tooextracool said:
I dont think hes rated him, but unless Im mistaken Ive never heard him say drop Collingwood and get Shah in the side before this test.
He's said it ad nausium. He'd say it before every Test but for the repetitive nature of it. Richard to confirm, but if he was selecting the team for this Test, Shah would be in for Collingwood.
As I said though, I don't have problems with
his stance on it, because he's never rated Collingwood and believed his run of "bad form" to be an accurate indication of his ability at Test level rather than a blip. I disagree with that assessment but I can respect it as a reason for wanting someone dropped.
tooextracool said:
There is no way of knowing how well someone like Shah or Key would do at the international level
Which is precisely why someone who has proven they can do it in the past should be persisted with through bad patches of form.
tooextracool said:
AFAIC if a team is not performing, and its safe to say that our batting has not been performing for a long time now, then changes have to be made. You cant keep going in with the same XI while taking beating after beating after beating, especially when there is no way of knowing if there is someone better in domestic cricket or not.
There's a difference between being in poor form and not being good enough, is my point. I just wanted the Collingwood criticisers to "man-up" if you will and say he's not good enough rather than hide behind "he's had a rough patch of form" or "we need to send him back to domestic cricket so he can regain his confidence" as the latter two are
not grounds to drop someone AFAIC, regardless of how the team is performing as a unit. South Africa are a good team and should beat England regardless of what team England put out IMO - that should be remembered. If you believe in someone's
ability (not form) at Test level, they should be persisted with through a rough patch as form is intrinsically cyclical. For mine, a proven Test batsman in dubious form is always going to have more chance of succeeding over five Test matches than an excellent-but-not-earthshattering domestic batsman in good form who is unproven at Test level. Unless the former shows evidence of true decline (which IMO Collingwood has not) he should not be dropped.