No it doesn't, both results are tied matches...*Bold= 1 teamAssuming we're playing timeless Tests, if you score 400 following on you're only setting the opposition 150 to win. Whereas if you reply with 400 first then roll the opposition for 150, your 300 2nd time round wins you the game.
Haha beat me to it.Ties it technically.
I'll stop discussing it when you stop being wrong.If you guys want to have this discussion again, just go to page 4, it has already been done.
You have to look at both sides of the story, some of you are only looking at the positives of scoring in the 1st dig, also assuming that if you fail in the 1st dig you will fail in the 2nd dig too.
Averages take into account both innings, so even if you fail in the 1st dig you will still be doing your team a great favor by scoring in the 2nd.
Couldn't be more true. Especially when it's 2 people at the top of the order that don't get out.Yeah, no kidding. Sorry to be blunt but I do wonder about some peoples' playing experience here. Walking off after your oppo scores 400 full of half tons feels far different to the same score if one or two guys smash you around the park.
Sigh...I agree that if two players get the bulk of those runs it will be more demoralising. But what about the other side of the coin (how many times has this been said now?)? What about in the second innings when those same two players get out for ducks or very low scores? You don't think that is going to let the opposition bowlers back into the game? Getting a batsmen out for a low score is a tremendous boost for the bowling side - hence why wickets so often fall in clumps.Yeah, no kidding. Sorry to be blunt but I do wonder about some peoples' playing experience here. Walking off after your oppo scores 400 full of half tons feels far different to the same score if one or two guys smash you around the park.
It's a pointless discussion to disregard context because it absolutely matters and often decides the course of a match before further runs scored or wickets taken do.
Or, as England have done, if you score heavily enough in the first innings you don't have to bother batting again.Sigh...I agree that if two players get the bulk of those runs it will be more demoralising. But what about the other side of the coin (how many times has this been said now?)? What about in the second innings when those same two players get out for ducks or very low scores? You don't think that is going to let the opposition bowlers back into the game? Getting a batsmen out for a low score is a tremendous boost for the bowling side - hence why wickets so often fall in clumps.
Which would increase your average anyway.Or, as England have done, if you score heavily enough in the first innings you don't have to bother batting again.
Why the **** are you still blabbering on about averages?Which would increase your average anyway.
Because we are discussing 2 50s vs 100 & 0 (or 0 & 100 whatever).Why the **** are you still blabbering on about averages?
I agree he should make more hundreds and it would help Australia more than 30-50 does but won't I don't agree with is him getting blamed for collapses.i would say continuing getting 50's and not going on with it is doing something wrong.
Yep, but you could also assume the the 100 and 0 would simply be in seperate matches (in which case the argument is still exactly the same). I.e. yes the 100 would have a positive effect on the team blah blah, but the 0 in the next game would be equally negative.Because we are discussing 2 50s vs 100 & 0 (or 0 & 100 whatever).
The consistency is that you must be averaging 50. You will average higher if you make a big 1st innings score and don't bat again.
He's not to blame per se, but if you're racing to 50 and getting out, and the batting lineup happens to be prone to collapsing quite a lot, then a lot of the time it's either going to be your dismissal which triggers a collapse, or you're going to be exacerbating a collapse by getting out in the middle of a collapse.I agree he should make more hundreds and it would help Australia more than 30-50 does but won't I don't agree with is him getting blamed for collapses.
Watson is not responsible for Clarke waving his bat around in a different postcode to his body, or North having a bigger backlift than an swing and no amount of discussing mental effects of 100s vs 50s changes that.
And after all It's TEST cricket, if you can't handle not coming in at 2/200 mabye you're out of your league.