I see.Similiarish area but they have very different functions, so an injury in one or the other is quite different. If Pietersen had a calf injury he wouldn't be able to play, but conversely would probably recover quicker. Tendon injuries are always very tricky, nagging things that take a long time to heal but don't necessarily hinder you that much, though somedays it feels worse than others. Unless of course you snap a tendon in which case you are buggered and need surgery.
Seven o'clock. 18 overs left and we'll get them all in.Good to see Prior go. Broke a good partnership.
What time is this scheduled to finish with the rain yesterday? What is the latest it can go to?
True. Prior looks compact and balanced at the crease. Unlike Pietersen who's all arms and legs falling over.I don't remember who it was, but someone recently ripped into me when I said I'd rather watch Prior bat than Pietersen.
This is why.
I think both are pleasant batsmen to watch - it basically comes down to whether you prefer watching off-side or leg-side play, IMO.
And he gets run out as I type this.
I think the key to Prior's technique is his balance and how straight his head is when he gets into position and plays his shots. Ive always said that his footwork is poor and he plays away from the body but much like Damien Martyn, its almost irrelevant because he gets into perfect positions to play his shots. Im still worried about how he will go against the swinging ball, but I dont think it matters that much because hes still going to be dangerous on all other wickets and he is an excellent player on turners as well.True. Prior looks compact and balanced at the crease. Unlike Pietersen who's all arms and legs falling over.
I just don't see the Australian batsmen seeing off 180 overs on day 4 and 5 to save the match and would be really surprised if they do so, I think they would need a lot of help from the weather, if they are to get out of this game with a draw.Agree with Warne that England should send Aus out there with a few overs to go tonight, disagree that Aus will chase this down. Would have to break a world record at this rate and can't see the Aussies doing it.
Maybe just tell them 10 minutes before the start of play tomorrowWith the overs left England will almost certainly have a 500+ lead at the close of play. Declare overnight or bat on for 20 minutes or so tomorrow just as a bit of mind games to irritate the Aussie openers?
Surprising maybe, but given that just one year ago this happened on the same ground:I just don't see the Australian batsmen seeing off 180 overs on day 4 and 5 to save the match and would be really surprised if they do so, I think they would need a lot of help from the weather, if they are to get out of this game with a draw.
Yeah but we're not talking possibility here; we're talking likelihood. It may be possible but it's just not very likely.Surprising maybe, but given that just one year ago this happened on the same ground:
HowSTAT! Match Scorecard
Its not impossible really.