aussie
Hall of Fame Member
It has all the relevance today. Same way if England get alot of leg-spinners in county cricket sudden i wont go jumping saying "finally England have got a WC leggie". If Aus get alot of off-spinners etc etc. History does certainly doesn't say IND will produce fast-bowlers of great quality consistently nor a consistent flow of test quality batsmen. So we defiantely should take a cautious approach in judging them.Err thats 2 different stories. You can't say India's bench strength is poor because players who came in and played 15-20 years ago were failures. It has no relevance to today. Fact of the matter is that there are players who have done the work at the domestic level, have impressed for the A team and the only step left for them to take is the step up to the international level (which they haven't had a chance to do).
I agreee 50%. Do you remember the spell he had againts Flintoff last winter, when Freddie was charging in @ 95 mph in a spell againts him & Yuvi really stood up technically?. Thats why i have recently reknewed hope in him...The problem is that people continue to make the assumption that you can bypass technique to be a success at the international level. You can only go so far with a good eye and great timing, technique is one of the most important aspects of any player's makeup and the sooner people start accepting that the better. Yuvraj has failed time and time again because of his poor technique, and its just bloody annoying that people seem to think that he will magically succeed even though nothing has changed technically since his last stint.