scorpiogal
U19 Debutant
eewwI think you're confusing 'troubled' shoulder with 'tasteless' shoulder;
eewwI think you're confusing 'troubled' shoulder with 'tasteless' shoulder;
Stand corrected. So he had his workload restricted, was forced to rest, no operations, there's just a bit of rehab...
That is simply not true. I'm not too bothered but Johnson is not regularly over 150kph nor is Siddle regularly over 145kph.It would actually be
1. Johnson - regular 150
2. Siddle - regular 145-150
3. Lee - very rare that he gets above 145
Tait is the quickest in the world but only for a few balls and not a test option
That is simply not true. I'm not too bothered but Johnson is not regularly over 150kph nor is Siddle regularly over 145kph.
Aye, although Johnson's as fast as anyone playing international cricket at the moment. He's not regularly over 150kph because noone is (it's just an example of that strange habit people have of exaggerating everyone's average speeds). But in South Africa he banged the ball down pretty damn fast. The spell where he injured Smith and Kallis had everything at once- express pace, extravagant bounce, movement both ways, nagging accuracy and a very mean streak.That is simply not true. I'm not too bothered but Johnson is not regularly over 150kph nor is Siddle regularly over 145kph.
Couple of things- i don't see why Lee should be below Stuey Clark in the pecking order considering he's taken more wickets in every series he's played since the last Ashes. And Brett Lee was absolutely not at his peak last time he visited England- his peak was about two and a half years later in the Australian summer of 07/08.White ball, meaningless match = B Lee bowling quick
Let me know when he does it in a test match because that's what the others do
BTW, I dont wish him any harm but he's 4th choice at best and his record in England WHEN HE WAS AT HIS PEAK says he shouldnt even be that
Yeah I agree, he was nowhere near his peak in the last Ashes series in England. He only started to perform consistently well once McGrath was gone.Couple of things- i don't see why Lee should be below Stuey Clark in the pecking order considering he's taken more wickets in every series he's played since the last Ashes. And Brett Lee was absolutely not at his peak last time he visited England- his peak was about two and a half years later in the Australian summer of 07/08.
Yeah I'd choose Clark too, I was just too lazy to highlight which part of the post I was agreeing with. I'd back Clark to be more effective on the English wickets with his length and movement than Lee. And would also back his second and third spells to be better.That's true, but if you had to choose one of them to bowl in tests in England this series, who would you choose? I'd take Clark, principally because Lee's form on two tours of England has been gash, and Clark's style of bowling, in particular his natural length, seems more suited to England than Lee.
Not a bad problem to have though .
Well, he goes for less runs. I'd also say he's more likely to take a wicket given the areas he generally bowls. If Lee's bowling well then obviously he's going to be a danger. I'd just have more faith in Clark than Lee when they're both coming back from injury.Tough call. I'd leave it until nearer the time to decide. Clark's a more defensive bowler too, so it depends on who else is in the side. If- god forbid- Mitchell Johnson was injured, I'd have Lee replacing him rather than Clark (there'd probably be space for both, but I'm being hypothetical).
I don't know. Lee is arguably on of the fittest fast bowlers you are ever likely to see. I was honestly expecting his pace to be bearly hitting the 145 after his injury return & too see him bowling this sharply in the IPL is brilliant.Personally, if he thinks at his age he's going to get back to hitting the mid-150s consistently, he's kidding himself.
What's more, he dialled back his pace a bit in the past few years and was loads better, and got some useful swing at lower revs.
I don't Lee ATS would be making his pace a priority. He knows he has to work himself back into form @ test level especially. Him having his pace back is key.If he goes to England all excited about his pace, and worrying about that, then we're going to be back to 2001 imo.
Yeah I think "Clark's a better defensive option than Lee" is a more accurate way of putting it than "Clark's a more defensive option than Lee". Clark's techniques for attack and defence are intermingled; Lee's techniques for attack are the very anthesis of defence. That means Clark can do both or one (defence only) depending on various factors; Lee can essentially only do one (attack only).Well, he goes for less runs. I'd also say he's more likely to take a wicket given the areas he generally bowls. If Lee's bowling well then obviously he's going to be a danger. I'd just have more faith in Clark than Lee when they're both coming back from injury.Tough call. I'd leave it until nearer the time to decide. Clark's a more defensive bowler too, so it depends on who else is in the side. If- god forbid- Mitchell Johnson was injured, I'd have Lee replacing him rather than Clark (there'd probably be space for both, but I'm being hypothetical).
Given Clark's ability to pick up a wicket whenever he was brought on by Ponting up until his tour of India I don't think he's too defensive an option. If you replaced Johnson with Clark then you pick another bowler who has the ability to pick up important wickets. Assuming Clark bowls in a similar way to how he bowled prior to his injury.
Hope you're right mate.I don't know. Lee is arguably on of the fittest fast bowlers you are ever likely to see. I was honestly expecting his pace to be bearly hitting the 145 after his injury return & too see him bowling this sharply in the IPL is brilliant.
I think he can still maintain high pace for a least another year..
Did he really?. I'd say he added variation along with his high pace between WI 05 to IND WI 08.
I don't Lee ATS would be making his pace a priority. He knows he has to work himself back into form @ test level especially. Him having his pace back is key.
Firstly, Clark is far more suited to English conditions than Lee and his inclusion gives the attack more balanceCouple of things- i don't see why Lee should be below Stuey Clark in the pecking order considering he's taken more wickets in every series he's played since the last Ashes. And Brett Lee was absolutely not at his peak last time he visited England- his peak was about two and a half years later in the Australian summer of 07/08.
Give me a tall, accurate, seam bowler over a guy that relies on pace every day of the week in England (and especially when you have other guys in the team who can act as the enforcer if required).Firstly, Clark is far more suited to English conditions than Lee and his inclusion gives the attack more balance.
Disagree. Lee in ODI's in his career has always be superb, so that ODI form meant nothing. Before the Ashes his ODI form of 2004 couldn't get Kasper out of the side.Secondly, skill-wise, Lee was pretty much at his peak in 2005 - he had been sensational for quite a long time in ODIs with high pace, accuracy and swing. What he didnt have until 2007 was any luck whatsoever.
Lee in SA 07 in conditions very similar to England, was superb & did all of the things you suggested here.Unfortunately, his bowling is generally less effective in English conditions because he:
a. is very low at the point of delivery so there's little bounce to be had in generally softer conditions;
b. generally doesnt seam it;
c. doesnt have a great change of pace; and
d. has rarely swung it.
Put all those things together and you have a bowler who'll have more bad days than good in that country
I can only disagree, Brett Lee swings the ball regularly, seams it when conditions allow and has developed a good slower ball in the past couple of years (if you remember, he nailed Dravid with it for the first wicket of the Aus-India series of last December). A lack of bounce isn't a problem any more than it is for Dale Steyn.Firstly, Clark is far more suited to English conditions than Lee and his inclusion gives the attack more balance
Give me a tall, accurate, seam bowler over a guy that relies on pace every day of the week in England (and especially when you have other guys in the team who can act as the enforcer if required)
Secondly, skill-wise, Lee was pretty much at his peak in 2005 - he had been sensational for quite a long time in ODIs with high pace, accuracy and swing. What he didnt have until 2007 was any luck whatsoever.
Unfortunately, his bowling is generally less effective in English conditions because he:
a. is very low at the point of delivery so there's little bounce to be had in generally softer conditions;
b. generally doesnt seam it;
c. doesnt have a great change of pace; and
d. has rarely swung it.
Put all those things together and you have a bowler who'll have more bad days than good in that country
Again, i can only disagree. Saying "Clark is a far better bowler than Lee" just doesn't explain why Lee's taken more wickets than him in every single series they've played together since the last Ashes. Even if you were to conclude that Clark is better than him anyway- not unreasonable- i still think your mind is holding Lee's previous incarnations against him to too great an extent.Yeah I think "Clark's a better defensive option than Lee" is a more accurate way of putting it than "Clark's a more defensive option than Lee". Clark's techniques for attack and defence are intermingled; Lee's techniques for attack are the very anthesis of defence. That means Clark can do both or one (defence only) depending on various factors; Lee can essentially only do one (attack only).
Clark is simply a far better bowler than Lee. There's no question in my mind that I'd have Clark under all circumstances other than Lee bowling as he did in 2007/08 (which I think is very unlikely to be repeated, though you'd be a fool to rule it out).