Spark
Global Moderator
I would have got Broad on. Push him back with the short one but your main plan should be the same as always - attack the stumps, look for the bowled, LBW and caught behind.Mix them up and try to get him to fend at one?
I would have got Broad on. Push him back with the short one but your main plan should be the same as always - attack the stumps, look for the bowled, LBW and caught behind.Mix them up and try to get him to fend at one?
I'm weird in that I'm probably the strongest (or second strongest when Richard is posting) advocate of judging players on results, and yet when I judge teams I'm far more open to just looking at the personnel. I guess it's because teams can change completely and the theoretical example of eleven players retiring at once and that country's Second XI team being 'the best in the world' until they lost enough games for the results to conclusively show they weren't is enough for me to dismiss the whole thing as pretty pointless.Nah IMO results are the only thing that matters in judging how good a team is. What's the point of looking good on paper if it doesn't translate to wins?
If England were to win this series by two tests will the rankings lie then?Indeed, the Saffers could well have said that for part of the 90's, but without the results it meant nothing, the rankings do not lie.
Because sides change too much. The England side now is almost totally unrecognisable from the side that last played in India for example, even if many of the players are the same.Nah IMO results are the only thing that matters in judging how good a team is. What's the point of looking good on paper if it doesn't translate to wins?
That's a subtly different question though.I'm weird in that I'm probably the strongest (or second strongest when Richard is posting) advocate of judging players on results, and yet when I judge teams I'm far more open to just looking at the personnel. I guess it's because teams can change completely and the theoretical example of eleven players retiring at once and that country's Second XI team being 'the best in the world' until they lost enough games for the results to conclusively show they weren't is enough for me to dismiss the whole thing as pretty pointless.
Yeah this is what I'm trying to say put in a much better way.I'm weird in that I'm probably the strongest (or second strongest when Richard is posting) advocate of judging players on results, and yet when I judge teams I'm far more open to just looking at the personnel. I guess it's because teams can change completely and the theoretical example of eleven players retiring at once and that country's Second XI team being 'the best in the world' until they lost enough games for the results to conclusively show they weren't is enough for me to dismiss the whole thing as pretty pointless.
No they will be the number 1 side and I'll say well played. Don't think that will happen mind. Still wouldn't think you'd come close to beating us at home.If England were to win this series by two tests will the rankings lie then?
Yeah, I see it like that with players too.That's a subtly different question though.
"Who is best Test nation in the world?" - that to me is purely results based.
"Who has the strongest playing XI in the world" - well, that's clearly a mixture of both.
Then we're talking at cross purposes. To me those two questions are the same. The best side is the side with the best players (and the best players are by definition the ones likeliest to produce the best results).That's a subtly different question though.
"Who is best Test nation in the world?" - that to me is purely results based.
"Who has the strongest playing XI in the world" - well, that's clearly a mixture of both.
And Presumably you will be out picking up something and missed play if England don't win the series? Right?Riled up are we boys?
Hey, we might not even win this yet. But rest assured, we are a better side.
cyainabit
so who was the best team in the world then after his retirement ? so from being team with 11 best players in the world they suddenly became the second best team because they lost just one guy?Then we're talking at cross purposes. To me those two questions are the same. The best side is the side with the best players (and the best players are by definition the ones likeliest to produce the best results).
Australia after Gilchrist’s retirement in 2008 would have been the “best Test nation in the world” under this definition but there is no way I would have said that they were at the time, because they just weren’t a very good side.
Stop that, now.Don't see any hope of India making it past tea to be honest. Too bad.
Haha, I wrote that post before bed and thought it might have sounded suss.And Presumably you will be out picking up something and missed play if England don't win the series? Right?![]()
You made dravid play that short and what us to stop now ???Stop that, now.
You've misunderstood me. I wasn't saying it was thanks to his retirement, I was just using his retirement as a marker.so who was the best team in the world then after his retirement ? so from being team with 11 best players in the world they suddenly became the second best team because they lost just one guy?
Agree with the theoretical example Pwes put forward but don't think that happened any time in the history of cricket rt or did during the parker era?.. don't know about any other team sports ..may be the Man u after that air plane accident would be a example
http://stats.espncricinfo.com/ci/en...late=results;type=batting;view=dismissal_listCan anyone get records on Swann vs Gambhir? Got him out in his first Test over, got him in the World Cup and got him today. Anyone think of any more?
On the match, I reckon if we get Tendulkar and one more before tea we've got this. New ball soon after tea too. Of course, Tendulkar and Raina were always the ones to fear, apart from the overnight batsmen - Raina's made himself into something of a fighter.
Stop that, now.