Not sure what the point of the 'he hasn't bowled more than 50 overs', he hasn't played for Auckland since NZ' etc is. You said he was being used poorly by Auckland, and you were way off. Incidentally he took 5-for in the game before that 6 against Wellington.@SteveNZ
Might have something to do with the fact that he hasn't even played a full season of matches for Auckland yet, he'd be lucky if he's even bowled 50 overs for Auckland in List A cricket, he's also from memory had one unbelievable performance against Wellington (6 or 7 wickets for about 40 runs, it's what got him in the NZ A team and then the NZ ODI team) - I don't think he's played a single domestic one dayer since his ODI debut.
He's as quick as anyone not named Bennett, Milne, Wheeler, Mathieson or Kuggelign within the country and unlike any of those players, he's able to control line and length. He's also a hit the deck bowler, which isn't something we have in the current three seamers we have at test.
Ryder as an opener. #5 is currently the test captains spot, with a coach who has said that he does not envisage the captain opening the batting for NZ in tests. #4 is locked down for Taylor. #6 is currently our all rounder who in his international performances to date has locked down that position. #7 is our best keeper batsman since Parore. Meaning you've got #1, 2 and 3. #3 is currently Williamson's to lose, despite Ryder being a better player, narrowing it to #1 and #2.
Looking at the players most equipped to deal with express pace and moving deliveries, Ryder is easily better than Fulton, Williamson (nasty tendency to play inside out at deliveries and follow the ball), Guptill (can't turn over the strike to save himself, follows deliveries) and Rutherford (horrible tendency to throw away starts)
So, is he good enough to play for NZ? Yes. Are there positions in the batting order we need to change/fix? Yes. Should he be given a chance at that spot, if the usual #5 is occupied by the captain and a coach reluctant to let him open, despite McCullum wanting to? Yes.
Look, great post and all, but you're not getting a like until you correct this.There is one guy scoring runs as an opener and it's Gup (and Papps, mind you).
Just quietly, I've taken a look at the lists for a certain Auckland club and Steve has played at least the same level if not higher than you have in his time, and alongside some mighty fine bowlers including one left arm shock bowler you like a lot...You do know the difference between swing and seam, right?
1. Your argument in the first point fails because gupill is gun at odi'sYou also have to re-read what I said about ODI cricket, it's not a great form indicator for test cricket but it's a hell of a lot better than our current domestic competition. How many times is Guptill going to go back and absolutely hammer domestic bowling, get in the test squad and fail dismally?
* Wagner is basically unplayable at first class level in NZ, yet he's had struggles getting to grips with tests and that's even after a reasonable career in a stronger South African domestic competition.
@Ohno
Yeah, because getting 80% of your wickets against top order players generally either LBW, Bowled or Caught Behind indicates you're a guy who gets lucky wickets
Funny that I say this because I was just thinking to myself that the exact ball that he hit for six that got his innings going the other day is the same type of ball he'd get out to in test cricket trying to block or drive.Guptill would be better off trying to hit the good balls for six than block them the way he does.
No...I didn't say he was being used excellently. You said he was being used poorly, and I used hard facts to prove he isn't/wasn't. And then you resorted to the 'but a lot of them were in such and such amount of games' which is the most ridiculous retort in all of cricket - unless we're again referring to your description of balls that move right to left in the air out of Boult's hand but apparently aren't swinging. And as I explained before, he bowls on a dung heap at Eden Park #2 with a heavy outfield/run-up that does not sit well with his size 15 feet. It's got absolutely zero to do with Hoppy's captaincy. In fact if you grab Mitch tomorrow night after the ODI, I know he will speak just as highly of Hoppy as he will Brendon.@Steve
So basically, you're saying he's been used excellently by Auckland on the basis of 16 wickets... eleven of which were taken in two innings? You also have to re-read what I said about ODI cricket, it's not a great form indicator for test cricket but it's a hell of a lot better than our current domestic competition. How many times is Guptill going to go back and absolutely hammer domestic bowling, get in the test squad and fail dismally? How many times did Andrew Penn run through domestic attacks and yet do absolutely nothing at the international level? Wagner is basically unplayable at first class level in NZ, yet he's had struggles getting to grips with tests and that's even after a reasonable career in a stronger South African domestic competition.
McCleneghan hasn't been used well in domestic cricket, period. I think he'd be OK under McCullum, irregardless, I think he's much more proven than Southee, Sodhi and Bracewell were before they got selected to test cricket, Boult is really the only guy in recent memory I remember dominating at first class and then getting himself into the test squad. (edit: Wagner too.)
Anderson will be locked in on the basis of his performance as a fourth seamer, he's racking up some pretty incredible statistics and again, as much as you don't count ODI form, his recent ODI performances will also ensure he plays the first test. So again, if you want Ryder to play, either McCullum opens or he opens, and we have the coach going on record to indicate McCullum will not be considered as an opener again.
@Ohno
Yeah, because getting 80% of your wickets against top order players generally either LBW, Bowled or Caught Behind indicates you're a guy who gets lucky wickets
Ironically there are few better at dropping the ball right in front and stealing a singlehe still sucks at turning over the strike though...
I've played with Hop and think he's a great guy, but can tell you firsthand he has no idea how to set attacking fields for bowlers and part of the reason Auckland haven't been a factor since 2008 comes from this exact fact. With McCleneghan, compare the field settings he gets for Auckland, versus the ones he's given at international level. Also, a guy who has hereditary hip problems should never be called on to bowl 55 out of 210 overs over two innings in a first class match, that's not how you use McCleneghan, especially when you have a number of part timers and a pretty good spinner by domestic standards available.No...I didn't say he was being used excellently. You said he was being used poorly, and I used hard facts to prove he isn't/wasn't. And then you resorted to the 'but a lot of them were in such and such amount of games' which is the most ridiculous retort in all of cricket - unless we're again referring to your description of balls that move right to left in the air out of Boult's hand but apparently aren't swinging. And as I explained before, he bowls on a dung heap at Eden Park #2 with a heavy outfield/run-up that does not sit well with his size 15 feet. It's got absolutely zero to do with Hoppy's captaincy. In fact if you grab Mitch tomorrow night after the ODI, I know he will speak just as highly of Hoppy as he will Brendon.
You're entitled to your opinion but I'm fairly certain most of us view Gup's failures at Test level to be his defensive technique, not his mental application. I'm also interested in how turning the strike over is an issue for him in Tests, with less scoreboard pressure, and not in ODIs where it becomes more paramount.
Simple. He didn't.Taking a score card at random and asking if the players are recognisable, I could do the same thing with a New Zealand team, even in Australia. But I recognise a fair few of those players, Phangiso has played for South Africa, Bossenger was in a number of South Africa A squads, there are a number of players there that have taken advantage of the Kolpak ruling to play county cricket. Our domestic cricket competition is not strong, it's weak as anything once the Black Caps are out of the mix. But yes, tell me how the South African domestic competition isn't stronger than ours, then try to explain how Wagner came to New Zealand and proceeded to pretty much top our domestic bowling figures season in, season out for the past six years?