Woodster
International Captain
None more so than if the finest all-rounder in ODI cricket is missing, in Freddie.Injuries are a fact of life in this sport but when it takes away a player like Oram, the side is severely deflated.
None more so than if the finest all-rounder in ODI cricket is missing, in Freddie.Injuries are a fact of life in this sport but when it takes away a player like Oram, the side is severely deflated.
As I say, I'd consider any Irishman qualified to play for this team. But apparently you can use twelfth-men from anywhere as long as you're confident they'll do their best for you.What if he were to take a catch? Would you not say it's immoral for England to be using someone who isn't even qualified to play for them in a role, however small, that could possibly influence the outcome of the match?
I honestly think Mascarenhas would do as well in the Powerplays against good batting as Broad or Tremlett or Anderson would.If you field a bowling attack full of Mascarenhas type bowlers, then, imo, they are likely to get smashed probably during the powerplays and again at the end of the innings as it's likely they will have plenty of wickets in the shed, by working the ball round in the middle overs after a flying start.
By the same theory, if an attack consisted purely of wicket-taking bowlers, then more boundaries than you may expect will be leaked in the middle section of the game, as well as the usual flurry early and in the last 10, dependent on how many wickets have been lost or if you have bowled the side out.
My point is you need to select a combination of such bowlers in order to get the best out of them. You can be a good ODI bowler if you fit into either of these two categories.
Well, there you go, Porterfield takes a catch.What if he were to take a catch? Would you not say it's immoral for England to be using someone who isn't even qualified to play for them in a role, however small, that could possibly influence the outcome of the match?
Apparently England could employ Jonty Rhodes if he consented and they thought he'd do his best for them.Isn't it ironic that New Zealand can't select a player that would be good for cricket in general like Shane Bond, or to lesser extents Lou Vincent and Hamish Marshall, but England can employ Ireland players to field for them?
You aren't the law.As I say, I'd consider any Irishman qualified to play for this team.
Pretty ridiculous law then TBH, fielding is just as much a part of the game as batting and bowling are...so to allow a non-Englishman, by the regulations apparently, to play a part in assisting the team on the field, is crazy IMO.Apparently England could employ Jonty Rhodes if he consented and they thought he'd do his best for them.
The batsman coming in after a wicket falls will be reluctant to go after a bad ball incase they screw it up and get out.Not really. If the bowling continues to be wayward, it'll continue to get smashed. That hasn't been the case today, it's been in the same areas throughout, the scoring-rate has been restricted throughout, and the wickets have come.
Of course. And to bowl economically too, naturally.
They're hardly remotely analogous TBH. As I say, I accept that some people, Australians especially, don't like it, but that's the way I'd do things. If you value each ODI, then you'd pick the best team to try and win it. But I don't. The only ODI results I care about are those in World Cups, and I want to use every ODI outside them to try and build a team for the ODI where results matter to me.
However, a bowler is a bowler. If a good one-day bowler has to be a wicket-taker to you, that's an attitude I find baffling. It makes no sense to me. Because a one-day game lasts 50 overs only, and if you bowl economically you'll restrict the total. And if you keep bowling economically, wickets will fall to boot (not that it matters whether they do or don't). Equally, you can restrict the total by bowling a side out in 30 overs, and that's fair enough too if you can do it.
What? They shouldn't need splitting up. They aren't the same country.Does seem a little odd yes. As I say though, the fact that Irishmen are used for England without an eyelid batted just says to me how absurd it is that I$C$C have tried to split them up.
I'm not sure Mascarenhas would be as effective with the new ball in powerplay situations as Broad, Tremlett and at times Anderson against good batsmen. I agree that wayward bowlers will get smashed, that is no revelation, but surely you can be a wicket-taking bowler without being wayward ?? The very best bowlers do do both.I honestly think Mascarenhas would do as well in the Powerplays against good batting as Broad or Tremlett or Anderson would.
Wayward bowlers will likely get smashed full-stop, Powerplays or no Powerplays. But it doesn't have to be a case of wicket-taking vs economical. The best bowlers do both.
Really? That might've been true 25 years ago, but I'd say most evidence suggests it isn't any more. Bad balls generally get smashed even if 2 wickets have fallen the previous over.The batsman coming in after a wicket falls will be reluctant to go after a bad ball incase they screw it up and get out.
None, based on that premise. Because there's no-one currently in the frame who's not got an excellent chance of being around in 2011. There's plenty I'd make because of other things, but as I say - by-and-large the England selectors have at least tended to go along the same lines as me on this matter.So, given you'd rather England build for a ODI than try and win matches up until that point, what changes would you make? And we'll pretend we're in a world of make believe where injuries don't come in to it or form.
For me, unless a bowler can take bagfuls of top-order wickets (none of this getting wickets at the death stuff), he must bowl with a decent economy-rate to be all that good and worth a place. Any bowler who doesn't have an incredibly low strike-rate cannot be a front-line ODI bowler IMO.A bowler is a bowler and is there to do a number of things.
- Take wickets
- Keep the run rate down
- Adapt to the match situation.
Let's take for instance New Zealand's bowling attack:
Mills - his job is to take wickets, keep it tight
Southee - as above
Mason - as above
Vettori - keep it tight, and take wickets
Elliott (Oram) - see above.
If a wicket taking bowler is being tonked on an unfriendly pitch he should then try and adapt his game to slowing down the run rate.
I don't think Mascarenhas is a front-line bowler.
Nor are Jamaica and Barbados. Doesn't mean they can't play cricket together. I've no truck with England and Ireland (and Scotland and Wales) playing cricket as one entity, as I've said many times, and as I've no desire to get into again.What? They shouldn't need splitting up. They aren't the same country.