• Welcome to the Cricket Web forums, one of the biggest forums in the world dedicated to cricket.

    You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join the Cricket Web community today!

    If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

*Official* First Test at the Gabba

Prince EWS

Global Moderator
If Bollinger is going to be left out for fitness reasons then what is he in the 13 in the first place for?
It might be why the squad is 13 and not 12.

Honestly though, the only speculation I've seen to suggest Bollinger might not play in on CricketWeb. I'm pretty sure he'll be lining up with the new rock.
 

Uppercut

Request Your Custom Title Now!
Yeah, he does take it to absolute extremes sometimes, but I think people only find it infuriating because it makes it absolutely impossible for him to be proven wrong.

Siddle's a good bowler so if he's picked he could well perform well, but Bollinger's an even better bowler so it's more likely he'd perform well. Siddle getting picked and performing well wouldn't change the fact that Bollinger was the more likely of the two to do so originally - all it'd prove was that Siddle wasn't ****. If it's for fitness reasons it's fine, otherwise Bollinger should (and IMO will) play. I'd actually be more inclined to leave Hilfenhaus or Doherty out than Bollinger, personally.
Yeah, I think I'd agree. Hilfenhaus was a properly good (and very much underappreciated) bowler before his injury last year. It could be that I've only seen his bad spells since but he really hasn't been at the same level.

Doherty, meh. I'm not sure any of the spin bowlers available are better than Marcus North by enough to justify their inclusion ahead of Siddle at the Gabba. If it's a mistake not to play a specialist spinner it certainly wouldn't be as big a mistake as leaving out Bollinger altogether.
 

flibbertyjibber

Request Your Custom Title Now!
It might be why the squad is 13 and not 12.

Honestly though, the only speculation I've seen to suggest Bollinger might not play in on CricketWeb. I'm pretty sure he'll be lining up with the new rock.
I expect him to play and Hilf,Johnson,Watson and Doherty to be the rest of the attack.Anything different and i'd be surprised.
 

Prince EWS

Global Moderator
There's still no reason to confirm that Doherty will play. Yes that's the likely plan but I could easily see them picking four seamers plus North/Smith. You'd say Siddle would be more likely to take wickets than Doherty regardless of the make-up of the attack.
I get the feeling North will essentially just bowl Watson's overs if Doherty doesn't play though, which is a step back in the quality of the fifth bowler.
To me it comes down to this: what's the best set of two bowlers out of Watson/Doherty and Siddle/North?
It's extremely close IMO but I'd lean towards the former in most conditions.
 
Last edited:

Howe_zat

Audio File
I get the feeling North will essentially just bowl Watson's overs if Doherty doesn't play though, which is a step back in the quality of the fifth bowler.
To me it comes down to this: what's the best set of two bowlers out of Watson/Doherty and Siddle/North?
It's extremely close IMO but I'd lean towards the former in most conditions.
That's where we differ then, I still don't really rate Watson as a bowler to be honest.
 

BoyBrumby

Englishman
I'd have to agree with Dicko to some extent though, you have to be willing to criticise selections even if they turn out well or you'll give selectors with good players to choose from too easy a ride. You never get to see what the other guy would have done.
Yeah, he does take it to absolute extremes sometimes, but I think people only find it infuriating because it makes it absolutely impossible for him to be proven wrong.
Sorry chaps, but that's bollocks and big hairy ones at that. It presupposes the correctness of one's own personal preference and, as Poos concedes, makes it impossible to be shown to be wrong. Bloke takes 10? My chap would've taken 15.

I'm quite prepared to criticise selections (would've gone for Ramprakash over Trott for the 5th test last year as an example), but when the chap I didn't pick performs I'm forced to concede that (hey) maybe I don't know it all and (yes) was wrong.
 

Prince EWS

Global Moderator
That's where we differ then, I still don't really rate Watson as a bowler to be honest.
Watson's gone through lots of different phases and actions as a bowler but as it stands he's a bowler who's going to be really effective on a seaming deck or if the ball's reversing. He's not the fast, bouncy, aggressive bowler he was, who'd come on as a seriously good frontline ODI option and bowl back of a length in the middle overs, but I think he could be the most useful Test bowler he's ever been now (assuming something resembling full fitness). His spell for NSW the other day was a gem.
 

Johnners

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Listening to an ABC grandstand interview with Hilditch on Saturday, I'm 95% certain Doherty will play. Basically said if a spinner's picked it will be Doherty, and that they'll almost certainly play a spinner at the Gabba. That said, it is Hilditch so who knows.....
 

Uppercut

Request Your Custom Title Now!
Sorry chaps, but that's bollocks and big hairy ones at that. It presupposes the correctness of one's own personal preference and, as Poos concedes, makes it impossible to be shown to be wrong. Bloke takes 10? My chap would've taken 15.

I'm quite prepared to criticise selections (would've gone for Ramprakash over Trott for the 5th test last year as an example), but when the chap I didn't pick performs I'm forced to concede that (hey) maybe I don't know it all and (yes) was wrong.
Well obviously you can't be "shown" to be wrong. There's no such absolute, unless you said something like "Siddle will take less than five wickets".

You definitely need to re-evaluate your initial judgments if the test presents some pretty good evidence that they weren't good. Hilfenhaus's performance in the first Ashes test last time out is a pretty good example. No one thought it was the right decision to pick him initially him a few overs in we all instantly saw why the selectors had done it. Except Dicko, who sticks rigidly to his initial judgments.

It's a pretty huge mistake to outright reject them too, though. There's an infinitely small chance that I would take ten wickets were I to find my long-lost Aussie father and turn out for the side badly jetlagged on Thursday- if that came to pass it would in no way make my selection correct.

Or to put it technically, you're just as much a fool as Dicko if you discard a hypothesis on the basis of one trial. One trial which you only know half the results of because no one gets to see the alternative.
 

BoyBrumby

Englishman
Or to put it technically, you're just as much a fool as Dicko if you discard a hypothesis on the basis of one trial. One trial which you only know half the results of because no one gets to see the alternative.
Yeah, that's called having your cake and eating it. Until alternate realities are discovered we're just stuck with the old fashioned idea that when selectors pick players who perform they've made a good call. It takes a Dickinsonesque arrogance to then maintain the decision was wrong because the selection differed from the one he would have made.

Moreover, "one trial" is often all selectors have. I don't see anyone seriously contesting the selection of Trott for Bopara which was by necessity a call for one test only.

Re the matter at hand, I think, assuming full fitness, I'd be inclined to select Bollinger, however I still don't think it's as cut and dried as all that; we aren't talking about leaving out McGrath for Mick Lewis here.
 

Spark

Global Moderator
It's probably worthwhile (2:30am and it shows, four attempts to spell that correctly and eventually had to resort to spell check, for shame) to distinguish between a selection itself - whose merits can only really judged on the results - and the justifications for it, which may be complete nonsense at the same time. A potential example could be North's last test.

This could also be nonsense, but again - it's twenty to stupid o'clock here.

---

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/new...r-the-first-test/story-e6frg7mf-1225958002792

Media are packing it in, aren't they? Expected to see something of substance, instead get a few vague lines and statements-of-the-obvious based on one fairly benign, predictable, and rather unimportant event. Then goes and makes other tired statements-of-the-obvious and vagueness/

EDIT: Haha it gets worse... quick snooping reveals their one source for their one statement of any substances is probably this. Sad that I was able to predict that so easily if so.
 
Last edited:

Uppercut

Request Your Custom Title Now!
Yeah, that's called having your cake and eating it. Until alternate realities are discovered we're just stuck with the old fashioned idea that when selectors pick players who perform they've made a good call. It takes a Dickinsonesque arrogance to then maintain the decision was wrong because the selection differed from the one he would have made.

Moreover, "one trial" is often all selectors have. I don't see anyone seriously contesting the selection of Trott for Bopara which was by necessity a call for one test only.
You're looking at this from a strange angle.. why are you so concerned with whether Dicko's initial prediction was wrong or not? We're just trying to judge whether the selectors' decision was good or not, and the point is that if you want to find out, it's best to look at more than just the results of it.
 

MW1304

Cricketer Of The Year
Given the australian selectors logic, I'm surprised they didn't pick O'Queef ahead of Doherty. Left field selection; left armer; they have this in both. Plus Queefy has a better first class record and he can properly bat. Considering the spinner probs won't have much of a say at the Gabba, surely its best to have the 3 seamers plus Watto, and another bat in Queef, who seems a handy enough spinner. They even have decent part timers ffs. They obviously wanted to go somewhat left field, just seems like O'Queefy would be a much better option, by their logic.
 

BoyBrumby

Englishman
You're looking at this from a strange angle.. why are you so concerned with whether Dicko's initial prediction was wrong or not? We're just trying to judge whether the selectors' decision was good or not, and the point is that if you want to find out, it's best to look at more than just the results of it.
I don't give a **** about Dicko's initial prediction; I just find it wrong headed he continues to insist selectors are "wrong" when the evidence of the play suggests the contrary. We, the general public, aren't privy to selectorial meetings so we're only summising what the reasons might've been anyway.

To use the Oval test last year again as an example one could quite easily propose an argument along the lines of "Bopara was selected for the first four tests, if they thought he was the man for the job then, why change now?" but that's rendered rather redundant when the man who replaced him scores a debut 100. If you disregard the result (which is, ultimately the objective of sport) it becomes impossible to ever make a "right" or "wrong" call.

The problem is, when one looks at anything other than the bottom line, one makes a subjective judgement as to whether a selection was the "correct" one or not. Ultimately any selection is just an opinion; the proof of the pudding is in the eating.
 

Uppercut

Request Your Custom Title Now!
To use the Oval test last year again as an example one could quite easily propose an argument along the lines of "Bopara was selected for the first four tests, if they thought he was the man for the job then, why change now?" but that's rendered rather redundant when the man who replaced him scores a debut 100. If you disregard the result (which is, ultimately the objective of sport) it becomes impossible to ever make a "right" or "wrong" call.
It is impossible to make a "right" or "wrong" call. That's the point. The "right" decision is the one that is most likely to turn out best for the team, right? We'll never even come close to knowing that most of the time, we can just make a vague estimate. An estimate that will generally be less accurate if all we look at is the result of the decision than it would be if we took other stuff into account. Such as whether the selectorial logic was sound or they just came out with bollocks like Bopara was selected for the first four tests, if they thought he was the man for the job then, why change now?

An acceptance that a decision that turned out badly wasn't necessarily a bad decision isn't the same thing as a stubborn refusal to accept that you might have been wrong.
 
Last edited:

Top_Cat

Request Your Custom Title Now!
Indeed. Lets not forget the Gabba pitch we saw a couple of seasons back when New Zealand toured.
India 03/04 too; pissed down all week, Zaheer Khan picked up 5 on a pitch where it was hard to differentiate the cut portion from the uncut portion, (ooer, missus, etc.* ).

Mind you, the Gabba ground has awesome drainage (QLD'ers know what they're doing when it comes to a deluge) so if the weather fairs up, the ground will dry out and the pitch will probably flatten quickly. Whether you bat first and endure a seamer's paradise on day 1 or bowl first and take advantage of good conditions will probably depends on the forecast for the week following Thu.

*(c)BoyBrumby 2009
 

Top