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and whilst his average ain't much over 40 Straus' 20 tons and leadership qualities rate him well over Tres in my mind.Vaughan did make his lineup though.
and whilst his average ain't much over 40 Straus' 20 tons and leadership qualities rate him well over Tres in my mind.Vaughan did make his lineup though.
The reason I didn't go with Anderson is because I think he's been better as he gets older so during the noughties not done enough, but a marginal call with Lee.would have Anderson over probably Lee or Jacobs.
Fleming over Collingwood.
Gillespie completely had the yips though; he'd lost it. Lee had just returned to the side and comfortably outbowled Gillespie and Kasprowicz in that series. There's no way Gillespie could be retained after that really.schearzie said:No I think you're right not to put Anderson in, but I find it hard to put Lee in any side. He was decent enough when he swung the ball at pace. But commentators overrated him so much it put me off him. Should have been dropped before Gillespie in my opinion. I know Dizzy's stats weren't great at the time, but Lee's were over inflated due to his bowling more overs at the tail. But anyway my vote is for Dizzy Gillespie, one poor year does not make him lose to Brett 'look at me' Lee. I mean the mullet, get the mullet in your team!
It was actually a reply to schearzie who Sparked and then deleted his post.Spark?
Sorry, I realised I'd gone outside the zone of sub 27 ave. Completely my fault obviously.Gillespie completely had the yips though; he'd lost it. Lee had just returned to the side and comfortably outbowled Gillespie and Kasprowicz in that series. There's no way Gillespie could be retained after that really.
Assuming you are talking about 2005 Ashes, did you (or anyone) see how he bowled against Bangladesh in the subsequent series. Was the bowling very much the same or was he back to bowling well. I know you said Gillespie had the yips but from what I remember, he didn't look to be bowling awfully, he just had no penetration or movement.Gillespie completely had the yips though; he'd lost it. Lee had just returned to the side and comfortably outbowled Gillespie and Kasprowicz in that series. There's no way Gillespie could be retained after that really.
People talk about taking players' peaks and looking at the highest level of skill they achieved a lot on this forum and I don't really buy into it a a very important measure a lot, but Bree Lee during this (almost) two year period bowled just as well as I've seen anyone bowl this century. It's often forgotten with his career of injury, inconsistency and unfulfilled potential, that he actually was indisputably the best fast bowler in the world for a little period before injury took hold of him again and Steyn took over. It's a shame that he mastered his skill at about the same time his body ceased to be capable of enduring the process; he was a bit like Ryan Harris in that way I guess.Plenty of possible teams that I think would give All Time Test XIs a run for their money. Batting is obviously strong but bowling is interesting. Thomson, Anderson and Zaheer would be a fine bowling line-up by any standards if you take the three in their prime. There is pace, swing and reverse swing. But there is also the prospect of chucking the ball to Lee and Thomson and watching batsmen hop around. I cannot imagine tailenders lasting too long against those two!
He bowled much better in Bangladesh than he did in England. He'd transformed into the bowler you're talking about by Bangladesh - bowled a tidy line and an awkward length but without the pace or movement to really trouble many batsmen. What always made Gillespie so deadly in his prime was that he seemed to lose a lot less pace off the pitch after the ball landed than most bowlers. I'm not sure if he actually did as such or it just seemed that way, but whichever the case it was well and truly gone by the time he played Bangladesh. He went back to domestic cricket for a while after that and was a solid bowler without ever really doing anything to suggest he should be back in the Test frame.Assuming you are talking about 2005 Ashes, did you (or anyone) see how he bowled against Bangladesh in the subsequent series. Was the bowling very much the same or was he back to bowling well. I know you said Gillespie had the yips but from what I remember, he didn't look to be bowling awfully, he just had no penetration or movement.
He was actually pretty quick for most of his Test career, I'm starting to find from clips on YouTube. More often than not pushing or over 140kph. IIRC, in Ashes 2005, he was often at 130kph.He bowled much better in Bangladesh than he did in England. He'd transformed into the bowler you're talking about by Bangladesh - bowled a tidy line and an awkward length but without the pace or movement to really trouble many batsmen. What always made Gillespie so deadly in his prime was that he seemed to lose a lot less pace off the pitch after the ball landed than most bowlers. I'm not sure if he actually did as such or it just seemed that way, but whichever the case it was well and truly gone by the time he played Bangladesh. He went back to domestic cricket for a while after that and was a solid bowler without ever really doing anything to suggest he should be back in the Test frame.
In England though he was actually terrible at times; perhaps he was striving to get back what he'd lost and was trying too much, but he was all over the shop rather than just innocuous.
Why don't you buy into it as being an important measure. Someone like Anderson should clearly go down as someone who started averagely but then become a world class bowler, same for Zaheer? Career averages are misleading in this way, right? Longevity is important, but I don't think you can really criticise longevity on the basis that they were a poorer bowler when they started.People talk about taking players' peaks and looking at the highest level of skill they achieved a lot on this forum and I don't really buy into it a a very important measure a lot, but Bree Lee during this (almost) two year period bowled just as well as I've seen anyone bowl this century. It's often forgotten with his career of injury, inconsistent and unfulfilled potential, that he actually was indisputably the best fast bowler in the world for a little period before injury took hold of him again and Steyn took over. It's a shame that he mastered his skill at about the same time his body ceased to be capable of enduring the process; he was a bit like Ryan Harris in that way I guess.
Yeah he was a genuine express bowler as a younger player. Morne Morkelish. Repeated Injuries slowly wore that down but he just had absolutely no rhythm at all in England so his pace, control, movement - everything - was shot.He was actually pretty quick for most of his Test career, I'm starting to find from clips on YouTube. More often than not pushing or over 140kph. IIRC, in Ashes 2005, he was often at 130kph.
Why don't you buy into it as being an important measure. Someone like Anderson should clearly go down as someone who started averagely but then become a world class bowler, same for Zaheer? Career averages are misleading in this way, right? Longevity is important, but I don't think you can really criticise longevity on the basis that they were a poorer bowler when they started.
Yeah it's easy to forget that post McGrath Lee really stepped up and led from the front. Bowled some excellent tests, but strangley even then never had that 7 or 8-fer day that most really good bowlers get at least once in their careers.People talk about taking players' peaks and looking at the highest level of skill they achieved a lot on this forum and I don't really buy into it a a very important measure a lot, but Bree Lee during this (almost) two year period bowled just as well as I've seen anyone bowl this century. It's often forgotten with his career of injury, inconsistent and unfulfilled potential, that he actually was indisputably the best fast bowler in the world for a little period before injury took hold of him again and Steyn took over. It's a shame that he mastered his skill at about the same time his body ceased to be capable of enduring the process; he was a bit like Ryan Harris in that way I guess.