BeeGee
International Captain
****ing incredible, is how I'd describe his performance. Exceptional keeping, especially.How good was Watling? 89, 22* & 8 catches
****ing incredible, is how I'd describe his performance. Exceptional keeping, especially.How good was Watling? 89, 22* & 8 catches
I think that that might actually be their best chance.Didn't Beamer say that the pitch for the second test was most likely to favour New Zealand? If that proves to be the case then you'd have to say WI are in big trouble.
He's dropped a few actually, dropped a leg side strangle off Southee's bowling in the Dunedin test v WI, and dropped a pretty straight-forward edge off Dhoni's bat at Eden Park. But yeah, generally he's been very good. It's especially impressive to see him keeping so well to the spinners in turning conditions, given he'd have had so little experience of that in New Zealand.Absolutely phenomenal, his 62 catches takes him to 5th of all time NZ keeper dismissals in only 16 tests behind the stumps, I can only remember one dropped catch in that time – off Alistair cook on day 4 at eden park which was a low one hander.
Narine isn't playing the next test. Last test only.I think that that might actually be their best chance.
Taylor has showed that he's a class bowler, and Roach is bowling himself back into form. Our spinners will be less effective without these conditions, while Narine will still cause problems.
It's a bit difficult to say who's better when comparing batsmen and bowlers as their roles are obviously fundamentally different. But there's no doubt that Southee has overtaken Taylor as New Zealand's most important test cricketer - basically for the same reasons that Hadlee was always rated above Crowe - Crowe was magnificent, but to win a test match you've gotta take 20 wickets.So has Southee officially overtaken Taylor as NZ's best current Test cricketer? Based on his last two years, I'd say, yes
I don't buy that argument that good bowlers always > good batsmen. I'm giving Southee the nod over Taylor based on his record vs. his contemporaries in the last couple of years. If Taylor averaged 100 in that time, it would be him. Similarly, Hadlee should be picked over Crowe because he was the better cricketer of the two, not because he was a bowler. Think Bradman vs. bowlers in his team.It's a bit difficult to say who's better when comparing batsmen and bowlers as their roles are obviously fundamentally different. But there's no doubt that Southee has overtaken Taylor as New Zealand's most important test cricketer - basically for the same reasons that Hadlee was always rated above Crowe - Crowe was magnificent, but to win a test match you've gotta take 20 wickets.
Yeah, disagree to an extent. I'm of the opinion that good bowlers are fundamentally more important in test cricket than good batsmen, especially in the modern era when pitches have generally made it so much harder to achieve results - and positive results are the basis on which all teams are judged. Look at the difference that Mitch Johnson made for Australia earlier this year. Admittedly, that's an extreme case, but it illustrates my point. If you have a bowler who can bulldoze through opposition batting lineups, then you're always going to be in with a chance. On the other hand a world class batsman - especially one operating on his own (such as Taylor for New Zealand or Clarke for Australia) - is going to struggle to have the same impact.I don't buy that argument that good bowlers always > good batsmen. I'm giving Southee the nod over Taylor based on his record vs. his contemporaries in the last couple of years. If Taylor averaged 100 in that time, it would be him. Similarly, Hadlee should be picked over Crowe because he was the better cricketer of the two, not because he was a bowler. Think Bradman vs. bowlers in his team.
Wouldn't that be the worst part, especially for your fanboyism?The best part is that Jeets must be kicking himself right now.
Or the other way to look at it is bowlers win tests on flat decks and batsmen on bowler-friendly wickets.Yeah, disagree to an extent. I'm of the opinion that good bowlers are fundamentally more important in test cricket than good batsmen, especially in the modern era when pitches have generally made it so much harder to achieve results - and positive results are the basis on which all teams are judged. Look at the difference that Mitch Johnson made for Australia earlier this year. Admittedly, that's an extreme case, but it illustrates my point. If you have a bowler who can bulldoze through opposition batting lineups, then you're always going to be in with a chance. On the other hand a world class batsman - especially one operating on his own (such as Taylor for New Zealand or Clarke for Australia) - is going to struggle to have the same impact.
Yeah, but how many genuinely bowler-friendly wickets are there these days? Surfaces like the one at Hobart are as rare as hen's teeth. Even in this match, the pitch was a pancake for the first three days. And good bowlers are still likely to be critical even on bowler-friendly wickets, as we saw during the Basin test against WI last year.Or the other way to look at it is bowlers win tests on flat decks and batsmen on bowler-friendly wickets.