watson
Banned
Absolutely true.Basically anyone who succeeds at 3 or 4 in a batting order should be fine at 6.
The reverse is not true, not everyone can open or bat at 3.
Absolutely true.Basically anyone who succeeds at 3 or 4 in a batting order should be fine at 6.
The reverse is not true, not everyone can open or bat at 3.
By the same logic Martin Crowe would not have been able to score his 188 runs against Marshall, Holding, and Garner at Barbados in 1985 if he were languishing in the No.6 position;That's true to an extent We can say that Mahela won't be a liability that down the order, but looking at his game which was all about staying on the crease for long periods of time and scoring big, would be wasted to an extent that down the order.
Don't you think having someone who has more experience of batting down the order, someone who is more used to batting with the tail would be better? Usually when Mahela walked in, the team was a couple of wickets down. It's a totally different ball game when you are in a partnership that is probably the last recognized pair in the team and your wicket means much more than it does top of the order. There is a reason we appreciate players like Steve Waugh or Lara coz they have shown they are much more than run getters. Mahela "can" do it, no doubt. But the scenario he is in, facing quality bowlers some of which are ATGs, suddenly taking him out of his comfort zone is a huge risk IMO. Again, Im just saying there could have been a better option who suited that role better. At least when I picked my players I respected their careers and not what they "can" do.By the same logic Martin Crowe would not have been able to score his 188 runs against Marshall, Holding, and Garner at Barbados in 1985 if he were languishing in the No.6 position;
2nd Test: West Indies v New Zealand at Georgetown, Apr 6-11, 1985 | Cricket Scorecard | ESPN Cricinfo
Neither would he have got his top score of 299 runs either unless at No.4;
1st Test: New Zealand v Sri Lanka at Wellington, Jan 31-Feb 4, 1991 | Cricket Scorecard | ESPN Cricinfo
You can't have your cake and eat it Aldo. One batsman has to give, and there is no concrete reason that it should be Martin Crowe.
I have my doubts that Mahela could have scored 150+ in the West Indies against Marshall et al. But I am happy to be wrong.
You need to be reasonable in a draft like this. If it comes to the final rounds and Jayawardene is the best available middle order batsman, you take him and bat him at 6, even if he batted at 4 more often.Don't you think having someone who has more experience of batting down the order, someone who is more used to batting with the tail would be better? Usually when Mahela walked in, the team was a couple of wickets down. It's a totally different ball game when you are in a partnership that is probably the last recognized pair in the team and your wicket means much more than it does top of the order. There is a reason we appreciate players like Steve Waugh or Lara coz they have shown they are much more than run getters. Mahela "can" do it, no doubt. But the scenario he is in, facing quality bowlers some of which are ATGs, suddenly taking him out of his comfort zone is a huge risk IMO. Again, Im just saying there could have been a better option who suited that role better. At least when I picked my players I respected their careers and not what they "can" do.
That batsmen you stated were much more versatile and complete than Mahela tbh.
Putting Mahela at No.6 is not a 'huge risk', rather it is a justifiable small risk.Don't you think having someone who has more experience of batting down the order, someone who is more used to batting with the tail would be better? Usually when Mahela walked in, the team was a couple of wickets down. It's a totally different ball game when you are in a partnership that is probably the last recognized pair in the team and your wicket means much more than it does top of the order. There is a reason we appreciate players like Steve Waugh or Lara coz they have shown they are much more than run getters. Mahela "can" do it, no doubt. But the scenario he is in, facing quality bowlers some of which are ATGs, suddenly taking him out of his comfort zone is a huge risk IMO. Again, Im just saying there could have been a better option who suited that role better. At least when I picked my players I respected their careers and not what they "can" do.
That batsmen you stated were much more versatile and complete than Mahela tbh.
No.You are telling that Dravid or Ponting would have had the same careers had they played at number 7?
'Career' is the completely wrong context.Well why not in their cases? And why is it different for Mahela? Honest question.
Didn't know about this!So like last group, both winning teams have to pick one players from Somerset's team. Since the votes are equal, it doesn't matter who picks first. Make your choices as soon as possible.
http://www.espncricinfo.com/magazine/content/story/485906.htmlThe quality of Barry Richards' merciless attack on the best bowlers of his time was not strained. However, after 1970, fate decreed that his batting genius was mainly limited to belting the hell out of all comers in county cricket. Richards leapt at a chance to play Sheffield Shield cricket in 1970-71, whereupon he astonished everyone by hitting more than a thousand runs at the Bradman-like average of 109. 86.
He hit 325 in one day against a strong Western Australia attack - Graham McKenzie, Dennis Lillee, Tony Lock, Ian Brayshaw, John Inverarity and Tony Mann - with such timing and power that even the WA players stood in awe and applauded him. Lock conceded more than 100 off nine overs, unheard of in Australia, where the old England master spinner usually had the opposition batsmen in knots.
Richards was on 317 when Lillee bowled the last over of the day. The second ball was flayed over cover - one bounce to the fence. The final delivery was a short-pitched ball that rose to above chest height. Most mortals would have done well to fend it to the ground, but Richards went right back on his stumps and somehow swatted the ball over mid-on, one bounce into the crowd.
- Ashley Mallett
Barry Richards played 4 Tests so he automatically falls into the category of available for selection. To consider him great or not is entirely different matter of personal opinions. The point I tried to make clear is that yes he played only four tests but the kind of attacks and circumstances he encountered in FC and scored were by no means easy roll oversThe keywords being in this draft. It clearly says on the tin that only their test careers are to be considered, and Richards' spans all of four tests. His county and shield exploits shouldn't mean a thing.