So now we go to "they weren't good enough" to shifting an argument as to why they weren't picked?
That is an argument in itself, but it's widely acknowledge how hard it is to break into the Test side, and how little of a chance you get once you're there. It hardly reflects the quality between the Test side and the domestic side as you often see in Australia A' V Australia exhibition matches. And you also see their quality against touring sides.
And one I really CBA with.
There are that many to Matthew Hoggard alone.
You must be off your flipping horse. You want to argue THIS too? Batsmen get how many dropped catches or close shaves in a game? The bowlers will have more wides and no-balls, let alone poorly bowled balls.
Dropped catches and let-offs are fortune beyond that any bowler ever enjoys. Bowlers will probably get away with more bad deliveries than batsmen will get away with erroneous strokes.
Yes, 'crazy' isn't a single-entity either, it's a group. It just doesn't answer the question. Ask yourself again: if there is almost always so many people against your very opinion, it must say something about the very things you judge cricket on. At the very least you should question it.
Not really, I wouldn't think things the way I do if I thought it was stupid. There are times when people have questioned me and I've seen the errors of my ways; there are also many when I haven't.
No, but let's see...out of all the threads I HAVE read in the two years with you debating something I've seen you concede 0 point(s). It doesn't fill me with much confidence if I go searching for ones where you do.
Suit yourself.
That is rubbish Richard. Good bowlers get hit because they face better batsmen. That's one very likely and easy reason to grasp.
Bad bowling gets hit around. Good bowling doesn't.
Of course, what constitutes good bowling changes from batsman to batsman. There are some things, though, that are good bowling to pretty much anyone.
The fact is that every batsman, even Bradman, is fallible so by that account everyone is crap? The fact that Hayden, even if he has the fallibility you prescribe has hindered him very little so it makes him a
great test batsman. If you think such a weakness is so easy to exploit maybe you should share your rich insight with TEST CLASS BOWLERS who seem to have trouble with it, maybe YOU would like to teach
them something
.
I'd love it if I had been able to, but it's a bit late now really. In any case, I highly doubt they were so stupid they didn't realise what they needed to do; they simply did not have the ability, nor the assistance from pitch and ball, to do it.
In short, few of these seamers were really Test-class, especially in the conditions they faced Hayden in.