andyc
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Sounds like both teams are getting more than they think.55-55 chance of Aus winning.
Sounds like both teams are getting more than they think.55-55 chance of Aus winning.
I think both teams put in 110% this game.Sounds like both teams are getting more than they think.
Sounds like both teams are getting more than they think.
That is an ignorant statement that needs to be set straight for the rest of the non-playing posters who have no idea what actually happens in a game of cricket.Woeful over by Tait it must be said.
So it's a disadvantage because Australia put their bowlers into ice baths when there was a possibility there could be a super over? Rubbish. That's poor planning by them, in that case. And I don't believe it happened. And in any case, he would have had 20-odd minutes at the end to warm up once it was becoming a possibility.That is an ignorant statement that needs to be set straight for the rest of the non-playing posters who have no idea what actually happens in a game of cricket.
Firstly let me say I think NZ deserved the win just for McCullum`s sake. To play an innings like that and lose just wouldnt be fair. I can appreciate brilliant cricket even when it comes from the opposition.
This is the first time I have seen this super-over put into play and I`ve got to say I don`t like it at all. It is too heavily weighted to the team who bat first in the match. All of their players, batsmen and bowlers are warm and loose from having just spent 20 overs in the field while all but 2 of the other team have been sitting down their bodies are well and truly cooled down. Their bowlers, and especially ones with frequently re-occurring injuries like Tait, as soon as they finish in the field go into their cool down routine. I can just about guarantee that Taity had at least three ice baths while his team was batting. The ice baths are to stop the production of lactic acid which dissolves muscle tissue. There is no way that this system does not disadvantage the team who bat last in the match. I think it should stay as a tie but if they really need to have a winner and a loser then a coin toss would be fairer than that crap, or let the 2 skippers have a foot race for 1 lap of the oval. Anything but that crap.
You havent mentioned Cam White, how did you rate his innings last night.McCullum's innings was so awesome last night. Really highlights what Australia is lacking in its batting line-up, Watto and Warner aside, in terms of ability to adapt and improvise. The scoop shot that he was playing really made it look like Australia just had nowhere to bowl to him. Someone like Haddin, on the other hand, who has a great textbook technique, played out four dot balls in a row because they packed the offside field and bowled a foot outside off stump. Watching Clarke and Haddin bat together, I just got the feeling that the two of them were far too orthodox to be willing to try something a bit different, even just in terms of giving themselves more room or moving around in the crease much (at least to the fast bowlers, Clarke obv. very willing to dance around against the spinners).
White's innings highlighted exactly what Clarke and Haddin were lacking and really showed Clarke up. On a ground as small as last night's, and chasing 210+, there really was no excuse to not be going for big shots. I'm not just trying to sully Clarke's innings here, because it was by far the best he's played in a limited overs game in a while, and hopefully he'll continue on from here, but I fear he can just be a bit too predictable.You havent mentioned Cam White, how did you rate his innings last night.
Yeah but we do have the three Ws who can all improvise to an extent so I don't see it as much of an issue. Anyways, making 200+ chasing is something I'm VERY happy with and losing the super over doesn't diminish that in the slightest.McCullum's innings was so awesome last night. Really highlights what Australia is lacking in its batting line-up, Watto and Warner aside, in terms of ability to adapt and improvise. The scoop shot that he was playing really made it look like Australia just had nowhere to bowl to him. Someone like Haddin, on the other hand, who has a great textbook technique, played out four dot balls in a row because they packed the offside field and bowled a foot outside off stump. Watching Clarke and Haddin bat together, I just got the feeling that the two of them were far too orthodox to be willing to try something a bit different, even just in terms of giving themselves more room or moving around in the crease much (at least to the fast bowlers, Clarke obv. very willing to dance around against the spinners).