silentstriker
The Wheel is Forever
That really has absolutely nothing to do with players and averages but......ok.bah you don't see Australian fans go missing just because we are losing, we just get really ****ty about it. And expect different.
That really has absolutely nothing to do with players and averages but......ok.bah you don't see Australian fans go missing just because we are losing, we just get really ****ty about it. And expect different.
Yes, I distinctly remember some of the huge crowds of Australians during the latter stages of matches during the Ashes.bah you don't see Australian fans go missing just because we are losing
Yeah, was funny the way Bumble and Beefy kept going on about spot the Aussie on day 5 of tests.Yes, I distinctly remember some of the huge crowds of Australians during the latter stages of matches during the Ashes.
Didn't know day 5 was designated fancy dress over there and they chose to come as seats.
Crowd numbers across the board are a bit of a worry here these days. I think you'll find weekday crowds will be low here again this summer and beyond. Disappointing fact of life. But our cricketers and cricket lovers don't abandon ship just because the going gets tough.Yes, I distinctly remember some of the huge crowds of Australians during the latter stages of matches during the Ashes.
Didn't know day 5 was designated fancy dress over there and they chose to come as seats.
I guess support is what silentstriker is referring to when deriding an entire culture? Becuase surely winning and losing is not "Australianism," rather skills based?That Aussie culture 101 is as bs as the 'australianism' that's trotted out (interestingly only when they win and not when they're bundled out for 47). And I admire the Aussie sports culture and i wish India had some of that but lets not go overboard here.
Nah, Richmond still get decent crowds.uvelocity, I am not really understanding your point.
I don't think anyone said Australian fans in particular are front runners or anything. All countries have fans who will turn up more when they win than lose. Winning and success brings in more fans, that is a fact in every sport.
What are you suggesting though? That they are more loyal to their team than other fans?
Ahh, ok. But I think this is a quality which does exist, but yeah not limited to Australians. And not all have it.fight back and never say die.
+1shahid afridi
Yes,Australia did well in their golden era a few years ago because they had awesome players with good discipline and a good first class system. Not because they had some magical never say die attitude that no other country had.
There's no doubt that having great players around you will make you lift your own game mentally and make you walk a foot taller. As those players retired there's no doubt they took alot of confidence around the group with them.Yes,
nothing annoys me more than fans claiming their team didn't show enough 'heart' or 'guts'. That's usually a problem during a single match when a team loses the plot but it can't explain a long period of success/failure.
If Warne and McGrath were able to get their mental state right very often then that's a skill/natural talent which helped them to be champion players. Siddle is proof so far that all the determination in the world still needs to be backed by skill for it to succeed.
Wow, that is absolutely dire. But no, we can't replace him because there's nobody else banging the door down. I'm sorry but you don't need players to be doing that when his results have been that poor. In any case, you could always just pick a stop gap solution like David Hussey, and in a year or two the chances are someone else will come along. What's the point of letting him drag the team down for as long as possible? I see no benefits for the team, or him personally.Of his past 17 innings, 11 have been 16 or under.
His past seven series averages have been 24, 24, 56, 16, 31, 17 and 33.
He is 37 years of age.
If he was a Pom, and they were clinging on to such a clapped-out, ageing, underperformer...we would be laughing
John Inverarity, put an end to this sad tale