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*Official* Second Test at Lords

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I'll still be absolutely shocked if there's anything other than a draw in this game. If England lose their last four wickets for less than 100 runs on this road they'll be disappointed, and 450 is surely enough to save a game on a pitch that's not getting any better for bowlers. That's before even taking into account inevitable lost play.

England's only hope of victory is some serious cloud cover, probably tomorrow.
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
I don't agree with this. Cook was beaten for pace, which can happen when you bowl 90mph+, even if inaccurately. Bopara's was a fantastic piece of setting up, Hilfenhaus knows every ball won't swing so you've got to give him credit when a batsman gets out playing for it. KP and Prior got awesome balls, and Flintoff's was a pretty decent one too. Only Collingwood threw his wicket away.

Australia have been reasonable today. Too many four-balls, especially from Midge, but plenty of wicket-taking deliveries too.
Nah, you virtually never see good batsmen being beaten for pace, not unless it's 97-98mph and on a deck with moderate (not neccessarily out-and-out quick) speed and bounce. Cook was simply startled by a very rare straight ball, which can indeed happen when a bowler is spraying it so hopelessly. It's not a good tactic nor good bowling, but it is a not-especially-unusual means of wickets falling - and a gut-wrenchingly annoying one at that. And although Hilfenhaus knows every ball won't swing, you still see plenty of straight balls not taking wickets and Bopara's could easily have been another - in fact was more likely to be than to take the wicket. It's disappointing every time it happens, even though it is indeed inevitable from time to time and certainly not undeserved as such.

Australia have provided sporadic threat and bowled one hell of a lot of nonsense. The worst sort of bowling to face-up to, because you've got such a good chance of doing worse than you know you should've done.
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
450 is surely enough to save a game on a pitch that's not getting any better for bowlers.
That's what we got at SWALEC. And England only just saved it.

Now, whether we can expect Australia to bat as well as they did then, England to bowl as poorly, or England to bat as poorly as they did second-innings is a moot question and the answer may well be "no"... but as a sensibly-pessimistic England supporter you can hardly blame one for answering "yes".

The fact that there's lots of time (maybe a full day?) scheduled to be lost tomorrow may indeed tip the balance firmly toward draw, but with a full game's play 450 would put England behind the eight-ball.
 
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That's what we got at SWALEC. And England only just saved it.

Now, whether we can expect Australia to bat as well as they did then, England to bowl as poorly, or England to bat as poorly as they did second-innings is a moot question and the answer may well be "no"... but as a sensibly-pessimistic England supporter you can hardly blame one for answering "yes".

The fact that there's lots of time (maybe a full day?) scheduled to be lost tomorrow may indeed tip the balance firmly toward draw, but with a full game's play 450 would put England behind the eight-ball.
The pitch at Swalec was getting a lot better for bowlers as the game progressed though. This pitch is much flatter and not so painfully slow, so runs should be pretty easy to come by. But it's not going to get any harder to bat on- if England ought to be capable of scoring 450 now, they also ought to be capable of doing so in the third innings, and Australia should do even better. In Cardiff, by comparison, 500 was a par score in the first innings and about 250 was a par score in the last.
 

vic_orthdox

Global Moderator
Didn't see the last session, but...

a) Australia really hasn't tried to "bounce out" Strauss. They've left blokes back for the pull and hook, mainly as a reason to make him sit back and think that they're going to try and bounce him out, and then get him pushing at full balls to nick them, or get him LBW when he's only half forward. They just haven't executed well enough.

b) Hilfenhaus' bowling to Bopara was bloody top class. Showed a lot of people that you don't try and get a bloke out within one over; it's Test cricket. You make him work hard for his runs, plans extend over a number of overs before you come along and execute the "wicket ball".

c) To say that Johnson's ball wasn't a good one is pretty silly. If you think that Cook wasn't late on that, you'd be kidding yourself.

d) Johnson's head fell away throughout the first two sessions. His eyes were on a slant, and it made him bowl more round arm than normal, rather than over and through his body. As bad as I've seen him bowl; I've seen him bowl in a mediocre fashion, I've never seen him bowl (for Australia) poorly like he did throughout the first two sessions today. The thing about him is that, he has that ability to still bowl a ball that will rip through you. Thank buggery, because nothing else worked for him today.

e) Amazing how much harder it is to bowl to Cook when he has that pull shot going. When he's pulling off a good length, it messes with the bowler's head so much. You can't bowl straight to him, on a good length or full (once he's in), and you can't give him any width because he cuts so well.
 

vic_orthdox

Global Moderator
The pitch at Swalec was getting a lot better for bowlers as the game progressed though. This pitch is much flatter and not so painfully slow, so runs should be pretty easy to come by. But it's not going to get any harder to bat on- if England ought to be capable of scoring 450 now, they also ought to be capable of doing so in the third innings, and Australia should do even better. In Cardiff, by comparison, 500 was a par score in the first innings and about 250 was a par score in the last.
Disagree with that. The pitch didn't deteriorate that much in the second innings, the main issue was the position of the game for England. Once the ball was old, the only threat was from spin, or stump to stump bowling.
 

GIMH

Norwood's on Fire
Interesting post Jack. Enjoyed reading that. Haven't seen much of the play but it sounds like a fair assessment from the snippets I did read.
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
To say that Johnson's ball wasn't a good one is pretty silly. If you think that Cook wasn't late on that, you'd be kidding yourself.
Of course he was late on it. Because he was startled to even receive a straight ball. If he'd been getting them more regularly, he'd have hit that (or at least been beaten because he played down the wrong line rather than for sheer speed) 99 times out of 100 or so. It's not like it was a quicker-ball; he just didn't get on it because he so patently wasn't expecting it. There was no good bowling about it, the way for example there was to Bopara in the First Test.
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
The pitch at Swalec was getting a lot better for bowlers as the game progressed though. This pitch is much flatter and not so painfully slow, so runs should be pretty easy to come by.
I don't really think the SWALEC pitch was getting harder TBH - it turned on the first day, it turned on the last. It didn't get that much more uneven - certainly not treacherously so, else England would never have survived. England just batted poorly, and are more than capable of doing it again when faced with a substantial defecit. If England had batted well everyone'd have been talking about what a docile deck it was that never deteriorated at all.

Whether the Lord's pitch will play the same or different to SWALEC, of course, remains to be seen. I'd say that on the opening day it played moreorless exactly the same. Only difference is the outfield was much faster and Australia's catching was much worse. So England have gone slightly better, and if their lower-order produce the goods again tomorrow morn they might get 480-500 instead of 450.
 

vic_orthdox

Global Moderator
Of course he was late on it. Because he was startled to even receive a straight ball. If he'd been getting them more regularly, he'd have hit that (or at least been beaten because he played down the wrong line rather than for sheer speed) 99 times out of 100 or so. It's not like it was a quicker-ball; he just didn't get on it because he so patently wasn't expecting it. There was no good bowling about it, the way for example there was to Bopara in the First Test.
It wasn't the line that got him in the first place though, it was the length. He went back to a ball that was, by all rights, a ball that he should have gone forward to.

REF: Michael Vaughan. When he got dismissed by Lee, it was because he misread the ball because of a combination of pace and the right length, thus he went back instead of going forward.
 

Uppercut

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Disagree with that. The pitch didn't deteriorate that much in the second innings, the main issue was the position of the game for England. Once the ball was old, the only threat was from spin, or stump to stump bowling.
I was taking the position of the game into account though, it's a potent mix of the odd ball playing tricks, pressure and having to concentrate on a mundane task for long periods of time that makes batting out the last day so difficult on deteriorating pitches like the one in Cardiff.

But even if England found themselves in a similar position here, I'd still back them to get out of it. There's no way Australia could roll them for under 250 unless they batted almost inconceivably badly.
 

wfdu_ben91

International 12th Man
Hitting someone for one boundary is considered a destruction these days? It really is a batsman's game.
Anderson swinging it both ways at 90mph and Hughes was dismantling him through the offside. Anderson was looking clueless and got removed from the attack.
 

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