Faisal1985
International Vice-Captain
^ Stats prove otherwise..............................
Before Bond came back, i would have rated NZ's attack lower then Pak's......I disagree, knowing what a player has had to overcome should play a role.
lol Freddy won the Ashes? Not even close. Strauss carried the English batting on his shoulders throughout the series. Flintoff sparked the bowling in one match and Broad did the same to a greater extent in a more important match.
Bashing NZ on roads is hardly that brilliant. Samaraweera played us better.
The spell of 5 wickets he bowled on the last day to take the Ashes test and an advantage in the series was a turning point for me.Flintoff averaged 33 with the bat with only one score above 50 - a 74 - and 52 with the ball in the Ashes. Those bowling stats don't really do his contribution justice as he bowled a match-winning spell in a Test, but to say he won England the Ashes is so ridiculously untrue that it isn't even funny, let alone debatable.
Certainly wouldn't have been a contest without Strauss's runs either. Or Broad's spell in the fifth Test. Or probably even Anderson and Swann's respective spells in the second Test either. Fact is, while Flintoff contributed to that second Test victory, he had a pretty damn poor series and he clearly wasn't the reason England won.The spell of 5 wickets he bowled on the last day to take the Ashes test and an advantage in the series was a turning point for me.
You can discuss the over all stats of the man, but he performed when it mattered most...without that win, Ashes could have been an even contest.......Freddie was the "difference" so to say in both sides......
When England 11's performance, is being matched by Australian 11's performance, Freddie was the tie breaker.......had Johnson clicked the way he had in SA, the Ashes scale would have been in OZs favor.
Certainly wouldn't have been a contest without Strauss's runs either. Or Broad's spell in the fifth Test. Or probably even Anderson and Swann's respective spells in the second Test either. Fact is, while Flintoff contributed to that second Test victory, he had a pretty damn poor series and he clearly wasn't the reason England won.
Definitely disagree with you regarding this, I think Strauss should be considered because he's scored consistently in a variety of conditions against decent attacks (twin hundreds in India is a very big achievment for an English batsmen), the Ashes shouldn't really have much to do with it. At the end of the day it's a bilateral competition, so doing well in it shouldn't give you some sort of advantage over players from sides that don't even compete in it. These awards are in the context of global cricket, and frankly the Ashes aren't that important in that context, certainly not when compared to the test rankings, which South Africa topped. I don't think a batsmen can ask for a better 12-20 months than AB De Villiers has had, his hundred in the record chase at Perth, his big hundred under huge hostility from the crowd at Headingley that led to a series victory, before that his double hundred in India, his one day form has been great too. Never mind JP Duminy's innings of the decade at Sydney (after of course Laxman's 281) that has somehow been forgotten behind 27 year old Graham Onions's wickets against the West Indies and odd contributions against Australia.Well lets look at who get the nod ahead of him.
Strauss - won the Ashes so is worthy of getting ahead of him
haha, disagree vehemently. Otherwise better hand over all awards to subcontinental cricketers who have had to overcome third world obstacles in the form of low per capita income, poor playing and coaching facilities, overwhelming expectations from huge populations, fear of effigy burning, houses getting stoned etc etc...I disagree, knowing what a player has had to overcome should play a role.
Well for a start it isn't really at the end of the English season, I mean it cuts into the SA tour of England and I believe only part the way through this year's ashes series and the Sri Lanka home season. Basically instead of such a rigid time frame they should say from tour A to tour B, keeping it as close to 12 months as possible, they should publish the list of series that have been taken into account, wouldn't be too difficult and would make the stats a more accurate reflection of how a player's been playing.How is a 12 month time period too rigid? The timing is one thing that does make sense as it comes at the end of the English season and before the start of the southern hemisphere seasons, therefore encompassing all cricketing seasons 08-09
He was shot because his cricketing team was targeted by terrorists while on a cricket tour. See how many times 'cricket' popped up in that explanation.haha, disagree vehemently. Otherwise better hand over all awards to subcontinental cricketers who have had to overcome third world obstacles in the form of low per capita income, poor playing and coaching facilities, overwhelming expectations from huge populations, fear of effigy burning, houses getting stoned etc etc...
I'm not sure on the start date but the end date was August 24th which was the end of the Ashes.Well for a start it isn't really at the end of the English season, I mean it cuts into the SA tour of England and I believe only part the way through this year's ashes series and the Sri Lanka home season. Basically instead of such a rigid time frame they should say from tour A to tour B, keeping it as close to 12 months as possible, they should publish the list of series that have been taken into account, wouldn't be too difficult and would make the stats a more accurate reflection of how a player's been playing.
Yea, but as G.I. Joe said, then poorer cricketers who had to overcome more would be more deserving than kids who grew up in sport academies? Or maybe overcoming a severe injury? Very iffy slope you're going down there.He was shot because his cricketing team was targeted by terrorists while on a cricket tour. See how many times 'cricket' popped up in that explanation.
awta.yea, but as g.i. Joe said, then poorer cricketers who had to overcome more would be more deserving than kids who grew up in sport academies? Or maybe overcoming a severe injury? Very iffy slope you're going down there.
To me, it should be on performance, and performance only.
Sort of agree with Athers here.Hard to say since I can't feel impartial to this. His story just makes the runs more impressive.
And where you grow up and being shot are pretty differents. I know it is a slippery slope but its just how I feel.
Considering he doesn't meet the criteria, I'm not.I'm surprised that Duminy didn't get nominated for the emerging category