Furball
Evil Scotsman
We didn't.how did you end up losing by an innings at Perth then?
We didn't.how did you end up losing by an innings at Perth then?
You might want to get your facts straight mate.how did you end up losing by an innings at Perth then?
It's certainly confirmed that the depth of the batting is absolutely vital to the team's success. I don't think the top 6 are up there with the best combinations ever, which doesn't mean that it doesn't contain some fine players. However, the guys from 7 to 9 are right up there with the best in those positions, so we don't often get rolled over for silly scores, and often we end up exponentially better than looked likely at the fall of the 5th wicket.The series has rather confirmed the suspicion that Australia and Sri Lanka made the batting look a fair bit stronger than it really is.
It's a good effort by a good line up against **** bowling. (You can see I'm doing my best to downplay Englands batting here)441-6 is a good effort though for a weak batting line up.
Been one of the most remarkable turnarounds in a test match in the last 10 years since Laxman and Dravid v Australia.Were England seriously 8/124 at one stage? Seriously? Or even 50 behind with 6 wickets left to get?
AWTA, unfortunately the scoreboard at a glance doesn't really show the full story. It's only when you look at the fall of wickets that you get an Idea.Been one of the most remarkable turnarounds in a test match in the last 10 years since Laxman and Dravid v Australia.
The reason it hasn't happened often lately though is because we had a great team...wins in Australia were reasonably common in the 80's, and I reckon they'll become a bit more common in the next couple of years if the team playing us is decent (if they're better than decent then we could get a flogging like England handed out to us recently).Wins in Australia are very common of course, hence why it happens so often
The nearest I've seen was the late 1970's: Willis, Botham and Hendrick, with Old and John Lever as alternatives.The depth in pace bowling is something that I've never seen as an England fan, not even remotely.