Couldn't disagree more with this tbh.If recent form and confidence are major factors, England has little chance of success in the final test. They have certainly improved since the last Ashes series loss of 5-0. However, if you look at the series to date, it realistically should have been Australia 2-1 at this stage (the First Test was a moral victory to the Aussies). At the end of the day, it will end up 2-1 in Australia's favour, but it should have been 3-1, and as I stated, that is a real improvement on the previous 5-0 drubbing.
The concern for England and the selectors should not just be the final test, but ensuring that their nation remains as competitive in the next 12- 24 months. Otherwise, it will be back to another 5-0 loss in Australia. Only time will tell.
I can almost feel them coming home as we speak...Freddie's fit mother****ers, have a bit of that, the Ashes are coming home
Thought it was Flintoff's knee that was the problem, not his feet.I can almost feel them coming home as we speak...
"And did those feet..."
Green top... but it won't happen.Thought it was Flintoff's knee that was the problem, not his feet.
If our England fans could choose a type of pitch to maximise their chances at The Oval, what ould it be?
Pre-series the talk was England's superiority in spin. They played two at Cardiff but it didn't really work out, though the turn there was low and slow. Also, although I agree Swann > Hauritz, is the difference given the way Swann has bowled great enough to go the way of preparing a bunsen?
Likewise, it seems to me England's attack relies a little more on atmospherics rather than what's in the wicket. Given what happened at Headingly and indeed in SA where Australia's attack excelled when there was something in the deck but has struggled in recent times when it's flat, do they risk a green-top, especially given their batting issues atm?
Find it a bit of a conundrum tbh, though 2-1 down is as bad as 1-1 for them, given we hold the urn. Maybe they just green it up and risk it
Well...if Strauss stays fit and Trott gets a call up...But SA aren't playing....
Pietersen coming back as a one-off aswell iirc.Well...if Strauss stays fit and Trott gets a call up...
I think they've only improved in the results column...if it was this English team vs the Aussie team of 06/07 then the result would be the same. In saying that, the Aussies have dropped off quite a bit since then. I don't think England's playing standard has lifted a lot since then.If recent form and confidence are major factors, England has little chance of success in the final test. They have certainly improved since the last Ashes series loss of 5-0. However, if you look at the series to date, it realistically should have been Australia 2-1 at this stage (the First Test was a moral victory to the Aussies). At the end of the day, it will end up 2-1 in Australia's favour, but it should have been 3-1, and as I stated, that is a real improvement on the previous 5-0 drubbing.
The concern for England and the selectors should not just be the final test, but ensuring that their nation remains as competitive in the next 12- 24 months. Otherwise, it will be back to another 5-0 loss in Australia. Only time will tell.
He'll only be fit for an hour...two at best. Don't get too excited. Given he'll have to score 200 and take 9 wickets each innings there's no way his body can hold outFreddie's fit mother****ers, have a bit of that, the Ashes are coming home
If they rock up to The Oval and see a dust-bowl, the Aussie selectors would be compelled to pick Hauritz, replacing (almost certainly) Stuart Clark. Massive plus for England IMO.Thought it was Flintoff's knee that was the problem, not his feet.
If our England fans could choose a type of pitch to maximise their chances at The Oval, what ould it be?
Pre-series the talk was England's superiority in spin. They played two at Cardiff but it didn't really work out, though the turn there was low and slow. Also, although I agree Swann > Hauritz, is the difference given the way Swann has bowled great enough to go the way of preparing a bunsen?
Likewise, it seems to me England's attack relies a little more on atmospherics rather than what's in the wicket. Given what happened at Headingly and indeed in SA where Australia's attack excelled when there was something in the deck but has struggled in recent times when it's flat, do they risk a green-top, especially given their batting issues atm?
Find it a bit of a conundrum tbh, though 2-1 down is as bad as 1-1 for them, given we hold the urn. Maybe they just green it up and risk it
Sure, but is their advantage in spin enough to warrant them doing that? Swann's a decent bowler, but maybe if they do prepare a dustbowl (or what passes as one in England) they'd be doing themselves a disservice. Australia's batsmen have generally struggled more vs England's quicks than spinners in this series.If they rock up to The Oval and see a dust-bowl, the Aussie selectors would be compelled to pick Hauritz, replacing (almost certainly) Stuart Clark. Massive plus for England IMO.
I disagree with you about the batting being the problem.Couldn't disagree more with this tbh.
These teams are far more closely matched than you're giving credit for. England have bowled us out cheaply twice and our blokes have needed help from the wicket to get the job done (as you expect from an inexperienced attack).
England's problem is and has all series been the batting. Strauss and Prior aside none of thwm are in consistently decent nick. At Lord's they got a good opening stand and put on 400 plus, but aside from thayt the top order hasn't done much. When it did they won. At Edgbaston their bowlers covered for them, as did their lower order, which incidently has been very good.