Athlai
Not Terrible
As probably captain of NZ I think he will have a very good chance of doing just that. He's a total maverick captain.But he is very unlikely to "define" cricket over a decade....
As probably captain of NZ I think he will have a very good chance of doing just that. He's a total maverick captain.But he is very unlikely to "define" cricket over a decade....
Nobody forced the awkward old sod to drop out for 3 years! And it was a combination of things, wasn't it - the England captaincy, not wanting to lose the Yorkshire captaincy, Solkar, etc. Mentally he was knackered, afaics, due to a combination of self-inflicted pressure and the real pressure of being the best batsman in an English lineup that wasn't nearly as good as it had been.Given that he was nearly 40 at the time, that was no mean feat, was it? Imagine if he'd been given the captaincy in 1973 and not missed those prime years against the Lillees, Thommos, Robertses and Holdings in 1975 and 1976.
Certainly not Lamb, Vaughan or Gatting (even when cashing in against weak attacks in the middle phase ..). Not Gooch, for the reasons you mentioned. Atherton, as he said himself, was far too vulnerable at the start of his innings. Probably not Gower, although I know who I'd rather watch. I really rated Amiss, but maybe he didn't have Boycott's sheer bloodymindedness. I do think that Dennis gets a rough deal for his "failures" in 1974/5 though, but if Boycott was at the absolute peak of his game (which Amiss was in 1974) then perhaps you could see him doing better out there. Edrich was very good, mind. Possibly under-rated because he generally kept quiet and just scored lots of runs.Who's been a better batsman for England since the Hutton-Washbrook-Edrich-Compton-May-Cowdrey-Barrington-Dexter-Graveney days then?
There have been plenty of fine batsmen in that time... John Edrich, Amiss, Gooch (though again his sensational finish can overshadow the fact that he was no more than good for most of his career - and he's one of my favourite cricketers of all, given that said ending was the time when I was starting to watch the game), Gatting (in the middle phase of his career), Gower, Lamb, Atherton, Stewart, Thorpe... Vaughan even.
But surely none of those names are really in Boycott's league?
I think you're only saying that because White's bowling is dreadful. Watson's bowling is poor though. I think he should concentrate on his batting as that is certainly his strong suit and his career will last a lot longer if he doesn't shoulder the bowling load as well; let's face it, he's no Shaun PollockHis bowling isn't that bad!
Good call. I'd forgotten him. Not exactly the next Waqar Younis though, more the first Lasith Malinga. Certainly he's bound to be a good call for a star for the next 10 years if he can stay fit!Um... Malinga?
Well, the dreadfullness of White's bowling was a big factor.I think you're only saying that because White's bowling is dreadful. Watson's bowling is poor though. I think he should concentrate on his batting as that is certainly his strong suit and his career will last a lot longer if he doesn't shoulder the bowling load as well; let's face it, he's no Shaun Pollock
The fact that he's not very good probably had something to do with it.chaminda_00 said:How did Tharanga not make the list
"Already" suggests he'll continue to develop at a faster rate than they will - what makes you think that? Secondly, he's nowhere close to being as good as Watson, Tait or Taylor for mine. He's better than Ashraful obviously, and Raina is simply completely unproven rather than not-very-good like Tharanga.chaminda_00 said:he is already far better players then Tait, Watson, Raina, Ashraful and Taylor.
What has Taylor, Tait and Watson really done to show that they are better really. Taylor done nothing at all really. Tait had one good series, even if was a World Cup. Watson continues to improve, but even though im a fan, i want to see if he can be pentrative bowler Test before I can rate him, higher than Tharanga.The fact that he's not very good probably had something to do with it.
"Already" suggests he'll continue to develop at a faster rate than they will - what makes you think that? Secondly, he's nowhere close to being as good as Watson, Tait or Taylor for mine. He's better than Ashraful obviously, and Raina is simply completely unproven rather than not-very-good like Tharanga.
Apart from 2 ODI centuries so far, one of which was a beautifully paced match-winning innings against the likes of Nathan Bracken, Shaun Tait and Glenn McGrath.Taylor done nothing at all really.
Even without his bowling, Watson is an infinitely better batsman than Tharanga. His first class average is nearing 50, for starters. Then take his ODI record, largely batting in positions and situations he isn't suited to, which is also far superior to Tharanga's against ODI standard teams.What has Taylor, Tait and Watson really done to show that they are better really. Taylor done nothing at all really. Tait had one good series, even if was a World Cup. Watson continues to improve, but even though im a fan, i want to see if he can be pentrative bowler Test before I can rate him, higher than Tharanga.
Its seems unless Tharanga scores a bucklet load of hundreds against the top sides, people are always going to see him an minnow even when his scoring runs lately against other sides. His got to covert his starts in a big scores, but apart from that his improving other areas, such his scoring rate, i.e during the SF and the recent Pakistab ODI series.
Yeah agreed.Sreesanth should be there imo.
Watson ODI record is inflated by not outs down the order. His average of 50 is also on a lot flatter pitches in Australia and England compared to the minefields of Sri Lanka. Its kind of pointless arguement when you consider the pitches.Even without his bowling, Watson is an infinitely better batsman than Tharanga. His first class average is nearing 50, for starters. Then take his ODI record, largely batting in positions and situations he isn't suited to, which is also far superior to Tharanga's against ODI standard teams.
I really don't see what others do in Tharanga. He hasn't done much of note against decent attacks at all really, and it's not even like his technique is anything to write home about for people to think he'll get that much better. I legitimately have no idea how he even makes the test team over Michael Vandort, and his ODI batting isn't that good either, especially cosidering he's supposed to be a top-order dasher and really isn't. If he's one of the 10 players who will define international cricket in the next decade, I might just stick to Pura Cup games. I could understand if you argued for Cook or De Villiers... but Tharanga? Please.
Haha, dire. Opening the batting in Sri Lankan conditions is probably one of the easiest jobs in first class cricket. From what we've seen at international level, their seam bowling options are pretty much dire and the pitches offer nothing to them so I reckon Tharanga would have scored a few if he was any good - although he's already proven he can score runs that don't matter against poor attacks at international level so I guess he doesn't need to. Watson's ODI average being inflated by not outs down the order is interesting when you consider he averages over 40 when he bats in the top 4. Don't let facts get in the way of a good story though.chaminda_00 said:Watson ODI record is inflated by not outs down the order. His average of 50 is also on a lot flatter pitches in Australia and England compared to the minefields of Sri Lanka. Its kind of pointless arguement when you consider the pitches.
No-one. He's supposed to be a dasher - not a slogger. As in, someone who scores at a good rate. No-one ever said anything about slogging. That's how he retains his place over the likes of Atapattu, apparently. But he scores at a similar dire rate most of the time before chucking his wicket away when he gets to 30 odd.chaminda_00 said:Who ever said Tharanga is top order slogger?
Seen a few. Looked fairly sound technically IMO - he did struggle with the ball swinging back into him early, but he played straight very well, had good off stump judgement and actually went back and across fairly well (by Sri Lankan standards, anyway).chaminda_00 said:You seen one innings of Vandort right? Has got the worse techincally errors i have ever seen from a batsmen who has played International Cricket.
I failed to notice the promising start, can you please elaborate on Raina's prolific start and what he has done to be in the test team ahead of Ganuly/Lax ?Raina - such a promising start, but failed when he played last. Certainly a future regular for India, but Tendulkar-esque as the article states? He's got to wait for the Indian beuracracy (sp) to die down so he can get a start in the Test team - Ganguly? Laxman ?.'
Have a looks at Sangakkara, Silva, Jayasuriya FC average and get back to me on the pitches. The pitches that most domestic matches are played on are far worse then the international pitches.Haha, dire. Opening the batting in Sri Lankan conditions is probably one of the easiest jobs in first class cricket. From what we've seen at international level, their seam bowling options are pretty much dire and the pitches offer nothing to them so I reckon Tharanga would have scored a few if he was any good - although he's already proven he can score runs that don't matter against poor attacks at international level so I guess he doesn't need to. Watson's ODI average being inflated by not outs down the order is interesting when you consider he averages over 40 when he bats in the top 4. Don't let facts get in the way of a good story though.
His not a dasher either, clearly been mis informed. Atapattu not really fit enough to play International cricket anymore. He just wants one last hit before he retires.No-one. He's supposed to be a dasher - not a slogger. As in, someone who scores at a good rate. No-one ever said anything about slogging. That's how he retains his place over the likes of Atapattu, apparently. But he scores at a similar dire rate most of the time before chucking his wicket away when he gets to 30 odd.
Any bowler in Sri Lanka who swings the ball knocks him off pretty easier. The situation has been even worse in the A Team. His scored all his runs against attacks that don't have a good swing bowler or a flat pitch. Any pitch that offers assistant or has a good swing bowler his cannon flodder. If he makes the Sri Lanka side agian it will be as middle order batsmen. His no where near good enough to play as a opener.Seen a few. Looked fairly sound technically IMO - he did struggle with the ball swinging back into him early, but he played straight very well, had good off stump judgement and actually went back and across fairly well (by Sri Lankan standards, anyway).
So not big fan of Haddin?Cook, Bell & Pietersen are all going to shape England's fortunes over the next 10 years.
For Australia, I think the key for them who is going to be the next long term keeper, with none really showing they are ready for the bigger stage. Will need to step up next season.
Asif will be a superstar for Pakistan. They really missed him at the WC.