Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
And if Australia bat again, they could be bailed-out by England bowling poorly.Well if England bat again, Australia could be bailed out by bad weather.
As I understand, the prospect of an enormous amount of disruption (more than 20-30 overs being lost) is slim. You cannot, in my view, take the "well it might rain" angle any more than you can take the "well a bowler might get injured" one. England are far more likely to bowl poorly than it is to rain.
England's best chance of winning and winning emphatically would be to bat again and grind them into the dust. It would also be the least risky strategy, because even if they bowl poorly, if Australia are chasing 500 then it'll only cost a draw, not a defeat. What's more, Australia are more likely to bat poorly again if they're facing a massive chase than if they've been given an immediate chance to atone for their errors.
I just cannot see any sense in enforcing the follow-on. I hardly ever can - the only occasion it should be used is if time is running-out IMO.