Agreed overall, England definately if they didn't have all the injury worries post 2005 Ashes & it must be said some better selections they would have been a real challenge to Australia's position as number one. The batsmen yea have flaws but i'd reckon the full English batting-lineup is better than what many other nations have ATM.
Yes, I agree, but they were never gonna be #1 for any significant period of time, due to the reasons I listed...which you agree with. Also, England's batting line-up isn't better than Australia's...that's what matters in this case. Neither opening partnership (in the case of both teams) is yet established, although as batsmen,
Hayden>>modern-day Vaughan, while
Cook>Jaques, if only because of the age and experience (in Cook's favour, internationally speaking), plus their respective technical faults (Jaques doesn't convince me against quality swing and spin, while Cook has that offstump problem).
Ponting>>>Bell, no question.
Hussey>Pietersen because of temperamental factors. We are also still at the stage where a 'quiet' series by Hussey - i.e India 2007/08 would constitute a relative success on Pietersen's part.
Clarke>Collingwood. Collingwood is still less wasteful than Clarke, but Clarke Mach II has tightened up his psychological outlook (not without lapses, though) to the point where Clarke's superior technique and more substantial talent is too insurmountable for Collingwood to overcome.
Symonds>>Bopara - alhough Symonds (though, as a fan, I'm loathe to say this) still relies on some generosity from the umpires and is thoroughly scratchy at the start of an innings. Still...at least he can turn his fortune into runs, whilst Bopara couldn't even turn
anything into runs in Sri Lanka.
Prior the batsman=modern-day Gilchrist the batsman -
Not talking about their keeping skills (this is a discussion of each side's batting line-up), but Gilchrist's Test batting has been mediocre (save the odd scorcher) for a while, to the point where it no longer looks as enthralling (although it still can be) as it does immature.
Plus our tail blasts theirs out of the water - Hoggard, Anderson and Panesar are all rabbits and while Sidebottom does show admirable fortitude, he is an inferior batsman to Hogg/Lee/Johnson.
Well IMO Flintoff's batting was maturing brilliantly since the Ashes. Yea even though he likes to think of himself as a batting all-rounder i don't think againts real quality attacks he would be a consitent test match #6 he is better off @ 7.
Going back to the maturity factor though, you talk about his game againts the spinners if you look at how he batted in India in 2006 when he was captain he totally changed him game & batted superbly in those conditions.
I never saw that England.vs.India series, so I'll take your word for it. During the 2005 Ashes, his idea of footwork mainly entailed dashing lead-footed down the pitch like a deranged madman.
Jones never was new-ball man though a bit of a one-series waqar younis in a way. A fully-fit Jones though would a have made a HUGE difference to England's bowling attack in sub-continental tours since the Ashes (but thats just wishfull thinking).
Yes, I agree - he would have. Comparing him to Waqar Younis, though, is pretty uninformed, even when talking on a series-by-series basis. Waqar, you see, was known (in his prime, anyway) for delivering reverse-swinging yorkers at express pace. Simon Jones was merely known for his reverse-swing. Also, Waqar was an accomplished new-ball bowler, while Jones patently wasn't.
Yea Gilo was never anything special but as Richard is rightfully saying in the right conditons for most of his career especially in the sub-continent he proved to be very effective.
I don't dispute this. His record in the sub-continent, by his fairly low standards, stands out like a flower in a pile of manure.
But in due course Monty came along had a nice start but his having his first real test as a spinner. But again if all where fit i reckon England in most cases would have adapted an all-pace attack in most conditons.
If they were wise, they would have, yes. Knowing England though, they would've found some excuse to place a spinner in there somewhere. Then again, Perth 2008 exposed the potential dangers of having an all-pace attack on a supposedly suitable pitch.
Yea fingers are definately crossed that England haven't seen the last of Trescothick IMO. I'd be devasted since he clearly has an awful lot yet to offer England in both forms of the game.
Given his ability to cash in on poor bowling attacks and his relative (but overstated) competence against spin, he may still have a lot to offer England. Be warned, though - he also has a lot to offer bowlers who can bowl accurate swing and seam-up and also to competent fielders. That is why I don't really rate him that highly.
On the highlighted part I know people have there views about Anderson on how he has lost that intial quality that made him such as hit when he first arrived on the international scene which is true. But i based on what i've seen of him last summer vs India he was very good on overall some pretty flat pitches, he won't ever be a world beater but he is still one of better bowlers in England one full-fit.
I've never rated Anderson as a Test bowler, TBH, although he has at times been mishandled by England (i.e: playing when he shouldn't have ala Johannesburg 2005). Still, whenever I've seen him, he's been too erratic and too adventurous in his pursuit of swing - he's also gone for 4+ RPO on a disturbingly frequent basis (42% of the time) as a result. Of course he's significantly more effective when he's fully fit - what bowler isn't?
Also, about that series in England, he was also outbowled by Zaheer Khan (who's improved significantly, although still lacking the consistency needed for him to truly kick on) and RP Singh (a
very overrated swing bowler who becomes cannon fodder when not swinging the ball - partially due to an over-reliance on favourable conditions and a somewhat erratic line-and-length).
On the rest of them well based on what i saw of Key in the past i have my doubts of him againts top-quality bowling, Tremlett would make a good test match bowler IMO, Broad also has great potential to be something good but whether he will be test match material when the Ashes arrives is the question, Bopara lets just say he still has a lot of work to do but a good talent no doubt.
Key has not proved himself against anything other than weak bowling line-ups. Take out his 221 (?) against WI (a decent knock in the face of ordinary bowling by Tino Best, Omari Banks and friends, who didn't respond adequtely to Strauss/Key milking them or hitting over the top) and he averages just 23. I agree on Broad and Bopara (albeit on an instinctual basis), although neither has done much at international level. Like I said, Tremlett had better be more effective than he was in 2005; if he isn't, I don't think he will be.
Word out, could be a series for the bowlers then...
Maybe, maybe...
Would think he would, i see his situtation as a temporary thing unlike Trescothick where i'm just holding out hope but with inner doubt.
Yeah, Tait is still young, unlike Trescothick.
Don't get why people don't dig Hodge's flow TBH. I really didn't see anything wrong with him vs SA in 2005/06.
Hmm...well aside from his 203*, which was a good, but not necessarily chanceless knock on a placid pitch (but admittedly against a decent attack), his next highest score was just 41. In fact, most of his scores were between 15-41, indicating a relative inability to kick on once he gets a start.
People talk about his technique againts high quality quicks etc but you compare him to another Lehmann another prolific domestic batsmen in Australia & well his technique againts pace IMO was far worst than hodge.
No...I was talking about his technique against the ball moving away from him, which can be suspect at times (and also against decent spin). Bowlers as diverse as Dilhara Fernando and Shaun Pollock have picked up on this, dismissing him in the slips after driving at wide, full, moving deliveries. His technique against pace without movement is fine, as his 203* shows.
As for Darren Lehmann, while he was probably inferior against sheer pace to Hodge, he was a far better player of spin (maybe not swing, given his tendency to shuffle across the crease). Besides, Lehmann and Hodge played international cricket in different times and both were selected for different purposes.
Hodge's axing for the SA tour was just a case of the selectors wanting to make up for their absolute shocking decision to drop Martyn after the Ashes defeat since they wanted him for the Ashes re-match.
Look, I admit that dropping him was very harsh (though not as harsh as may be first apparent), even though Damien Martyn's selection did turn out to be inspired in the short-term.
Yea Katich failed in the Ashes due to the swing, can't say whether he has improved his game to compat it if he gets a chance again. But he will definately be in the reckoning given his recent domestic form.
I would pick him in conditions where he has been a proven success (i.e: India and Sri Lanka) not places where he's a proven failure (i.e: England), if at all.
I agree on Rogers i caught that flaw on his debut that why i have my doubts whether he can transform his domestic form unto the test level cause if people reckoned Hayden technique was bad againts the moving ball & it took him a potential career ending ashes series (which was compounded by the fact that he was in a year long slump between Bangalore 2004 to Trent Bridge 2005) to correct i would say 70% of his flaws it would be tough work for Rogers.
Look, I'm as sceptical about Rogers as you are. He's not gonna be anything other than a pale successor to Hayden's throne unless he rectifies that, IMO.
Don't know much about Hughes but other Australians who have been seeing him seem to think highly of him, but even so i reckon even if he has a superb domestic season next time around i think the Ashes would be a bit too soon for him.
Yes, so why bother bringing his name up?
Forgot Divenuto retired the other day, what your position on Dighton as a possible opener of do you think he is just short of international quality.
I didn't realise Dighton was an opener - I always thought of him as a middle-order batsman. So, probably not suitable.
Richard said:
Loss? Y'mean 2-2 draw? Should have been a loss, sure (maybe even a 5-0 one if the stars had aligned in South Africa's favour) but it was actually a 2-2 draw, which really rather flattered us.
Yes, but I was talking on a match-by-match basis. Vaughan lifted the team to that 2-2 margin after spluttering to a heavy defeat the game before.
That's what I meant. I know, too, that they were lucky to draw that series
Yeah, I know. I did, and I do believe it. No fingerspinner has the ability to turn the ball significantly without something in the surface to allow him to. And while turn isn't all there is to spin-bowling, if the ball doesn't turn no spinner offers a great deal.
I don't think I ever said that a fingerspinner didn't need the help of the pitch to turn the ball a noticable distance. There is certainly truth in what you're saying - spinners
don't offer as much on unfavourable pitches, obviously - but quality off-spinners and leg-spinners will still make batsmen cautious by virtue of flight, drift and variation even if the pitch lacks turn. Thus, they are still in with a chance to pick up wickets - or give them to bowlers who benefit more under those conditions by building pressure. So saying that they don't offer a great deal seems a little harsh.
Look, you're going to have to get used occasionally to the fact I say stuff - or, at least, appear to say stuff - that isn't exactly what I mean. You seem, vis-a-vis Best case, to have already grasped as such.
Doesn't mean that I have to like it, though. That trait seems to be unintentionally misleading at best and disingenuous at worst - plus it has already forced you to rectify your statements a lot, which can make you look like pandering if you do it too much.
His deformed wrist and unusual accuracy indeed makes him one of a kind. He is like no other wristspinner and certainly like no fingerspinner.
Not to be rude, but duh.
He would still consider himself an offspinner regardless.
I've always been somewhat dubious about this one - not because it wasn't an excellent performance, but because a few odd stories seem to be told about the wicket. That pitch definately had plenty in it for both seam and spin (some sort of rough parrallell would be Mumbai 2004\05). Warne, who had been excellent for most of the summer (APU), had an off-day, and Tufnell had one of his very best.
I don't think that the wicket would have been as bad as Mumbai 2004. That wicket was one of the
worst I've ever seen. After the first few hours, it gave absolutely no help to seamers (before that, it did) and way,
way too much to spinners (to the point where Michael Clarke, a part-timer who utilises flight better than turn, turned the ball square and absolutely cleaned up). Besides, the scores in Mumbai 2004 were even lower than those at The Oval 1997. Still, you said that it was merely a
rough parallel, so I'll lay off.
Besides, we both agree that The Oval wicket was one on which quality seamers made hay, right?
You see, this "Giles = flat and defensive" stuff has always been a bugbear of mine, too. Not only did Giles demonstrate that over-the-wicket, bowled well, can be an attacking ploy on a turning surface, but he also did (especially earlier on in his Test career) bowl around-the-wicket plenty. What's more, I've seen Giles beat countless batsmen with loop and dip. As many as Tufnell or MSP over equivalent timescales? No. But plenty enough to suggest he had far more skill with flight than many give him credit for. As I've said - Tufnell's flight skills were excellent, MSP's generally very good, Giles' merely pretty good. I don't think Tufnell was "much better" in that department than Giles. Tufnell and MSP, of course, are natural spinners; Giles was a seamer until the age of 17. To even attain the skills of flight he did achieve was a phenominal effort (and yeah, I realise this doesn't actually impact on who's better, but I wonder how many people are truly aware of it).
Well, for the most part, Giles did = 'flat and defensive', for various reasons, not all of which were really his fault. That's why you'll have that bugbear for a long time.
I do, however, agree that he was much more effective on favourable subcontinental turners than he was elsewhere. Sadly, I'm too young to remember him bowling around-the-wicket on a regular basis. I
did see him do it against Australia a couple of times in Tests and one-dayers, but he usually looked no more threatening when he did. I also never said that Giles
never beat batsmen in the flight. I just don't think he did it nearly as often as he should have. As you admit, Tufnell had him in the department and so do many other international finger-spinners.
Surprisingly, though, I've always seen Monty as a bowler with a flattish trajectory whose flighted ball was one of his variations. I think Monty>Giles for other reasons, which I laid out earlier.
I'm aware that Giles was a seamer once, but I'm not taking that into account. This is simply because one, using that line of reasoning, could argue that Brad Hogg is a superior Test bowler to Stuart MacGill because Hogg didn't take up wrist-spin seriously until he was around 23 while MacGill was playing around with it when he was younger than that. I'm not saying that you went by that logic though, because you have more intelligence than that.