Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
The thing is, though, that often applies. Often, you'd think the batsmen should be good enough to score lots against the bowling. But a great many batsmen become considerably lesser in the sitution in question, because they feel under huge pressure when chasing a substantial total.Again I disagree, and I did provide my rationale as to why in that previous post. Pretty much the for the same reasons I picked England as favorites to chase 294 against New Zealand at Manchester earlier this year in the 4th dig (even though they were dismissed for around 200 in the 1st innings) & picked New Zealand as favorites against Bangladesh chasing 317 to win in the last innings in Oct. I just didn't think the English bowlers were good enough to bowl India out cheaply for a 2nd time in those conditions.
That as much as the fact that most pitches deteriorate (to varying degrees) is as important as that in terms of why such massive fourth-innings' are so rare.
It's very rare to see batsmen either negate or not feel the usual degree of pressure chasing such a large total. And it's to Tendulkar and Yuvraj (less so Sehwag's) credit for not doing.