grecian
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
nahyes yes yes
Anderson bowled better than Flintoff in that Lord's Test
nahyes yes yes
Anderson bowled better than Flintoff in that Lord's Test
See my reply on the matter...was bad wording by me
See my reply on the matter...was bad wording by me
You people know I'd never deliberately underplay Freddie brilliance...it's just that Jimmy did more to win us that game
Not at all, just don't believe he has lived up to the hype. We heard about how much he'd turned into a match-winner last Ashes. Ho-hum.Think you are putting too much emphasis on the 'record'.
No, just that he's never been outstanding against us, anywhere he's played. I haven't watched him against too many other teams. We beat that much better team than us in SA too, so Mitch rules as wellYou say finally as if this will be his eighth series in Australia...
Also 'against someone else' doesn't carry the same weight as it did in 2006 I'm afraid. You lot are ranked 5th in the world
That's not to say Anderson doesn't have a lot to prove, his record away from home isn't good enough and it's fair enough to expect him to fail. I just think that counting the last away Ashes series for anything when it comes to Anderson is misguided and that his battles with conditions are a bit overplayed. I mean I always read on this site about how it's a batsman's game these days and Anderson has averaged low-twenties for the past year or so, IIRC.
Edit - 22.64 since the last Ashes. Yeah we've played some crud teams in that time but we did go to South Africa, a much better team than Australia. Jimmeh rules.
Absolutely stuffed us...Yeah and they stuffed you in Australia.
Except for Anderson it was his most recent winter tour... whereas we all know what Johnson managed overseas last year.No, just that he's never been outstanding against us, anywhere he's played. I haven't watched him against too many other teams. We beat that much better team than us in SA too, so Mitch rules as well
Hes always been a match winner when the conditions have suited him even when he was a fresh face 20 year old. Have things changed since then? well he has a much greater command over swing bowling to the point where Id argue that when the ball is swinging he is the best in the world. The problem is when it isnt swinging, which is when he struggles to take wickets and that has not changed. However, over the summer hes been working on bowling the right lines and lengths even when the ball isnt swinging. So while he might not take wickets, at least he might be able to keep it tight. With Swann in the side, England can afford to have a bowler as mercurial as him who requires the right conditions to become threatening.Not at all, just don't believe he has lived up to the hype. We heard about how much he'd turned into a match-winner last Ashes. Ho-hum.
If things have changed since then, then we'll see this time around.
The quote was taken out of context. He meant that he's over 30 now and is heading towards the end of his career in age terms. He didn't mean he is declining as a cricketer, just that he's reached 30 and knows he's only got a few years left in the game.Read this story about Pietersen earlier this week. Is a bit worrying to hear him say something like this to be honest:
My career is 'on the way down' admits Pietersen - Cricket, Sport - The Independent
Yeah fair points, ill let you have this roundnah again
Flintoff bowled incredibly well in the first innings and created pressure which jimmy, brilliantly capitalised on.
So Freddie was great in two innings, and Jimmeh was in one.
All true. But the conventional wisdom more goes back to what used to happen in AUS pre 2000s, since pitches in AUS i.e Perth haven't been as bouncy this decade as before.It's conventional wisdom that banging it in is the way to success in Australia but there's barely been a bowler this millennium to go there and support that theory. Even the ones that bowled really well got absolutely smashed- check out how many wickets Kemar Roach and Ishant Sharma left with.
Australia's recent home batting failures have all been exclusively down to swing. At the SCG last year against Asif and Sami, at the MCG the year before when Steyn took ten and at Perth the year before that against (of all people) RP Singh and Irfan Pathan. Jimmeh's absolutely crucial.
True, and I've admitted that. But he's played twice as many games at home than he has away from home and it's only since 2008 that he's been regarded as a first choice bowler - his career away from England up until then is a scattering of one off Tests here and there, with 3 Tests of an Ashes series in Australia when he'd played virtually no First Class cricket in the 2006 domestic season due to injury.A fair amount of special pleading here, tbf. His record away from home is poor because on the whole he's been poor away from home. I don't really buy the "leader of the attack" thing. In fact I don't know what it means or how it's relevant.
Yes, his most recent tour in conditions that generally suit quick bowling.Except for Anderson it was his most recent winter tour... whereas we all know what Johnson managed overseas last year.
Yes I would agree with that.True, and I've admitted that. But he's played twice as many games at home than he has away from home and it's only since 2008 that he's been regarded as a first choice bowler - his career away from England up until then is a scattering of one off Tests here and there, with 3 Tests of an Ashes series in Australia when he'd played virtually no First Class cricket in the 2006 domestic season due to injury.
The time to properly judge Anderson away from home is after 4 or 5 seasons of consistently bowling in all conditions - something he's only had for 2 seasons of a 7 year Test career.