PhoenixFire
International Coach
He had a brilliant ODI series against India last summer, looked a million dollars.
1-et-demi? He's been doing it non-stop in his career, now spanning nearly 4 years. There has never been longer than 8 months when he's stayed in the same position (classifying three and four as one and five and six as likewise). That's not particularly because of bad selection (though ideally I suppose he might've played at five against Australia, but that'd have meant Pietersen debuting at four when he'd batted six in his ODIs the previous winter) but simply the way injuries have forced matters.My one piece of sympathy for Bell is that he spent a year and a half alternating between 6 & 3 in the batting order, which is no way to build a test career.
How long were we wondering it with Flintoff, remind me? At least 2 years.Even so, there's no getting away from the fact that we're lacking a decent return on the time that's been invested in him. Only one test hundred against decent attacks. Way too many failures when the pressure's on. I've read so many pieces in the last year or so along the lines of "now being the time to step up a gear" that you have to wonder whether it will ever happen.
About that, yes. If you take it from the India tour at the end of 2001 until the WI tour at the start of 2004. I suppose that makes it two and a half years: which is a half a year less than where we're currently at with Bell.How long were we wondering it with Flintoff, remind me? At least 2 years.
I was thinking of his fivefor in Barbados (iirc). Granted his batting was substandard on that tour.WI tour of 2004? It was the summer of 2004 at the earliest for mine.
The startpoint was the one I was thinking of though, yeah. Any fool could tell he shouldn't have been anywhere near Test cricket before 2001/02.
After your first Test series is against a side you wouldn't classify as Test quality, where do you go? Is there any chance you can provide me with his career average sans non- Test class teams? I think it would be under 40.No, he shouldn't. But it's not like he's never got any better - not at all, in fact. And it'll take at least another couple of series of this sort of stuff (the sort of stuff we saw at home to India and in New Zealand - nothing else is of relevance) for me to decide I don't want him in the side.
Against Test-class teams his scorebook average as a number three to seven batsman is 39.62. This is pretty meaningless, though. What's of far more relevance is the split: at three and four he averages 33.14 (and this flatters him after a let-off or two in Pakistan inflated it); at five and six (and a few innings where he's been pushed down to seven by nightwatchmen) he averages 49.08. And as I mentioned earlier, he's never had more than 8 months in the same position, he batted five on debut, four in his first serious series (ie, Ashes 2005), three in his next, three and opening in his next, dropped for the next, six in the next, three in the next, six again for the whole summer '07, three again in SL, five in NZ, and five so far this summer. It's ridiculous.After your first Test series is against a side you wouldn't classify as Test quality, where do you go? Is there any chance you can provide me with his career average sans non- Test class teams? I think it would be under 40.
A top order batsman for club doesn't necessarily qualify a top order batsman for country. It often does, but not always. Ian Bell has looked far more settled when he's played in the lower middle order, so I think the justification lies in him being asked to bat outside of what appears to be his Test match comfort zone.Doesn't he bat 3/4 in CC though?
I'm still trying to see whether him moving around is any justification in him underperforming.
Yes, ever since 2002. And, surprise surprise, he underperformed woefully in 2002 and 2003 having been superb in 2001 at five.Doesn't he bat 3/4 in CC though?
It is. Three\four is not his position in Tests, that's patently obvious to me. And I can't blame him too much for not cashing-in every single time he's gone down to five and six because he's been shifted from it so often. However, he has now played 5 Tests in a row there and has managed no innings of much note (pulverised a threadbare attack where Grant Elliot was a key part, and has done nothing besides) so the time must be coming soon, or else his position will start to be questionable.I'm still trying to see whether him moving around is any justification in him underperforming.
Good to see that you aren't 100% on his position either.Yes, ever since 2002. And, surprise surprise, he underperformed woefully in 2002 and 2003 having been superb in 2001 at five.
It is. Three\four is not his position in Tests, that's patently obvious to me. And I can't blame him too much for not cashing-in every single time he's gone down to five and six because he's been shifted from it so often. However, he has now played 5 Tests in a row there and has managed no innings of much note (pulverised a threadbare attack where Grant Elliot was a key part, and has done nothing besides) so the time must be coming soon, or else his position will start to be questionable.
Yeah, but he can't always bat against Bang, Pakistan 2nd's or WI: which, for mine, is where his test match comfort zone appears to lie.A top order batsman for club doesn't necessarily qualify a top order batsman for country. It often does, but not always. Ian Bell has looked far more settled when he's played in the lower middle order, so I think the justification lies in him being asked to bat outside of what appears to be his Test match comfort zone.