aussie
Hall of Fame Member
The Hansie Cronje era ended vs IND 2000. So i presume you talking about the test under Pollock's captaincy before the AUS tour. South Africa played:It's completely relevant. It may not be the sole determinant but it is unquestionably important. And it's not the prior 6 tests, we're talking about 12+ tests. Did you check the links?.
- Toured SRI 2000
- NZ & SRI @ Home 2000/01
- toured WI & ZIM 2001
- IND @ Home 2001
None of those series (except the tour to SRI) where SA challenged & none of those series could you say was a good preparation for the then "unofficial test championship" as it was called ATT.
Aus exposed that SA team for not being all that strong as they where hyped up as before that tour.
Thats just stats picking. As i said before in the period mentioned above i saw Donald bowl live vs IND 2000 & WI 2001. He was clearly passed his peak LONG before the AUS tour, thats not being subjected - thats fact my friend. He was bowling 80-85 mph & wasn't the same "white lightning" that made him such a great bowler in the 90s.Even Donald who for the last few years of his career was routinely unfit and didn't finish series on occasion never had a series of averaging above 30 in the 2000s. You have to go all the way back to 99 and against Zimbabwe when that happened. The time before that, all the way back to 97.
So thus you had a situation where, Donald was passed his peak - the pitches where flat - Hayden is tremendous form. Hayden dominated & wasn't tested technically.
No. As i said above Donald was the only bowler who could exposed Hayden technically & he was passed his peak.They did.
- Pollock doesn't bowl that well to left-handers & is not a swing bowler.
- Kallis, Ntini & Klusener clearly had no skills to trouble him.
All the pitches over the 6 tests where flat decks. Thats for sure.They were; at least comparative to pitches around the world at the time.
Let me give my opinion on Hayden career, since i am as much a backer of his ability & greatness as much as you Ikki. My defense of Richard's particular notion about what occured vs SA 01/02 is just me acknowledging the few area's where Richard has been correct of Hayden in the past, since i've been on his case since i first came on this site in 2005. After all Richard & TEC long before the 05 Ashes had predicted he would fail & they where proven correct.It's wrong. Hayden's weakness is exaggerated. All batsman, every single one of them, are susceptible to the swinging ball and high quality seam. It's not even a real criticism. The argument made that he faced less of this post 2000 is a valid one, it just doesn't detract from his all-time great status.
Frankly, I find it humourous to think he corrected himself on the pinpoint of the Oval test in 05. He wasn't in form for at least a year before that Test. Deficiencies in technique don't simply go away like that; so in conclusion the deficiency was exaggerated. It was more form-related. Someone like Hayden who goes after batsmen is bound to go through periods of trough probably heavier than those with a conservative approach. However, his approach also meant he scored at a freakish rate when he was on song.
During the 90s Hayden faced some of the greatest bowlers around the world, both against domestic sides and touring test sides. He did so on what were largely bowler friendly pitches - or at least fair to both bat and ball - during that time. He amassed a tonne of runs. Any deficiencies that were glaring would have been spotted.
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You can opine as you wish, as long as you remember what you're saying is purely subjective. You mentioned dates and talk about his batting problems as if they are known facts. The same you do with the S.African bowlers. This is not intelligent IMO. I appreciate the fact that you try to side with Hayden in saying he "fixed" himself, but there really wasn't much fixing to do in the first place.
As I said, we're not going to agree. You're plain wrong in my view. I think we should also stop talking about Hayden in a Mark Waugh thread.
Soo my summary goes..
- Hayden in the 90s was exposed technically by some great bowlers in the tests he played. Its very clear he wasn't the same batsman he was when he came back & destroyed IND 2001 that he was during the test he played in the 90s.
Yes he indeed scored domestic runs vs touring great attacks & as some AUS psoters like FaaipdeOaid (spell check) & Mister Wright have highlighted in the past. The conditions in Brisbane in domestic matches where bowler friendly & he built his career scoring runs there.
But i don't believe we should use the runs he scored in domestic matches or vs touring teams as a "clear argument" to justify Hayden's ability to play swing bowling. Since the intensity of a domestic game (although the standard of cricket in AUS FC cricket was very clsoe to that of intl cricket in the 90s) is not always that of test cricket. The times he scored Hundreds vs touring sides - those blokes could have very well have been bowling on low intensity in preparation for the test. I remember when AUS toured WI in 2003, when Carlton Baugh slammed a BIG hundred before the 1st test in Guyana & when he made his debuted during the series he looked totally out of his depth. Same thing happened with Hayden in 90s.
- Fast forward to IND 2001 after that superb series. FromMumbai 2001 - Cairns 2004, Big Mat was FTB. He faced no testing pace attacks in bowler friendly conditions. He smoked everything in his path. The only time he faced a bit of swing in this period vs ENG 01, he wasn't that fluent.
- Then from IND 04 & NZ 05 before the Ashes. Hayden went into a bit of bad run of form, but he still was exposed technically for the first time since ENG 01 by Mills & Akhtar in those test.
So come the 05 Ashes he was all over the place in the first 4 test, since the well oiled ENG bowling machine exposed him 100% technically. But Hayden corrected these in Oval test & later vs SA 05/06 & IND 07/08 when he faced very good attacks & bowling friendly conditions.
The runs he scored here should prove conclusively why Hayden is great since, not many players could change their ENTIRE gameplay as Hayden had to do to save his career in the Oval test. Being exposed like that could end careers.
- The last part would be 08/09 vs IND/NZ/SA after returning from 6 months out of the game with injury - where he struggled before retiring. IMO in this period after AUS losted in IND, Hayden was being made a scapegoat by the media & this pressure clearly had a mental effect on his batting. Since Hayden went into an usual shell during the AUS summer - but was not troubled technically.