Jono
Virat Kohli (c)
Yeah will bowl fuller second dig surely and kill us. WahhhJohnson will obviously get 6/30 second innings now, though.
Yeah will bowl fuller second dig surely and kill us. WahhhJohnson will obviously get 6/30 second innings now, though.
See previous page.I find it weird that there's been so much talk about Kohli's awesome () press conference, and not quite enough about Mitch throwing the ball at Kohli's beautiful bum in frustration because he couldn't get him out. If anything, that's what's pissweak.
this makes absolutely no sense. who mentioned anything about culture?The Aussies have this sports culture of "Do and say what you need to in the park, even if you actually respect the guy you are sledging". Now, that's perfectly alright. But the truth is that is not the culture everywhere, and we have a culture where sledging in the park is a sign of disrespect. Now, you may not agree with it, or think it's weak (even though it isn't). So, when you are saying that "Look you need to understand our culture here. Nobody actually disrespects you. We think you are a fantastic player", that's basically saying "Look, you need to respect our culture, even though we don't give a flying **** about yours."
Controversial post, but still.
Not really. Steyn, and especially Philander had us in all sorts of trouble with the new ball, and runs were extremely hard to come by. Pujara took 71 balls to score his first 12 runs and he and Vijay weathered the storm. After that, once the shine was off the ball, it was carnage. Tahir only bowled 15 overs, and didn't bowl much when Pujara and Kohli got going. He came back to bowl at the tail and got a few cheap wickets. Morkel's injury was the real problem for SA.IIRC the attack was flagging pretty badly and they scored a lot off Tahir. This was genuinely good bowling treated with complete disdain.
You do realize of course both teams have been sledging? If it's disrespectful over there then someone needs to give Rohit, Ishant, Kohli and Dhawan some spankings. Not a controversial post, just really silly.The Aussies have this sports culture of "Do and say what you need to in the park, even if you actually respect the guy you are sledging". Now, that's perfectly alright. But the truth is that is not the culture everywhere, and we have a culture where sledging in the park is a sign of disrespect. Now, you may not agree with it, or think it's weak (even though it isn't). So, when you are saying that "Look you need to understand our culture here. Nobody actually disrespects you. We think you are a fantastic player", that's basically saying "Look, you need to respect our culture, even though we don't give a flying **** about yours."
Controversial post, but still.
Perhaps I'm overstating Tahir's impact yeah. Easy to do, mind.Not really. Steyn, Morkel and especially Philander had us in all sorts of trouble with the new ball, and runs were extremely hard to come by. Pujara took 71 balls to score his first 12 runs and he and Vijay weathered the storm. After that, once the shine was off the ball, it was carnage. Tahir only bowled 15 overs, and didn't bowl much when Pujara and Kohli got going. He came back to bowl at the tail and got a few cheap wickets.
I'd say this was better bowling though, certainly. Harris was brilliant.
The first innings was where Tahir was truly horrendous. Philander and Morkel were causing loads of trouble and Tahir kept giving Kohli a boundary ball every over.Perhaps I'm overstating Tahir's impact yeah. Easy to do, mind.
Yep. But not enoughSee previous page.
In Australia, it is generally considered culturally insensitive to speak in a language that not everyone present understands when there is an alternative. Australians don't complain about it because they know that there is a difference between cultures.The Aussies have this sports culture of "Do and say what you need to in the park, even if you actually respect the guy you are sledging". Now, that's perfectly alright. But the truth is that is not the culture everywhere, and we have a culture where sledging in the park is a sign of disrespect. Now, you may not agree with it, or think it's weak (even though it isn't). So, when you are saying that "Look you need to understand our culture here. Nobody actually disrespects you. We think you are a fantastic player", that's basically saying "Look, you need to respect our culture, even though we don't give a flying **** about yours."
Controversial post, but still.
I did.this makes absolutely no sense. who mentioned anything about culture?
Both teams are sledging because that's what the Aussies have dragged down everyone else to, because of their disregard for others' culture. And there is a reason why Rohit, Ishant & Co. are so piss poor at the art of sledging. It's just not something that is a part of the routine here.You do realize of course both teams have been sledging? If it's disrespectful over there then someone needs to give Rohit, Ishant, Kohli and Dhawan some spankings. Not a controversial post, just really silly.
I think this is perhaps the case. Either this, or Rahul was watching Rahane and Kohli bat for an hour before he came to bat, and got carried away.****ing lol at Dhoni coming down the track. Seems like he gave Rahul the instructions to go after the bowling? Only logical explanation for someone on debut to do that on his 7th and 8th deliveries.
I think he means the sledging is coming from a different place. For the Aussies sledging is just something you do, a part of the game, and no real disrespect meant by it. For Indians however, if you sledge someone you actually don't respect them all. If you respected a player you'd keep shut.You do realize of course both teams have been sledging? If it's disrespectful over there then someone needs to give Rohit, Ishant, Kohli and Dhawan some spankings. Not a controversial post, just really silly.
I think every culture agrees that this is rude, but at the same time every sporting nation in every sport will choose communicate amongst themselves in their native tongue. It keeps tactical discussions secret from the opposition without having to resort to complicated hand signals or frequent team huddles (like they do in American sports). More of a tactical move than a cultural thing.In Australia, it is generally considered culturally insensitive to speak in a language that not everyone present understands when there is an alternative. Australians don't complain about it because they know that there is a difference between cultures.
mr reactive ha ha thats gold.No wonder TPC called him Mr Reactive during that incident with Rohit.
I love a good sledge as much as the next guy but I think the umpires need to have a chat with the captains before a day's play and tell them to can it before something happens or they have to do something. Getting a bit out of hand tbh, from both sides.
Indians, Pakistanis and South Africans have been known to address comments to Australian batsman in languages they know they don't understand. How is that tactical?I think every culture agrees that this is rude, but at the same time every sporting nation in every sport will choose communicate amongst themselves in their native tongue. It keeps tactical discussions secret from the opposition without having to resort to complicated hand signals or frequent team huddles (like they do in American sports). More of a tactical move than a cultural thing.