Full name Thomas William Maxwell Latham
Born April 2, 1992, Christchurch, Canterbury
All you need to know.
Full name Thomas William Maxwell Latham
Some pretty decent analysis from Danny Morrison there. As much as he can sound like a halfwit he knows his cricket.
I think WW already commented and as expected he was gracious (as are all of us WI fans). As for your list of predictions I think you'll find that most of what you listed applies to how many of us WI fans feel. I for one will never get over the dropping of Blackwood for Shillingford. Our pace attack should be talked up,especially when you consider the rabble that we sent to NZ earlier this year. They delivered unfortunately our batting seriously needs an injection and yes beating a dead horse again, dropping a batsman for an extra bowler is not gonna cut it.....jeez we must have the worst luck when it comes to selectors.Looking forward to WW's post.
Predictions:
Concedes defeat.
Hates on the selectors
Lays out a challenge for next time.
Talks up the pace attack.
Hates on the selectors + Shillingford.
A wish for Narine.
Talks up one of Southee or Boult
Hates on the selectors
I'm going for 3 smileys as well.
Sigh... the thing is, the "gamble" worked in terms of batting. The problem isn't in what they got out of their replacements (Holder/Shillingford) with the bat. It's more so that they didn't get enough from their top five. Bringing Blackwood into the side wouldn't have contributed anything different to this match in my view, because between Holder and Shillingford, you saw them put on near 140 runs in the game and in both innings, showed fight that was sadly lacking in some of the middle order players.I think WW already commented and as expected he was gracious (as are all of us WI fans). As for your list of predictions I think you'll find that most of what you listed applies to how many of us WI fans feel. I for one will never get over the dropping of Blackwood for Shillingford. Our pace attack should be talked up,especially when you consider the rabble that we sent to NZ earlier this year. They delivered unfortunately our batting seriously needs an injection and yes beating a dead horse again, dropping a batsman for an extra bowler is not gonna cut it.....jeez we must have the worst luck when it comes to selectors.
Ps just saw some highlights of Holder batting...not bad not bad at all...
Actually, Cricket is very much driven by statistics, simply so.It's because cricket exists outside the realm of stats
Right, but if you dig into the statistics a little more... we know history indicates his best performances of the series generally come in the first test match and he dwindles from that point onwards - excluding 4th match of the series outliers as the sample size of innings bowled is too small. We also know that Jerome Taylor averages much lower at home (very close to what he ended up averaging this series) and struggles away from home.Yes but analysing things by only looking at the stats won't tell you the whole story, take Jerome Taylor's career average for example
no.statistics will tell you the true story if you look deep enough
Na he hasn't posted since the loss. I'm interested in his post series write up.I think WW already commented and as expected he was gracious (as are all of us WI fans). As for your list of predictions I think you'll find that most of what you listed applies to how many of us WI fans feel. I for one will never get over the dropping of Blackwood for Shillingford. Our pace attack should be talked up,especially when you consider the rabble that we sent to NZ earlier this year. They delivered unfortunately our batting seriously needs an injection and yes beating a dead horse again, dropping a batsman for an extra bowler is not gonna cut it.....jeez we must have the worst luck when it comes to selectors.
Ps just saw some highlights of Holder batting...not bad not bad at all...
As someone who works with statistics a bit, this is pretty wrong. I don't think you understand how bad using historical data can be in predicting future performance. Cricket is even harder, there are literally hundreds of variables you have to consider before you can even begin trying to make a predictive model. Cricket statistics are so far removed from actual analysis that businesses use, they can barely be considered the same thing.Right, but if you dig into the statistics a little more... we know history indicates his best performances of the series generally come in the first test match and he dwindles from that point onwards - excluding 4th match of the series outliers as the sample size of innings bowled is too small. We also know that Jerome Taylor averages much lower at home (very close to what he ended up averaging this series) and struggles away from home.
Again, statistics will tell you the true story if you look deep enough, it's why the fields of Business Intelligence and Predictive Analytics are the most highly invested fields in the business world at the moment because metrics give great indicators of performance and allow you to plan accordingly. Cricket is probably without exception the most deepest statistical game there is, it trumps Baseball due to certain nuances like how many balls per innings you can face in Cricket.
Taylor was returning from isolation - he hadn't played in six years.no.
I've said this before, but I'll repeat it:
Statistics, even if used absolutely perfectly (i.e. not like how you use stats*) by eliminating a whole range of variables including opposition strength, team composition, conditions and a myriad of other more complicated and obscure factors, are still only an indication of what happened in the past. Now, what happened in the past is usually a very, very good indicator of what is going to happen in the future, but it is not the actual future.
So yes, statistically NZ dominated the home series and the away series to a lesser extent. But that doesn't mean that these teams are miles apart in talent looking ahead.
*One key stat you seem intent on ignoring is the fact that both Roach and Taylor were returning from injury.
You obviously don't work with statistics in this day and age if you assume that they can't be used to give indicators on performance in future settings - WASP is a great example of this, it does nothing more than use the averages across all games of cricket to work out what is likely to be the case based on a particular match situation and does so to pretty good accuracy. Cricket statistics are no different to business statistics, the reality is that sport has the most to gain from advanced analytics because it can adapt so quickly and change the way it is operating in real time to take advantage of those statistics.As someone who works with statistics a bit, this is pretty wrong. I don't think you understand how bad using historical data can be in predicting future performance. Cricket is even harder, there are literally hundreds of variables you have to consider before you can even begin trying to make a predictive model. Cricket statistics are so far removed from actual analysis that businesses use, they can barely be considered the same thing.
Let's take your Boult-Wagner comparison of top-order wickets. Boult has 21/41, Wagner has 20/31. According to you, it means Wagner is far better at taking top-order wickets. But when I do a crude two-tailed Z-test of proportions, the p-value is 0.25. Statistically there's no difference between the two.
Of course this test is stupid and violates several assumptions, but my point is you can't just claim statistics as some sort of proof, nor can you use it as an accurate performance predictor unless you're aware of some amazing neural network or something.
Was arguably a daft selection, middle order collapse and missed chances that handed Windies a win at all in this series.Was arguably a daft selection, a late order collapse and a missed chance that handed you guys the series