He's bowled OK overall, he's had a lot of edges not and other things not go his way. Just people who as usual don't have a clue remember the odd wide as if that automatically means all of his bowling was crap, which is not the case. Still if he bowled at around 55-60mph I'm sure the WI would manage to hand some lbws and bowleds on a plate...Wicket for Plunkles, TMS are singing his praises at the moment saying he's bowled OK this spell. Think they have short memories in their old age.
It is when your best bowler gets injured and all you have is The Chuckle Brothers and the faint hope that the West Indies will gift all ten wickets to Monty.Oh and today showed how silly it often is to declare at a score of 500, 550 etc.
If and buts, meaningless. Hoggard wouldn't have been any more effective than Plunkett has been. If WI had batted competently against someone who's barely spinning the ball they'd be what, 4 down? Hell on another day Monty wouldn't have been given any of his 3 lbws (they were out, but still).It is when your best bowler gets injured and all you have is The Chuckle Brothers and the faint hope that the West Indies will gift all ten wickets to Monty.
If England had bowled well then 500, 550 or even 600 would be insignificant. The declaration was the right decision, the bowlers however failed to back up captain Strauss.
So is your defence of Plunkett. Plenty of if and buts... If only that edge had carried, if only that cover drive hit through the vacant covers had a fielder there he would have stopped it, if only there was two sets of stumps, Plunkett's leg side trite would possibly be on 'target'.If and buts, meaningless. Hoggard wouldn't have been any more effective than Plunkett has been. If WI had batted competently against someone who's barely spinning the ball they'd be what, 4 down? Hell on another day Monty wouldn't have been given any of his 3 lbws (they were out, but still).
As soon as you get to a point where you wouldn't enforce the follow-on and there's 2 days left it makes your decision to declare a bad one - England batting a second time would have happened more often than not. How many times would declaring a bit later cost England a win? That's a one in hundreds shot, an event that is less likely than England declaring at 553 and losing.
England lose two overs through change of innings, it was a no-brainer if you play to your percentages - which unfortunately doesn't seem to happen very often in English sport. They don't miss out on the slightest edge in America in American sports.
Monty got more decisions in his favour than you'd expect given the 3 that were given you see given not out regularly. Plunkett has a catch dropped and had 15-20 runs come off edges, but as usual morons on here imply he was rubbish while Monty was godlike...Monty had about 6 decent LBW shouts. You seem obsessed about "could of beens" for Plunkers, but ignore the ones for Monty. Funny that.
Hoggard's first ten overs were unthreatening and easy pickings, so it's unlikely he'd have gotten much better when the ball is older.So is your defence of Plunkett. Plenty of if and buts... If only that edge had carried, if only that cover drive hit through the vacant covers had a fielder there he would have stopped it, if only there was two sets of stumps, Plunkett's leg side trite would possibly be on 'target'.
And how can you suggest Hoggard would have gone no better than Plunkett for what's Liam done in Test cricket so far to suggest his comparably the same or indeed better, other than playing for Durham and swinging the ball?
Lets not forget Hoggard last winter on concrete got seven wickets. Plunkett is more akin to your track conditioned bully stereotype you used earlier to describe Hoggard.
You might wanna have a word with this fella then...I like to try and point people in the direction of being accurate if I can help it.
Eh? What was the Cook comment you were referring to?but you have to expect some stick given you track record of bringing up times when others have maybe got things a bit wrong. You tend to make judgements based not on watching, but what has tended to happen in the past to other players (an example is this discussion about the comparison between Prior and Jones, when in fact there is NO comparison). You did it a couple of years back about Alastair Cook as well.
Just forget about it and dont get so worked up about it
Oh and today showed how silly it often is to declare at a score of 500, 550 etc.
550 was about right , England could have batted this morning and added 150 to their total. On such a inactive surface , and conditions that haven't helped swing terribly (well the bowlers haven't helped themselves either) , a 700 total wouldn't have helped much. I would have meant less time for bowling the West Indies out. And what if England have had been rolled over for 40 - 50 , wouldn't England have been wondering what could have been have they have been in those conditions.I actually do see the point made by Scaly though. It would be far easier and quicker to score the runs in the 1st innings rather than have to have the tricky time in the 2nd innings and the awkwardness of knowing how long to bat and what total to set.
350 isnt a massive score to avoid the follow on and it means England have to bat again. I think there is a mental barrier to having to score 400 to avoid following on that WI didnt have to face.
By putting the runs up in the 1st Innings you decrease the liklihood of batting again and rather than costing you time it saves time.
So like I said, I understand where he is coming from and its a fair point. On the other hand, I would have declared overnight as England did and backed my bowlers.
You can't really say that , just because he didn't bowl well in the morning doesn't mean he wouldn't have bowled better in the afternoon. And it would have taken some of the pressure off Plunkett and Harmison , leaving them fresher and more confident.Hoggard's first ten overs were unthreatening and easy pickings, so it's unlikely he'd have gotten much better when the ball is older.
Tell me - have you seen Prior bat before? I certainly have, and I was prepared to say his shot-selection was poor on those occasions. Even though I've seen him score runs several times - even in the short game.It defies logic though to actually hold the similarities against Prior, merely because Jones failed. Unless the fact that Jones was an instant success and scored a quickfire hundred against a poor attack was actually part of the reason for his demise, then it really makes no sense to say "Don't get excited - look what happened to Jones." Jones's demise was caused by his dire shot selection - something we've yet to see from Prior, so to draw comparisons negatively would be completely unfair and unnecessarily pessimistic (and yes, I know you hold the opinion that pessimism is usually a good idea - but it comes a time where it's OTT and unnecessary). First class statistics tell us that Prior is a significantly better batsman than Jones to begin with, which is reason enough to wipe the Jones case from our heads - not to mention the fact that Prior has better footwork and better shot selection than Jones anyway.