Rasimione
U19 Captain
Ingram is a hack. Miller il reserve my comments until i have seen enough of him.Colin Ingram and David Miller. Looked pretty good when I first saw them, but have disappointed.
Ingram is a hack. Miller il reserve my comments until i have seen enough of him.Colin Ingram and David Miller. Looked pretty good when I first saw them, but have disappointed.
^
He's only 23 ffs.
Tbf I did state that he still had time to change that perception, and I think he probably will. But considering how he started in South Africa in 2009 he has been quite disappointing.Yeah I'd be quite suprised if Hughes didn't have some impact on Aust cricket in the next decade. His time is clearly not now, but you'd have to think a player with such a high amount of natural talent and ambition as him will somehow find a way to succeed eventually, even if it takes a few more years.
Wow. You're hard to please. 259 wickets at 26. When I saw Gillespie take 7-for-something on his first tour of England I thought he was a gangly kid who didn't really know what he was doing. I really never dreamed he'd turn into the fantastic performer he was.Jason Gillespie comes to mind. Expected more and was disappointed.
Harsh, I'd say. Bloke did take over 300 test scalps at not too much over 30. I think his career should be viewed partly with regards to who he played with. When he was the fourth member of the Dizzy McWarne combo he was a pure strike bowler; went for runs but took vital wickets.Matthew Elliott, Greg Blewett, Sadagopan Ramesh, Wahjatulla Wasti, Brett Lee (Test cricket only), Azhar Mahmood, Liam Plunkett, Peter Fulton, Amit Mishra.
And Atul Sharma.
Interesting point, actually. My two favourite players, ftr and essentially because both were such absolute joys to behold. Touched by the hand of god, as it were. Because they were so preternaturally blessed tho, do we hold them to higher standards than mere mortals?Waqar Younis and Brian Lara - showed promise to be unarguably the best bowler ever and unarguably the 2nd best batsman ever, respectively.
Wouldn't say short changed, some times frustrated, but not short changed. He may not have been definitively the best after Bradman, but he is in the very short list of players in the discussion to be.Harsh, I'd say. Bloke did take over 300 test scalps at not too much over 30. I think his career should be viewed partly with regards to who he played with. When he was the fourth member of the Dizzy McWarne combo he was a pure strike bowler; went for runs but took vital wickets.
When the aforementioned trio left the stage BLee really stepped up. Until his body betrayed him he was arguably the world's leading seamer for a season.
Interesting point, actually. My two favourite players, ftr and essentially because both were such absolute joys to behold. Touched by the hand of god, as it were. Because they were so preternaturally blessed tho, do we hold them to higher standards than mere mortals?
I think Waqar can be excused slightly because his "decline" can be largely traced to his injury, but what of the little master? Personally I don't feel short changed at all but maybe Windies fans fel differently?
Yeah understand your point, but he is not a disappointment in the sense that he didn't achieve - infact his record cannot be questioned. My issue, and why his record isn't what it could be, was due to his lack of intelligence as a Test bowler.Harsh, I'd say. Bloke did take over 300 test scalps at not too much over 30. I think his career should be viewed partly with regards to who he played with. When he was the fourth member of the Dizzy McWarne combo he was a pure strike bowler; went for runs but took vital wickets.
When the aforementioned trio left the stage BLee really stepped up. Until his body betrayed him he was arguably the world's leading seamer for a season.
Great call. There was so much hype and excitement around this man.Steve Harmison. As above, but more so.