointYeah...along with 20/20 .
Replace 20/20 with ODI cricket, and I'm afraid you'd have a pointYeah...along with 20/20 .
That's bollocks. If you didn't care you wouldn't bother replying to our arguments, indeed, you wouldn't bother even posting in an internet forum at all - after all, that's the point.I couldn't give a toss what you lot think.
I was referring to thoughts on me personally, as was somewhat implied by the rest of what I said there. I'd find being vilified fairly amusing actually to be honest.That's bollocks. If you didn't care you wouldn't bother replying to our arguments, indeed, you wouldn't bother even posting in an internet forum at all - after all, that's the point.
In 20/20, what it takes to be a good bowler is to not lose your head. When bowlers begin to compensate for getting hit to the boundary they usually present an even easier target. For the greater part in all the 20/20's I've seen (NZ internationals, Aus vs Eng, NZ state 20/20) the bowlers who are consistent and tight, are the ones who take wickets. Sure in this form of the game batsmen are playing dangerously, which makes it even simpler for the bowler to get them out. A level headed bowler will know that they are aiming to take around 6-8 runs an over, if I can give them less than that then I will probably get a wicket.A batsman charging a part-time medium pacer and getting caught at deep midwicket is still a dismissal, but I certianly don't see how it is "getting a batsman out" in any but the most literal interpretations. A form of the game where slips are a liability even in the first half a dozen overs of the match is never going to encourage attacking cricket or good bowling.
And as for lesser bowlers taking more wickets (though you may be right in the better ones not being able to play), I believe I've heard Richard say, form is temporary, class is forever.Anyway, as far as not rewarding crap bowlers is concerned, I don't really know what you're on about. The best bowling figures in domestic 20/20 in Australia this season went to a batsman who had never taken a wicket in domestic cricket before. He took 6. The equal "all-time" leading wicket takers in international 20/20 are Andrew Symonds and Paul Collingwood. I'd say that says quite a bit about the format.
Though it should be noted that a lot of the better bowlers in Australian domestic cricket didn't play all the 20/20 fixtures, so that does make a difference to the stats.
One can only hope.....Replace 20/20 with ODI cricket, and I'm afraid you'd have a point
We're getting an insight into how the mind of the infamous Scaly Piscine works.I was referring to thoughts on me personally, as was somewhat implied by the rest of what I said there. I'd find being vilified fairly amusing actually to be honest.
No batsman is waiting for a bad ball to play his shots in a Twenty20 game, whether its a good ball or a bad one in a Twenty20 game a batsman would always go for a slog (unless the batsman is Chris Martin or M.Patel because they won't be able to touch the ball).
So as a bowler you just try to pitch the ball in the right places and hope for the best!!
You quoting from Hingston at the moment is really, really confusing.One can only hope.....
Yeah, and he's got a Donald Avatar... If he was more succesful with the ladies, he could well be me..You quoting from Hingston at the moment is really, really confusing.
Nice one mate.Most of the haters are from Australia or NZ, the countries that have the least exposure to Twenty20.
Brain testicles?Nice one mate.
Personally, I love a good game of 20:20. Though it would be better if Wellington played Heath Davis.
I did enjoy *that* game where Graeme Aldridge bowled a no-ball to Andre Adams with 10 required off one ball... Belted for four and the re-bowled ball smashed out of the park. I'm a big fan of Aldridge, but maybe that showed he doesn't have the mental cojones?
Wellington's Mark Houghton had a good debut in the 20:20 this year. Good player.
Other that that, I've seen a few games at the Rose Bowl and County Ground, Chelmsford. Good game for a laugh, very enjoyable - but hopefully the 'skills' won't transfer over into test match cricket else some piss poor batting will be exposed pretty quickly.
What are you implying? Do you find the idea of brain testicles confusing? Do you not have a pair of your own?Brain testicles?
My testicles are my brains I thinkWhat are you implying? Do you find the idea of brain testicles confusing? Do you not have a pair of your own?
Well, if wanting to preserve Test cricket, and thinking that it is the highest (or the only) form of the game is elitist, then I am proud to be one TBH. I hate the limited overs format. I hate the idea of it, I hate the execution of it, I hate the fact that it has taken over the international scene at the detriment of real cricket, and I hate the fact that when a overblown, over hyped piece of ****e tournament like the World Cup rolls around, the real game takes a back seat.1, The two games are different - yes, we know that. What's wrong with someone being good at one and poor at another? That's just elitist nonsense on the part of the Tests-are-all-that's-worthy gang. I don't normally get on my high horse on you over this, but that pisses me off I'm afraid.
2. Fair enough, he's not an all time great seamer, but he's still very good.Richard said:2, Ntini, if he really is the best seamer in The World, which is highly debatable, is merely the best of an average bunch. It's not exactly a big secret that the quality of seam-bowling hasn't been what it mostly is these last 6 or 7 years.
3, He was only dropped for a couple of games due to not-the-best form, FFS! Has that never happened to anyone else?
There is nothing 'wrong' with it in the sense that it is what is needed to win the game. But that's precisely my point - that fact that such strategies are almost essential to win a game. It's not like it's just a couple overs here and there. It's at least 40% of the overs in every game!Richard said:And finally - the view that end-of-powerplays = snooze-time is IMO the biggest load of nonsense ever spoken about the ODI game. What, exactly, is wrong with some good defensive bowling and field-setting, combined with batsmen trying to work their way around it?