Josh
International Regular
He values his wicket. He knows he can hit any bowler out of any parkValue your wicket? Gayle to hit the fastest Test century tomorrow.
He values his wicket. He knows he can hit any bowler out of any parkValue your wicket? Gayle to hit the fastest Test century tomorrow.
Bollinger just ain't that good. Your boys made him look good. Tear him to pieces tomorrow. Hauritz is the worry for mine; possibly Johnson if he gets the ball jumping off the pitch.Not when you factor in what the opposition bowlers will be doing.
Australia has the best bowling attack in this match. On the whole it'll be tough for West Indies to win this match from here. The encouraging thing is that they've come into a position where they have a chance to win it.Bollinger just ain't that good. Your boys made him look good. Tear him to pieces tomorrow. Hauritz is the worry for mine; possibly Johnson if he gets the ball jumping off the pitch.
Agree with all of this, great effort by WI to put themselves in a situation where they can win, but it is still rather unlikely.Australia has the best bowling attack in this match. On the whole it'll be tough for West Indies to win this match from here. The encouraging thing is that they've come into a position where they have a chance to win it.
Spot the Vic.Bollinger just ain't that good. Your boys made him look good. Tear him to pieces tomorrow. Hauritz is the worry for mine; possibly Johnson if he gets the ball jumping off the pitch.
Spot the Vic.Spot the Vic.
I sense the wrong cause is being linked to the effectAustralia still strong favourites. But I'd so love it if West Indies won. So sick of Australia's arrogant declarations and so far they've escaped it coming back to bite them, but it will happen sooner or later. Australia aren't good enough to be treating teams with such utter disdain.
There were a few ways the WI were going to score less than 520 in the match, but looking back now of course we can say there wasn't.There was absolutely nothing to lose by batting on as the only way West Indies were going to score less than 520 in the match was if there was going to be plenty of time left, in which case batting on wouldn't have mattered at all. While the only advantage of batting on was insurance, insurance is more of an advantage than the advantage of declaring when they did - ie. nothing.
Australia declared because they thought they could; not because it was actually a good idea. It was a typical example fo the "we have enough runs" atttitude, but again that's not the point at all if you have a look at how many overs are left are what is actually to be gained by declaring. It's easy to say that the only way you'll lose after posting 520 is by playing poorly, but playing poorly actually does happen sometimes and there's nothing wrong with taking insurance against that, particularly when it costs your chances of winning absolutely nothing anyway.
Go on, carry on then. Or are you up to **** all as I expected?
Yeah, but if they did there'd be plenty of time left in the game anyway, so it wouldn't matter if Australia had batted on. That was my point.There were a few ways the WI were going to score less than 520 in the match, but looking back now of course we can say there wasn't.
Hmm. Not really sure how this applies to me TBH. It's not like I've been brought up in England or been taught the fundamentals of cricket by an Englishman.I think this is the inherent difference in English and Australian attitudes to the game though.
Well personally I think that's an absolutely ridiculous position to take when there's nothing to lose by taking such insurance. There was no risk of batting on producing a draw that declaring when they did would have avoided.Personally I don't think you ever take insurance out against playing badly when you've made 500+ first innings.
I don't agree at all. What there is absolutely no point in saying is "Well even though batting on wouldn't diminish the chances of winning in any way, we're not going to do it because we think we have enough."There's absolutely no point in saying "Well bat on to 700 I think chaps, just in case we collapse in a heap in the second innings."
Value your wicket? Gayle to hit the fastest Test century tomorrow.
This again is pretty pointless though because if you're going to take three and half days to bowl someone out, they're going to score more than 520.If anything though, a lot of these recent early declarations are coming because Ponting feels we may need a lot of time to bowl a side out which is in itself conservative and "English". It's not arrogance, it's a lack of confidence in the side.
Personally I think it's a very un-Australian thing to do. It's so lacking in ruthlessness to declare because you think you've got enough runs when getting more runs would do no harm to your team's prospects at all. And it's let the West Indies back into the game.Yeah, but if they did there'd be plenty of time left in the game anyway, so it wouldn't matter if Australia had batted on. That was my point.
Hmm. Not really sure how this applies to me TBH. It's not like I've been brought up in England or been taught the fundamentals of cricket by an Englishman.
Well personally I think that's an absolutely ridiculous position to take when there's nothing to lose by taking such insurance. There was no risk of batting on producing a draw that declaring when they did would have avoided.
I wasn't referring to you personally when I commented on the differences between the English and Australian mindset.Yeah, but if they did there'd be plenty of time left in the game anyway, so it wouldn't matter if Australia had batted on. That was my point.
Hmm. Not really sure how this applies to me TBH. It's not like I've been brought up in England or been taught the fundamentals of cricket by an Englishman.
Well personally I think that's an absolutely ridiculous position to take when there's nothing to lose by taking such insurance. There was no risk of batting on producing a draw that declaring when they did would have avoided.
I don't agree at all. What there is absolutely no point in saying is "Well even though batting on wouldn't diminish the chances of winning in any way, we're not going to do it because we think we have enough."
It's all about the potential gain and the potential loss of a decision - there was no potential loss in batting on at all, as the only situation in which a draw was going to occur was if Australia batted again anyway. If the West Indies scored less than 520 - or even less than 650 for that matter - it wasn't going to be draw, so declaring was pointless.
Yeah, exactly.I don't understand. No one would be complaining about Ponting's declaration if Australia hadn't suddenly collapsed in the 2nd innings. Too many people are being way too results orientated.
ExactlyI don't understand. No one would be complaining about Ponting's declaration if Australia hadn't suddenly collapsed in the 2nd innings. Too many people are being way too results orientated.
I wasn't talking in hindsight though; I was talking in general. No matter what happened after that point, the decision to bat on (had it actually been made) would not have resulted in a draw that could have been avoided by declaring unless it rained heaps. There was no potential loss by making that decision at the time regardless of what happened after it. I'm not just saying that in the context of what actually did happen after that point - I'm saying it in general because if the West Indies actually did manage to bat out the rest of the game, they'd pass the score anyway so Australia would have to bat again.Looking at the situation now as it stands, no it wasn't going to be a draw if they batted on on the second day.