Funny, I see a lot of poms using this arguement as to why Vaughn is the greatest batsmen their country has ever produced and that he should be an automatic selection, even with his dodgy knees and when he's completely out of form.Class is permanent. Form is temporary.
Well Vaughan's captaincy has meant that he is basically an automatic choice whenever he is fit, which is understandable because he is their classiest Test batsman and also the most senior player in their batting lineup.Funny, I see a lot of poms using this arguement as to why Vaughn is the greatest batsmen their country has ever produced and that he should be an automatic selection, even with his dodgy knees and when he's completely out of form.
My question is, if form was temporary and class permanent, why did the Aussie selectors ever pick Katich
Edit: And why has Lee been in the test side for so long with neither form nor class to his name?
Definitely. His 102* at the WACA was amazing.Once Gilly is in he smokes every type bowlers so spinners are no exception!
I didn't think stephen was talking about his return to Test cricket, but perhaps he was.In response to Vaughan being 'completely out of form', I thought I'd let the stats speak for themselves since his return from injury.
I was referring primarily to when Vaughn was in Australia and was picked for the OD side. But more than that I was looking to the time between his brilliant ashes series and 2006. During that time he did NOTHING with the bat except for the odd century here or there (he was averaging around 35 in test cricket at the time I believe). To be honest I have not really followed his exploits since the World Cup, but seeing English fans fawn over a player with such a record at test level and use that exact phrase to justify it was bewildering at best.I didn't think stephen was talking about his return to Test cricket, but perhaps he was.
Mine were not necessarily specific either, except as examples. But time and time again in recent years the selectors have favoured players who are not in the best interests of the team at the time. The Katich example was the most obvious. If you have a core team, which Australia does, I don't think it hurts too much to pick a couple of players on form alone. If you pick a player who is out of form it can hurt their future (and the team) more than it can help.Also, my comments weren't specific to the players you mentioned, but instead about the pecking order. Just because one batsman is in good form doesn't mean he is a better player than another batsman.
Michael Vaughan is a terrible ODI batsman, and I've not heard too many Englishmen dispute that fact. In Tests he is a class act but in the longer format he should have never been picked. In 36 games between the end of the 2002/2003 Ashes and 2006 Vaughan averaged 36.91 and scored seven centuries. It was a pretty poor return from him but you have to factor in his captaincy, which was one reason he remained in the side despite not being as consistent as he should have been. He was the stabilising factor in the middle order after the retirement of players like Hussain, Thorpe and Stewart while some of the newer faces established themselves.I was referring primarily to when Vaughn was in Australia and was picked for the OD side. But more than that I was looking to the time between his brilliant ashes series and 2006. During that time he did NOTHING with the bat except for the odd century here or there (he was averaging around 35 in test cricket at the time I believe). To be honest I have not really followed his exploits since the World Cup, but seeing English fans fawn over a player with such a record at test level and use that exact phrase to justify it was bewildering at best.
Simon Katich was in better form when picked to play ODIs for Australia in 2004, so I'm not really sure what your point is. Obviously Jaques has been piling on the runs since then, mainly in England, but Katich was the better batsman at the time of his selection and continued to score runs at ODI level and merited his selection.Mine were not necessarily specific either, except as examples. But time and time again in recent years the selectors have favoured players who are not in the best interests of the team at the time. The Katich example was the most obvious. If you have a core team, which Australia does, I don't think it hurts too much to pick a couple of players on form alone. If you pick a player who is out of form it can hurt their future (and the team) more than it can help.
Isn't that a good thing though? to be dismissed by Murali only once having played him for a reasonable amount of time..Ponting has only been dismissed by Muralitharan once in Test cricket. That doesn't prove an awful lot TBH.
Well yeah, it is a good thing but how does it prove that Ponting is statistically the best batsman against Muralitharan? He's played against him in 8 Tests and been dismissed once, which is a good effort from Ponting, but it doesn't conclusively prove he is the best against Muralitharan.Isn't that a good thing though? to be dismissed by Murali only once having played him for a reasonable amount of time..
Wonder if there is anyone who's played in more tests with more runs that hasn't been dismissed by him tbh.Well yeah, it is a good thing but how does it prove that Ponting is statistically the best batsman against Muralitharan? He's played against him in 8 Tests and been dismissed once, which is a good effort from Ponting, but it doesn't conclusively prove he is the best against Muralitharan.
Lara and Fleming both have great records against Murali.Well yeah, it is a good thing but how does it prove that Ponting is statistically the best batsman against Muralitharan? He's played against him in 8 Tests and been dismissed once, which is a good effort from Ponting, but it doesn't conclusively prove he is the best against Muralitharan.
The point with Vaughn was that he didn't warrant a spot based on batting skill, and to counter this was used the phrase "form is temporary, class is permanent". Enough talk about poms though :PSimon Katich was in better form when picked to play ODIs for Australia in 2004, so I'm not really sure what your point is. Obviously Jaques has been piling on the runs since then, mainly in England, but Katich was the better batsman at the time of his selection and continued to score runs at ODI level and merited his selection.
Not sure ITBT, and wouldn't really know how to look up the stats for that one.Wonder if there is anyone who's played in more tests with more runs that hasn't been dismissed by him tbh.
No, Vaughan didn't warrant a place on batting alone. As I said, his captaincy helped him be selected through that tough time.The point with Vaughn was that he didn't warrant a spot based on batting skill, and to counter this was used the phrase "form is temporary, class is permanent". Enough talk about poms though :P
Katich was the best choice when he was picked but by the 05/06 summer was by no means the best choice any longer. He was holding both Hayden and Jaques out of the team. Hayden probably deserved to be dropped after the ashes, but Jaques deserved a go while Katich, at his snails pace didn't. Jaques only got one opportunity that summer and made a 90, which was higher than Katich's highest ODI score that summer IIRC.
Similarly, when he first cracked onto the scene, Brett Lee was very very good. But by 2002 his form no longer warranted his place in the team, and when he was dropped, he only got back on account of his ODI form, which has always been top notch. He never earned his way back into the team and now that he's back in he's really been treading water, relying on McGrath or Warne at the other end to create the pressure. And the biggest criticism I have of him - every time he gets a bit of tap he goes back into bouncer-yorker mode and goes for even more.
Obviously your memory is foggy. It was not the amount of runs that was the issue with katich, but instead the way in which he scored them. He chewed up a ridiculous number of balls to score his runs and only went on past fifty very, very rarely. His strike rate for the summer was something like 65! That's attrocious for a modern day one day batsman and put a lot of pressure on the bat at the other end. Meanwhile, that same season Jaques made 4 ODD centuries, ended with an average over 90 and the highest strike rate in domestic one day cricket.No, Vaughan didn't warrant a place on batting alone. As I said, his captaincy helped him be selected through that tough time.
The thing is, once Simon Katich was in the side he was scoring runs pretty consistently and I find it tough to drop players when they are doing that. Jaques scored his 94 at the start of the 2006 season and Katich averaged almost 40 for that season and also scored his maiden century, an unbeaten 107*. Dropping a batsman who is performing well isn't good practice at all, and shows know confidence in the player. He wasn't keeping Jaques or Hayden out of the side either, as they both hada poor summer and didn't deserve selection.
And scored alot of runs against him too?Ponting has only been dismissed by Muralitharan once in Test cricket. That doesn't prove an awful lot TBH.