There are plenty of areas MSP could improve upon, yet he hasn't. The subtle changes of pace, trajectory in his delivery and the angle of which he bowls on the crease. These are not as difficult skills as perfecting a doosra, but there appears very little variety in his bowling. A good long coaching session with one Daniel Vettori would not go amiss.MSP, well, as I said early in his career, anyone who expected him to get much better was going to be disappointed. He was just an unusually developed 24-year-old. There was always precious little he had remaining to do and those who overestimated his potential are now paying the price.
he would find bedi some where near mohali stadium if he wantThere are plenty of areas MSP could improve upon, yet he hasn't. The subtle changes of pace, trajectory in his delivery and the angle of which he bowls on the crease. These are not as difficult skills as perfecting a doosra, but there appears very little variety in his bowling. A good long coaching session with one Daniel Vettori would not go amiss.
Vaas hasn't played for months, so I don't really know.Do you still think Vaas>Zaheer atm?
Whatever, he can't be lucky all this time without some effort from himself.TBF, 3 of them were lucky timing - he happened to be standing-in in a match that India won.
This was the first time he's actually been captain and captained to victory, as it were. Nonetheless, to have your first match as captain as one like this is not bad, at all.
A composite XI currently would be something like this:A gutsy performance by England in making it a competitive test, albeit winning an important toss. With the greatest respect, they are clearly an inferior side to India in tests or ODIs these days if you look at the lineups. I mean hypothetically how many English players would actually make the Indian test side, only Pietersen & Flintoff would be dead-certs IMO & possibly Strauss.
Anyways, great test non-the-less & fantastic to see Tendulkar get his hundred.
I'm sure he does. The worrying aspect is you hear of the hours he spends with people like Vettori talking about spin bowling, yet there is no improvement made. His pace is the same wherever he bowls, the commentators were suggesting that he naturally bowls the ball a little quicker than most spinners, that is fair enough, but it does not mean to say he can't experiment with the odd one or two tossed up.he would find bedi some where near mohali stadium if he want
All well and good if you ignore the fact that he was sensational last time England were in India.but despite some saying Anderson has improved, I honestly don't think he's up to it when things get tough - like a 10 kph slower version of Lee in India.
All of this would certainly help him on pitches like this, but Harbhajan Singh (who is perfectly good in all those areas) still did not-that-much on it.There are plenty of areas MSP could improve upon, yet he hasn't. The subtle changes of pace, trajectory in his delivery and the angle of which he bowls on the crease. These are not as difficult skills as perfecting a doosra, but there appears very little variety in his bowling. A good long coaching session with one Daniel Vettori would not go amiss.
For a whole 1 Test?All well and good if you ignore the fact that he was sensational last time England were in India.
Harsh on Gambhir but probably correct nonetheless.A composite XI currently would be something like this:
Strauss
Sehwag
Pietersen
Tendulkar
Laxman
Collingwood
Dhoni
Flintoff
Zaheer Khan
Harbhajan Singh
Ishant Sharma
TBH, I don't think Pietersen is a surety in the Indian team, given India play atleast 60% of her matches in subcontinent.A gutsy performance by England in making it a competitive test, albeit winning an important toss. With the greatest respect, they are clearly an inferior side to India in tests or ODIs these days if you look at the lineups. I mean hypothetically how many English players would actually make the Indian test side, only Pietersen & Flintoff would be dead-certs IMO & possibly Strauss.
Anyways, great test non-the-less & fantastic to see Tendulkar get his hundred.
Yup, I'd buy that, but certainly no more than 4 of themA composite XI currently would be something like this:
Strauss
Sehwag
Pietersen
Tendulkar
Laxman
Collingwood
Dhoni
Flintoff
Zaheer Khan
Harbhajan Singh
Ishant Sharma
Corrected.A composite XI currently would be something like this:
Strauss
Sehwag
Gambhir
Tendulkar
Laxman
Collingwood
Dhoni
Flintoff
Zaheer Khan
Harbhajan Singh
Ishant Sharma
Strauss > Gambhir IMO. No question about that.Harsh on Gambhir but probably correct nonetheless.
Possibly, but I think Gautam has a lot upside yet. Will be interesting to see in a few years time what they've done.Strauss > Gambhir IMO. No question about that.
Dreadful as Pietersen was in this current game, I don't think he's done enough of late to fall below Gambhir, who has still only established himself as a Test player very recently.Corrected.
Disagree with that. It is even more important to have variety on pitches that are not offering as much spin. To use Vettori as an example once more, his deception in flight is vital when he is not the biggest turner of the ball, and the ability to bowl a ball 10kph quicker without any discernible change in action is a skill that would benefit MSP on any track.All of this would certainly help him on pitches like this, but Harbhajan Singh (who is perfectly good in all those areas) still did not-that-much on it.
What's more, none of the above improvements would help him much on surfaces that turn less than this one did.