My gripe is that the D/L equation took the chase from "intriguing, unlikely to succeed, but still definitely possible" to "pretty much no chance."You can't ever make it satisfactory, though. You're sort of "pre-deciding" part of the game which reduces part of the uncertainty which is kind of the point of sport.
In that case it's fair enough. In fact, that's quite a sensible move, all things considered.Not sure if he has been dropped in the traditional sense, he needs 4 day cricket desperately with The Ashes on the horizon, thus its a better idea for everyone that he is playing with Worcester and Ajmal red ball cricket.
That's another argument altogether, but yeah, the fact you were 7 down ultimately screwed you on DL.My gripe is that the D/L equation took the chase from "intriguing, unlikely to succeed, but still definitely possible" to "pretty much no chance."
Although my main gripe is that we were even using D/L in the first place. There were ****ing lights at the ground.
In fact, the equation was 54 from 43. England were definite favourites provided Plunkett and Rashid stayed there for 6 overs.
Once D/L kicked in, New Zealand were definite favourites barring a miracle.
I think he meant from a RRR perspective as opposed to just stating the obvious there.That is a big "provided"
But that's the whole point. If the NRR stays the same with no wickets being lost, that's not even slightly close to even. That's the batting side winning. This is especially true when a side is down to the last pair who can bat.I think he meant from a RRR perspective as opposed to just stating the obvious there.
Yeah, don't disagree with any of that. I was meaning I doubt Furball was suggesting the fav outcome was those two actually batting out the 6 overs.But that's the whole point. If the NRR stays the same with no wickets being lost, that's not even slightly close to even. That's the batting side winning. This is especially true when a side is down to the last pair who can bat.
As we saw, the game was only really over when Rashid got out. If that shot from Rashid had an extra metre on it, England would've needed 18 from the last over, bowled by Grant Elliot, with Rashid still there. It's still doable. Instead it was a great catch that won it.
The rain stopped that from happening for 24 deliveries. Yes, England were unlikely to make 34 off 13 balls. They were also very unlikely to keep their 8th wicket stand going at 9rpo for another 5 overs.
I think the rain did affect the result, but only because it halted a phase of play where England were coming back into the match, and the run of play is a delicate thing.
This series could turn out like that ODI series tbf. No one can see any point in it, which makes it all the more fun when it becomes entirely bonkers.I love how we spend half our lives scoffing at "JAMODIs" and then endlessly debate who would have won one when it rains.
Also known as the Richard approach to Twenty20Well yeah, a JAMODI is defined as 'this probably isn't important enough to hold my interest on result alone if the cricket were boring', not 'i refuse to take any interest in this regardless'.
I particularly like this one; hope they do it.• Allowing five fielders outside the 30m circle between the 41st and 50th overs
Yeah but I found his endless sequence of half volleys a little concerning too.Just watched the highlights. Yeah it's getting to the point where sides are employing death batting throughout the whole innings. Some of the shots played by both sides in the first 10 overs are just stupid, you shouldn't be able to routinely blast length deliveries through the line without risk until the ball is older imo.
I found Santners wickets to be very promising, did the batsmen with extra turn and bounce.