cnerd123
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How could the current conditions be more beneficial to the Aussies?I agree. Though mostly because Indian home conditions are a lot more beneficial to them than the Australian home conditions have been for the Australians.
How could the current conditions be more beneficial to the Aussies?I agree. Though mostly because Indian home conditions are a lot more beneficial to them than the Australian home conditions have been for the Australians.
Well, tbh, the conditions in India in 2013 and in UAE recently were extremely good for batting too. None of them were truly big turners except one where Jadeja got a 5fer IIRC. Australia just bowled like ****. Like India bowled like **** here.I agree. Though mostly because Indian home conditions are a lot more beneficial to them than the Australian home conditions have been for the Australians.
It's a different kind of 'good for batting'. These wickets (Adelaide aside) had fairly good pace and bounce, it meant the quick bowlers could be accurate and pose a threat. The pitches in India and UAE were so slow that edges wouldn't carry to the slips.Well, tbh, the conditions in India in 2013 and in UAE recently were extremely good for batting too. None of them were truly big turners except one where Jadeja got a 5fer IIRC. Australia just bowled like ****. Like India bowled like **** here.
Every now and then teams go in with this thought process and it ends up backfiring on the home team. England and South Africa to testify.Nah a beneficial deck would be one where the Aussie quicks can rip India a new arsehole. It might help the Indian quicks more also but judging by the way they bowl, I doubt the australians will score any less runs.
This. Flat decks help the home team more than it does India.All Australia need to beat India is to make the chances of them taking 20 wickets negligible. Over a 4 match series, the rest would take care of itself.
As much as I don't think the Australian batting lineup is that great I seriously don't think they will go down hooking as England idiotically did.Every now and then teams go in with this thought process and it ends up backfiring on the home team. England and South Africa to testify.
Ffs Jono they took 12 wickets in Adelaide. They nearly won because there's no mercy rule in cricket.Mediocre posting. India dropped catches too, and the only reason India lost Adelaide is because they didn't want to draw it. The scoreline was 2-0 because of a lot of stuff, including the fact India batted very well at times against quality bowlers
Read the post again. Never said India deserved to win. But they could have drawn that match, and would have had Clarke not declared and given them a chance. All the credit to Australia and Clarke in particular for giving them that temptation. But don't tell me India couldn't have been boring and drawn that match if they didn't want to.Ffs Jono they took 12 wickets in Adelaide. They nearly won because there's no mercy rule in cricket.
Definitely agree, amazing effort by the Australian team when you put it into context of the tragic death before the series. Its tricky though, how much do you keep bringing it up? Right after the last ball in Sydney Smith was interviewed by Nicholas and he mentioned the Phil Hughes situation to Smith and my mate and I at the ground looked at each other, unsure whether he should be asking that question at that time in a public interview. Not saying it was wrong, but its hard to know what is the right thing to do. Should the media and pundits keep bringing it up?I should also say, whilst India did well to draw the last two tests, not enough is being acknowledged about the tragic elephant in the room here: Australia had a player die a week before the first test was scheduled to start. Nearly half the side was on the field when it happened. They then lost Clarke after the first test, who had been amazing leading them through the aftermath of Hughes' death & is their best batsman, while Harris and Johnson only played together in two of four tests.
It seems almost as though the death of Hughes was overlooked towards the back end of the series when it came to analysing the performance of the home players, not that I'm saying it should have been dwelt on. But a bit of an acknowledgment by the TV and radio pundits of what a great effort it was for those blokes to pick themselves up after having that happen would not have gone astray. It must have been an incredibly emotional time for those blokes. They stood up really well IMO.
It's a different kind of 'good for batting'. These wickets (Adelaide aside) had fairly good pace and bounce, it meant the quick bowlers could be accurate and pose a threat. The pitches in India and UAE were so slow that edges wouldn't carry to the slips.
Similarly, the Aussie batsman cashed in on these decks, but struggled more when the wickets lacked pace. The Asian ability to generate power through wrists and bat speed isn't common with Aussie bats who prefer solid timing and placement on wickets with pace. Backfoot play is also less important on Asian decks as it is here.
Also the Indian spinners would bowl better on Indian flat pitches as the lack of pace and bounce suits them, whereas in Aus a spinner like Lyon enjoys it more as he can exploit the bounce.
And lastly as the pitches deteriorated the Aussie ones tend to become more up-and-down, suiting the quicks and Lyon, whereas in UAE and India they get ragged and start showing signs of turn and have the odd delivery spitting off the pitch. Basically nothing a quick can exploit, but something Ashwin, Jadeja, Babar and Shah become deadly on.
Or IDK, might just be talking out of my ass here.
All Australia need to beat India is to make the chances of them taking 20 wickets negligible. Over a 4 match series, the rest would take care of itself.