Pitch was unfit for play, as evidenced by the nice old crack posted above.I don't know the details.
Please explain.
Harare- Andy Flower 142 and 199* v. South Africa, 2001What do you think was the best performance from each venue.
Help me fill in this list . . . (hope I've got them all)
Harare
Bulawayo
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Why do you think that is better than Gilchrist's 149?Richard said:Bellerive Oval, Hobart - just has to be Kumar Sangakkara, 192, 2007/08
Dicko to come out with a less than convincing case for Sangakkara's being significantly better rather than just admit that he forgot about Gilly.Why do you think that is better than Gilchrist's 149?
http://www.howstat.com.au/cricket/Statistics/Matches/MatchScorecard.asp?MatchCode=1484
Could be that Langer was not given a plumb lbw, and hence the match doesnt qualify under the General Theory of First Chance Averages (GTFCA)Why do you think that is better than Gilchrist's 149?
http://www.howstat.com.au/cricket/Statistics/Matches/MatchScorecard.asp?MatchCode=1484
Tests only, methinks.For the MCG, Sober's effort for the RoW?
I didn't exactly forget about the Langer-Gilchrist partnership - I can't be expected to remember every game played at the ground.Dicko to come out with a less than convincing case for Sangakkara's being significantly better rather than just admit that he forgot about Gilly.Why do you think that is better than Gilchrist's 149?
http://www.howstat.com.au/cricket/Statistics/Matches/MatchScorecard.asp?MatchCode=1484
You heard it here first.
What's Langer's non-lbw got to do with the Gilchrist innings? Unless it was Gilchrist who got the let-off, the fact that there was one is irrelevant.Could be that Langer was not given a plumb lbw, and hence the match doesnt qualify under the General Theory of First Chance Averages (GTFCA)
Gilly might have run out of partners.What's Langer's non-lbw got to do with the Gilchrist innings? Unless it was Gilchrist who got the let-off, the fact that there was one is irrelevant.
AWTA. An awesome innings by Gooch.Fair point. I guess it could be debated.
Bothams effort is unlikely to be replicated anytime soon and was an innings for the ages. Though it was relatively pressure free and Willis made a contribution. I dont want to sound like Im down playing it as it was story book stuff but there was an element of nothing to lose.
Gooch stood and took on the might of the West Indian attack on a track that seamed all over. Noone else (on either team) was capable of looking settled.
It was not a risky innings or a gamble but a dominant professional innings by someone at the peak of their game.
Ive never sen an innings better than the one by Gooch. Certainly there is not 1 every year.
The thing about Gilchrist's though, is that not only was it a match-winning knock, but it couldn't have been played by anyone else. Had it been a world-class batsman like Rahul Dravid or even Sachin Tendulkar they would've been very likely to run out of partners. 149 off 162 balls, in the fourth innings of a test match to almost single-handedly win the match and chase a near-impossible target, is incredible at the best of times. When you add in the fact that he had to score as quickly or his innings would've been in vain, it's difficult to conceive of a better innings.I didn't exactly forget about the Langer-Gilchrist partnership - I can't be expected to remember every game played at the ground.
However, on balance I would probably say Sangakkara's innings was the better one. It didn't and never was going to lead to victory, no, but nor would you have thought Gilchrist's was going to when it started either.
I watched full highlights of the Sangakkara knock and have only seen odds-and-sodds from the Langer-Gilchrist stand though, so that clearly gives Sangakkara an advantage to my consideration. Sangakkara just pretty much never looked like getting out.
Meh, it was test in every way that matters.Richard said:Tests only, methinks