fredfertang
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Davies doesn't excite people because he is not particularly quick but his record is excellent - the cupboard may well look pretty bare come July and by then he may have an irrestible claim to selection
2004 - 50 wickets @ 18.76Mark Davies WTF, Hahahaha.
As Nash says, the WI have built some good momentum after New Zealand....Jamaicaobserver
We need to keep momentum going
NASH'S NOTES
BRENDAN NASH
Tuesday, March 03, 2009
It was always going to be difficult to get a win on such a batting-friendly pitch. Yesterday the bowlers tried hard... they gave it everything they had, but it was very hard going. We just didn't take enough wickets early on and the game just drifted after that.
Unfortunately for me I missed a catch and Alastair Cook went on to make a century. I just didn't quite get to it, I was running back into this very strong breeze that was actually blowing back against me.
In the end I actually thought the ball was a little bit closer to me than it was and in the end I had to lunge and dive and couldn't quite get the fingers on it. But that's one of those things. Had that catch been taken, you never know what could happen but that's the kind of thing you need on a day like today (yesterday). You need to be able to take the half chances and put pressure on the batting team.
Having said all that, England batted very well on what was a very good batting pitch and a very good outfield.
I have to say these are probably the best batting conditions I have come across in the Caribbean. It was definitely suited for the batsmen and bowlers had to work very, very hard. The scores tell the story.
Towards the end though, the spinners were getting a little bit out of it.
Now we go to Trinidad 1-0 up with one to play, it is important that we recognise that we can't just say 'okay we can't lose the series so let whatever happen, happen'. We can't do that. We have built some good momentum since New Zealand.
We drew that Test series, we have come back here and won at Sabina Park and now we have drawn twice, so now we have to keep that momentum going.
We need to keep fighting and keep on with the good work.
Maybe he should've thought about that before he decided the ICL was the thing then, shouldn't he?Tino Best: “I don’t want to disrespect Daren Powell, but he is looking a bit tired and that is my spot. It would be great to run in with Fidel [Edwards] again.”
Is he qualified to play or not do we know? Cos if, having left the IPL, he is, surely this gives a lot more players (read Bond) hope of playing international cricket again.Maybe he should've thought about that before he decided the ICL was the thing then, shouldn't he?
Now that is a WTF-ish statement. Swing has nothing to do with the pitch whatsoever (it's completely reliant on the ball) and rather takes the pitch out of the equation.If the pitch swings
There's actually a decent bit of evidence suggesting Davies would be capable of keeping it tight far more effectively than most on a deck offering no seam-movement. He'd not be very likely to bowl many wicket-taking deliveries, but he's probably far less likely to go around the park than most others.He'll be fodder on a flat deck.
Haven't a clue, but I imagine players will have to demonstrate a little while at worst of having defected away from the ICL before being allowed back to international cricket.Is he qualified to play or not do we know? Cos if, having left the IPL, he is, surely this gives a lot more players (read Bond) hope of playing international cricket again.
On Bond - last year he played for Hampshire in the early season and was quality. He was far and away the best bowler I saw play down there all season (albeit, our overseas player was a certain Darren Powell later in the season). I know its a year on, but he still looked handy a year ago and I wouldn't mind betting that NZ would be a much better side for the next 2 years at least.Haven't a clue, but I imagine players will have to demonstrate a little while at worst of having defected away from the ICL before being allowed back to international cricket.
And as I say every single time this issue arises, Bond is pretty old now and is unlikely to have anything much to offer should he play another year or so of ODIs (he'd already decided to retire from Tests before taking the ICL offer).
TBF, Powell played in 2007. In 2008, it was Imran Tahir who replaced Bond, and I bet most were left wishing Imran had simply been signed for the entire campaign, much as Bond's seven-for was surely indeed a fair performance.On Bond - last year he played for Hampshire in the early season and was quality. He was far and away the best bowler I saw play down there all season (albeit, our overseas player was a certain Darren Powell later in the season).
If Bond lasts the next 2 years in a fit state to bowl 10 overs in every ODI NZ play in that time I'll eat my computer.I know its a year on, but he still looked handy a year ago and I wouldn't mind betting that NZ would be a much better side for the next 2 years at least.
Ha oops, I thought there was something not quite right as I was writing that, but cba to check it. Point still stands though, Bond was the best bowler to play down there last season. And I had OD cricket in mind, rather than the CC stuff.TBF, Powell played in 2007. In 2008, it was Imran Tahir who replaced Bond, and I bet most were left wishing Imran had simply been signed for the entire campaign, much as Bond's seven-for was surely indeed a fair performance.
Easy to say when we'll never know.If Bond lasts the next 2 years in a fit state to bowl 10 overs in every ODI NZ play in that time I'll eat my computer.
It's not, no. Atmospheric conditions play a part.Now that is a WTF-ish statement. Swing has nothing to do with the pitch whatsoever (it's completely reliant on the ball) and rather takes the pitch out of the equation.
There is? What?There's actually a decent bit of evidence suggesting Davies would be capable of keeping it tight far more effectively than most on a deck offering no seam-movement. He'd not be very likely to bowl many wicket-taking deliveries, but he's probably far less likely to go around the park than most others.
And let's face it, England don't have so much as one bowler apart from Flintoff who can extract anything from an even, non-seaming deck. If the ball's not doing anything through the air and Flintoff's crocked, England are buggered. The best you can hope for under such eventuality is bowlers who can keep it tight, rather than picking utterly hopeless types like Mahmood in the completely vain hope they'll be able to produce the wicket-taking deliveries.
They play a part, certainly, but a good bowler with a good ball will achieve swing whatever the atmospheric conditions.It's not, no. Atmospheric conditions play a part.
Might've been a good idea to say that then, rather than blurring the issue of swinging balls and seaming pitches.My meaning was apparent anyway, when the ball doesn't swing Davies has little to recommend him.
Look at his figures for Durham on flat pitches. On the seaming, uneven ones he's been economical and lethal; on the even, non-seaming ones he's been economical and unpenetrative. He seems to possess accuracy beyond most bowlers.There is? What?
Sidebottom couldn't keep it tight at Kensington Oval - in case you missed it, he went for 4-an-over. That isn't keeping it tight. At Sabina Park, however, he managed the role well indeed.& playing a swing bowler who can keep it tight worked well with Sidebottom at Bridgetown, eh?
Well when your choice is between hoping you'll pick-up wickets and, well... hoping you'll pick-up wickets, it's not really a surprise that hoping you'll pick-up wickets is the choice which ends-up being made.You seem to be advocating just hoping we'll pick up wickets, was is bizarre even by your Olympian heights of cobblers.
A different option which achieves the same end is no different, really.The only seam-up bowler who got anything out of the pitch was Edwards and that was because he bent his back and bowled with genuine pace. If we'd played Harmison or Khan the result would've almost certainly been the same, but they'd have at least been a different option to turn to.
What the hell is Tino on about... why is the guy speaking up when he knows he can't play for us... although by the way you'd hear him you'd think he could.... Hate to see someone criticising existing players like that, as if you would ever catch an England player say something like that.Tino Best: “I don’t want to disrespect Daren Powell, but he is looking a bit tired and that is my spot. It would be great to run in with Fidel [Edwards] again.”
He writes one after every day's play. They're sponsored by the company he works for. Is a coach for them, an insurance company.As Nash says, the WI have built some good momentum after New Zealand....
Can they take that into the Trinidad Test?
Does this column come out in the Jamaica Observer after every test?
There can obviously be no case where I$C$C ever fines boards for pitches. The ludicrous thing, though, is that people make threatening noises (that's all they can do, they can't actually act on these threats because there's no protocol on which to do so) about pitches which actually offer something (be it lots and lots of turn or lots and lots of seam) while nothing is said about stupidly flat ones.Had a bit of a chuckle at the suggestion of fining teams for flat pitches, how could the ICC just call it a flat pitch when it could've just been good batting or bad bowling, its a fine line. There are some painfully obvious ones in subcontinent, but I don't think the plan would ever really come to fruition...
He'd already made his choice to retire from Test cricket before he went the ICL route though, that's the thing so many people seem to gloss-over. It is a bit of a shame he's not been playing ODIs for the past year-and-a-bit, but even so, it doesn't bother me massively, as he'd have been very unlikely to have played in the 2010/11 World Cup.Bond is an oustanding bowler, such a shame he is not available for international cricket. Some may say he made his choice, although there was an element of backtracking from the NZ cricket board.
Oh, no-one would've been saying that Imran should've been signed from the start of the season - I just bet they wish they had done. There is no conceivable circumstance under which they might, though, save a complete and totally random punt.Hampshire were probably surprised as to the extent of Imran Tahir's performances last season. They could not have imagined for as much success as he brought. Has had a pretty decent season for Titans in the SuperSport series so far also.