Faisal1985
International Vice-Captain
Still he is the guy if you want the Ashes back....he has been there, done that...you need his presence against this English side....
Against this English side his "been there done that" is to lose...Still he is the guy if you want the Ashes back....he has been there, done that...you need his presence against this English side....
Well...i meant to say it a bit differently...but i guess you are right he has lost to this English side a couple of times but still over all has loads of experience....the notion that Clarke is any better is funny to me.....for the lack of a better captain from the current Aussie side i think Ponting is still the best person to lead...Against this English side his "been there done that" is to lose...
I'm not disagreeing with you when you say he shouldn't captain the Ashes and I do think both his experience and his skills as a leader are still of immense value of this team. However Clarke isn't exactly bad either, he clearly has the respect of the players and his captaincy in what he's done thus far has been solid. And we really need Clarke to step up soon as he is the only player we have with good test match experience who isn't going to retire soon (wonderful how that's worked out )Well...i meant to say it a bit differently...but i guess you are right he has lost to this English side a couple of times but still over all has loads of experience....the notion that Clarke is any better is funny to me.....for the lack of a better captain from the current Aussie side i think Ponting is still the best person to lead...
Thing about Sachin is, he was NEVER really as aggressive a player in tests as he was in ODIs or as, say, a Lara or Ponting was in tests... He had his matches and innings where he would be very aggressive but they all seemed to be calculated and in the very next dig, you would see him slow down and bat rather circumspectly. It became exaggerated since 2001 AFAIC, when he knew that there were others around him who would bat for a while too and run making was not getting affected... The advent of Sehwag to the top also freed him to play this way, I reckon. The problem was with age, you are never going to be on top all the time and there was always the odd ball that was gonna get you out.TBH, I'm not sure Sachin's change in approach coincided with his improvement in form. He's been playing his new relatively circumspect game pretty much from 2004-05 (playing spinners from the crease, paddle-sweep, rarely drives fast bowlers on the rise etc.) but the difference is he's much more solid since WC 2007. Before, he'd look very tentative, go into a shell and get out (see dismissals against Afridi, Panesar, Anderson, Udal etc.) now he rarely looks like getting out once he gets set. It took a wonder-ball from Malinga to get him out even in the last innings. I really like the balance in his batting these days, doesn't fall over and look like an LBW candidate even though he gets lots of runs on the onside. I think his change in approach came as a result of the tennis elbow and back injuries and the results started coming when he regained confidence in his fitness.
oh.. I agree with that. Him and Hayden seemed to be Gods back then... Conditions and bowler standards notwithstanding, they were awesome and just about the most invincible I have ever seen any batsmen be..Hesitant about bringing this up, but I rate the 2005-6-7 Ponting as the best batsmanship I have ever seen. Damn near impossible to get out, gritty to the end, but consistently hammered the opposition, putting them out of the game in a session. And then did it again. And again.
Well, who knows the exact timeline of stuff like that but I'd guess his elbow injury was around the 2004-05 mark? Would have impacted on his results, especially using a big tree like he does.TBH, I'm not sure Sachin's change in approach coincided with his improvement in form. He's been playing his new relatively circumspect game pretty much from 2004-05 (playing spinners from the crease, paddle-sweep, rarely drives fast bowlers on the rise etc.) but the difference is he's much more solid since WC 2007. Before, he'd look very tentative, go into a shell and get out (see dismissals against Afridi, Panesar, Anderson, Udal etc.) now he rarely looks like getting out once he gets set. It took a wonder-ball from Malinga to get him out even in the last innings. I really like the balance in his batting these days, doesn't fall over and look like an LBW candidate even though he gets lots of runs on the onside. I think his change in approach came as a result of the tennis elbow and back injuries and the results started coming when he regained confidence in his fitness.
Yes, though there were reportedly some signs of it even as early as WC 2003 where he had a great tournament. He missed quite a lot of cricket between 2004-06.Well, who knows the exact timeline of stuff like that but I'd guess his elbow injury was around the 2004-05 mark? Would have impacted on his results, especially using a big tree like he does.
Sri Lankan pitches though. They're only flat when Sri Lankans are batting on them.Lots of dead sub-continent pitches would be the reason behind Sri Lanka and India having so many batsmen up there.
Could say the same for India.. seeing we did win the matches we scored heavily in..Sri Lankan pitches though. They're only flat when Sri Lankans are batting on them.
lol.. but seriously Jono, do you think there is any real reason why our batters don't do well in SL and their batters don't do well here?Love Prince and Uppercut. Actually understand cricket and the beauty of foreign conditions.
On that track??? Yes, we were bad.I didn't think our batting was that bad in the first game.. I mean Gambhir had a bad game, perhaps Yuvraj below par.. the rest chipped in, didn't they? Even the tail showed some guts. I think we let them get about 100-150 runs too many and after following on, left ourselves too much to do to save the game.
Last series we were definitely bad though. Murali and Mendis ran through us at will.
Hmm yeah that's a good point. Who bats six though? I'm really not too keen on any of the options, really. Can we talk Hodge into coming out of retirement?I can see legitimate purpose for him to be put down the order, to number five, but I wouldn't do that now. I think that this batting order will best serve us for the tour of India - I think that Watson's best chance of making runs in India is opening when he is in by the time that the spinners come on, and I think Ponting is of a similar nature.