Agreed. North is dire. We can't blame him though as he's merely transporting what he's done in the State sphere for many years, into the Test Match theatre - i.e. averaging in the low 40s, and either getting none (when you need him most) or a bellyfull (when we're already 4/300.North has to go after this series, who cares what he did with the ball, his batting simply cannot be relied upon. Not sure Smith is the answer just yet either, but ultimately whoever would replace North would be in a similar situation (i.e. still quite inexperienced).
So gutted about Johnsons dire efforts this series, guess he just can't adapt to the conditions properly. Without checking stats guru I'm guessing his home & away bowling would be a stark contrast.
Moving Clarke now would be very dumb, he's obviously going to be at number four for years to come (unless things go terribly wrong), so why budge him from there temporarily straight after giving him the job just to accommodate Ponting's ego. Move Watson to 3, Ponting to 5, Hussey to 6.If Hughes comes back I'd ideally moved Watson to three, however I can't imagine Ponting's ego wearing that, so 4 might be the best option. Again assuming Clarke could stand the demotion.
That said I'd still retain North for India as his not-awful offies could be useful over there
I'm a little reluctant to criticise him after such an excellent bowling performance. Especially considering the circumstances under which he took the job, it doesn't feel quite right. It's a bit like bringing a club-standard batsman into the side as a last-minute replacement for an unexpected injury, then complaining after the match that he wasn't very good at batting.I don't want to be too much of a curmudgeon as he's a young bloke captaining in his first test after taking over in trying circumstances and he actually won, but I wasn't massively impressed, tbh. Looked lost when Smith was counter-attacking and set some rather bizarre fields.
Stating the obvious as it may be, but his bowlers won him the test. Most of the dismissals were bowled, LBW or caught by the keeper which one doesn't usually ascribe to the captain's tactical acumen.
Spoke well tho.
You know the famous saying nothing succeeds like success. Now that Pakistan has won..most people will probably tend to be positive in their attitude towards Salman Butt. But Uppercut said something which I thought was very intelligent in the Ricky Ponting sacking thread. He said "The batsmen batted badly and the bowlers bowled badly. What's that got to do with whether Ponting's a good captain or not?"Fair enough.
Let's get back on topic
---
Err... how did people find Butt's captaincy? Both on and off. Looked impressive off the field in the interview, classy and composed (I am overusing those words), but he has a bit to learn on it. Still. Brings a calmness and rationality to the team which is desperately required.
Ya, man has guts. These are the types of thing a captain needs he should get credited for his flexibilty, he just used that brain and with guidance, he will get better IMO.Also deserves some credit for bowling the innocuous-looking Umar Amin, TBH.
Look, Im not going to come out here and stand by Salman Butt but isnt bringing out the best in your players part of captaincy? I think we need to keep in mind that here is a man who has never captained at any level of the game and he's been given the task of captaining the most mercurial team in the world. His strategies and field placings were obviously going to be at a novice level because the man is a novice. There's no point criticizing him when this should have been expected when he was given the arm band.Yeah the bowling was excellent. The fielding was excellent (for Pakistan standards, no dropped catches is an excellent day at the field) and the batting wasnt as bad as it could have been (at least they didnt get all out for 150 in the first innings)
But what does that have to do with whether Butt is a good captain or not?
His strategies, field placings, body language was pretty unimpressive, left a lot to be desired.
When Australia came into bat in the second innings, Michael Holding remarked that the field that Butt set was as if Austraila were 170 runs ahead instead of behind.
You might be right on Watson, perhaps he'd be better off batting at 4 or 5. I dont think he should be in the top 3 though, he plays too many strokes to be in those slots and hes going to struggle batting like that against the new ball. His lbw dismissal against Asif was appalling, I mean heres a guy playing a full blooded front foot drive and missing the ball by a good few inches and getting out lbw.No, not for me. He's a top 4 batsman or he's nothing. I don't think it's coincidence he's looked a much better bat opening than he did in the middle order. He needs time to construct an innings and he'll never be as good as Hussey is at rotating the strike and protecting the tail.
If Hughes comes back I'd ideally moved Watson to three, however I can't imagine Ponting's ego wearing that, so 4 might be the best option. Again assuming Clarke could stand the demotion.
That said I'd still retain North for India as his not-awful offies could be useful over there.
Yeah agreed.Look, Im not going to come out here and stand by Salman Butt but isnt bringing out the best in your players part of captaincy?
It's that sort of depth that has Ponting looking forward with confidence. The rebuilding is complete, now the finishing touches are being applied.
Think it was a relatively flawed premise in the first place. It's hard to talk about rebuilding being finished when you don't yet have your preferred XI playing at the time. And there were still a number of question marks over a number of players supposedly in the 1st XI (North, the role of Watson, etc.).In fairness, the article was written immediately following a 150-run win against the same team they just lost to. Nowhere does it say they're going to be world-beaters or anything outrageous like that. At the time, don't see any problem with what he wrote, especially about Paine whose work behind the sticks was far better than most expected it would be.
Its hard to see how this statement is justified exactly:In fairness, the article was written immediately following a 150-run win against the same team they just lost to. Nowhere does it say they're going to be world-beaters or anything outrageous like that. At the time, don't see any problem with what he wrote, especially about Paine whose work behind the sticks was far better than most expected it would be.
Pretty conservative as far as articles written about and by Aussies is concerned.