I think Warner will be able to do that. And if he doesn't, well then he should probably get the kick because anything much under 40 and we are heading towards NZ territory. And surely we can do better than that. Surely.
How about a slowfire 30 off 100 once a year? Tim McIntosh doesn't have much on at the moment...somebody opening who can consistently score 40 off 100, rather than a quickfire hundred once a year.
I've gotta admit, it's not as bad as I thought it would be.Ross Taylor 42
Jesse Ryder 40
David Warner 39
Brendon McCullum 35
You're not heading towards NZ territory, you're smack bang in it.
You've got a long way to go if you want to steal our crown for producing meh openers.I've gotta admit, it's not as bad as I thought it would be.
Ps. I was actually only talking about openers.
That is because Watson consistently scored 40 at a run-a-ball and threw his wicket away slogging rather than push on and get big scores. The role of an opener (in a traditional sense anyway) is to see off the new ball so that the middle order can come out and dominate. If you are going to get out for 40 you should be facing a good amount of balls in doing so.But Watson did that, and was massively criticized for it. Regardless of whether they score 50's or 100's, what we really need - and this is a pretty revolutionary thought here - is someone who can consistently average about 40. I think Warner will be able to do that. And if he doesn't, well then he should probably get the kick because anything much under 40 and we are heading towards NZ territory. And surely we can do better than that. Surely.
It's rare for a player to be able to consistently make medium range scores essentially over their entire carer, but it's not without precedent - e.g. Redpath. So yes, it was always unlikely Watson would have been able to maintain the amount of 50's he was pumping out, but not impossible.This is why we had a problem with Watson scoring 50, though (apart from the fact that it wasted good starts, exposed the middle order needlessly, failed to set up the innings in the way Clarke/Ponting would etc). Good form doesn't last forever and you have to make it count when you can.
It's not a false dichotomy because it doesn't even attempt to describe all of the possible outcomes - it's pretty clear it's just meant to be an example of two contrasting scoring patterns which sum up to the same total of runs (or 'average' across the match), and can be used to illustrate if each pattern has a different effect on a match as a whole.Oye, this again. The 50/50 vs 100/0 is a false dichotomy, FFS.
Also, it wasn't merely that Watson didn't go on with it, was how he got out too. You've opened and your team is 3 for <100 after a woeful, woeful start, if you nick out going for a big drive, you haven't done your job. It meant some **** had to come in at 4/100 (still far from safety) and do the spade work with the added pressure of knowing they were the last of the specialist bats but it also lets the oppo know that you're rattled. That gives them more confidence against the rest of the order which is a really crap advantage to hand them on top of your wicket.