It's beside the point... I just think to say he never lacks confidence is a bit of an exaggeration. His double against Pak is a perfect example of why I think that's wrong. He started the innings off playing the pull shot in a really terrible fashion, but as he stayed at the crease longer, he started hitting the ball in the middle. I fail to see how that abrupt change of form can be anything other than an increase in confidence.Not that many of Ponting's dismissals on the pull have been top-edges. He's mostly middled them, but his technique on the pull/hook means that he hits in the air very often... and when he middles it, they sail. Luck and two men back do the rest.
Of more concern was when he tried the Clarke short-arm jab. I have no idea how Clarke plays that shot, but it's not for Ponting. Luckily he shelved it for the true Ponting pull at first opportunity.
Form itself is largely mental and tied to confidence, though. You don't just temporarily lose the ability to bat, or temporarily gain superpowers allowing you to bat better.But again that's not confidence. That's form. If he wasn't confident, he wouldn't have been trying to play the shot. You do actually see the ball better, pick up the length better, your feet move better, you're more relaxed at the crease etc. etc. with time at the crease so yes I can see how just spending time in the middle can get you from failing to middle any pulls to middling everything.
No, a lower level of confidence means he plays the shot with more hesitancy - hence more errors result. And btw, he has actually been more conservative and decided not to play the shot in recent times (sometimes ducking bouncers instead of pulling etc.), hence further proving he lacks confidence. If it was simply a matter of not being 'warmed up' , then he would go through the painful process seen in the Pak 200 every innings - but he doesn't... he usually starts playing well once he reaches 20 or so. The reason he took so long in that game to get into good form was because his confidence was at a low after the Roach incident etc.But again that's not confidence. That's form. If he wasn't confident, he wouldn't have been trying to play the shot. You do actually see the ball better, pick up the length better, your feet move better, you're more relaxed at the crease etc. etc. with time at the crease so yes I can see how just spending time in the middle can get you from failing to middle any pulls to middling everything.
Nah, Strauss was a poor shot in the context. 3rd ball of the 1st overseas Ashes Test and you slap a cut shot throat high to gulley. Poor.Almost all is greatly exaggerating the first innings effort from England.
Strauss threw his wicket away. But he did cut a ball that moved back into him a bit. Could've left it.
Cook: fell to a ball on a length angled across him around off-stump (This has been mentioned as a weakness by all and sundry).
Trott: beaten by a good ball from Watson trying to play an off-drive.
Pietersen: Possibly didn't have to go for the drive. Bit of movement from Siddle on a good length.
Collingwood: Got out to a good ball around off-stump...like every man and his dog knows he will. Stuart Clark to testify in the affirmative. Never looked good in his brief stay.
Prior: Bowled by a good one first up.
Broad: Also got a good one, made history as the 3rd down in a hat-trick.
Out of 7 bats, maybe you could lay claim that 1 to 1.5 'threw their wickets away'.
Not really 'almost all' though is it?
No, you've proved you've got a fragile batting lineup that was saved by a combination of incorrect umpiring decisions and somebody pulling out the best innings of their career/last 4 years from their ass.Have no idea how you can say England came out on top easily. Were you watching a different game for the first three days?
Australia proved they could take ten English wickets cheaply. England have not done that.
On the other side of the coin, England have proven they can dominate Australia's attack... and so too have Australia proven they can dominate the English attack.
And Brad Haddin tbh. What a gun. Quality.No, you've proved you've got a fragile batting lineup that was saved by a combination of incorrect umpiring decisions and somebody pulling out the best innings of their career/last 4 years from their ass.
Yeah, he was the "career". Hussey was the "4 years"And Brad Haddin tbh. What a gun. Quality.
How costly were the drops? I mean Trott didn't offer a chance until he was in the 80s or something.And you guys were saved by us not being able to catch a cricket ball. Whatever, the point remains that we scored 481 runs in there, which is plenty.
The vast majority of which were scored in one partnership which offered a number of chances and had an LBW incorrectly turned down.
481 is quite a lot, but ignoring your 2 high scorers, you're innings was very comparable to ours. Just we didn't get the let offs.
Yeah, because 11 batsmen vs 3 (or effectively 9 vs 1) is entirely comparable.
...
517 is quite a lot, but ignoring the two highest scorers, we got barely over a hundred.