Yeah, the chilled aggression is our brand. The chilled was always there and the aggression is the new factor.@ skyliner - nah we'll just ignore him and aim to nick him off cheap like we did in the group match and would have in the final had he had to do something.
if he survives the ashes (doubt it because he's getting towards retirement and sucks away from home) he'll struggle against the relentless channels of southee and henry*
*provided they're still not obsessed with the middle of the pitch....
Smith trolling our channel by flicking it to leg is my biggest fear.
We play chilled aggression and it's great.
Yeah, the chilled aggression is our brand. The chilled was always there and the aggression is the new factor.
I'd like to see some heat or some spice or something in trans-tas cricket. It's been ages since underarm. The Chappell-Hadlee doesn't have any cachet, and no-one even remembers there is a Trans-Tasman Trophy.
There used to be so many incidents in the past...Dyer the Liar, Hadlees A Wanker, the Snedden no-catch, the six sixes, the whole country hating Greg Mathews with a passion. It's all dead really. There needs to be some explosive new incident like those ones of the past.
Competing hard is the first thing that needs to happen, and then the Aussie's might have a real go at us, if they see us as a threat.
I crave their respect. I need it. I want to see the nasty Aussie's, it'll mean we are right in the contest.
Wanker' and all that
But besides the humour, Sir Richard also spoke seriously, particularly while explaining the origins of the "Hadlee's a wanker" chant that erupted at grounds around Australia during the 1980s.
It started, he said, as a result of an incident that happened when the Kiwis played a Geelong District team at Kardinia Park in 1981. Angered by some slow batting by left-handed opener Peter Oxlade - the Ballarat batsman had made 95 in 358 minutes - Hadlee bowled him several bouncers, one of which struck him in the head.
Hadlee, who had earlier accosted and reprimanded a schoolboy who had said, "You're a mongrel, Hadlee", needed a police ****** off the ground, while Oxlade (pictured) was taken to hospital with concussion.
Hadlee later told the media, perhaps rather foolishly, that he questioned Australia's education system. "I think it's fair to say it wasn't a very good thing to say," said Sir Richard.
But he did get some support, the Kiwi great explaining that Greg Chappell once told him being called a wanker was, in fact, a compliment. "(He said), 'It's a mark of respect. The people here do rate you and they do fear you and you have the capability of upsetting Australia.' He didn't have to say that."
How can someone who has watched so much cricket make a post like this?180 for 7 beats 280 for 9 - yeah, that makes sense
NZ bossed this match and the result was a joke
lolno180 for 7 beats 280 for 9 - yeah, that makes sense
NZ bossed this match and the result was a joke
You type some words and click "Post Quick Reply".How can someone who has watched so much cricket make a post like this?
He used to play with his collar up, he was a bit different, ****y as. The real outpouring of hate came when he claimed a catch in an ODI at Eden Park and it was given out & he was shown on TV to have been standing on the boundary rope. He was public enemy number 1.Why was Greg Mathews hated by NZ'ers?[/B] Does anyone know the background to that story?
F*n Julios.He used to play with his collar up,
I could never analyse why, right from the outset, sections of the New Zealand crowds had taken a set against Greg. Perhaps it was his juanty manner on the field. Perhaps he was a shade too successful for the liking of the more rabidly parochial Kiwi fans...You could never understand the mentality behind the crank phone calls Greg received in New Zealand, the egg-throwing and the incident in Wellington where a toilet seat was thrown on the field. Allan Border
Stick it to Kiwi crowds, Matthews says - Cricket - Sport - smh.com.auF*n Julios.
Stokes drove me nuts all tour.
Thanks for the catch information.
I had a turd posted to me and then a bible packed with marijuana sent to me and I hurled it out the window and 10 minutes later the cops came and said they were doing a drug search.
We all hated him. I still do. He was:Stick it to Kiwi crowds, Matthews says - Cricket - Sport - smh.com.au
Matthews said he had bricks thrown at him in Jamaica and batteries thrown at him in India, but said New Zealand crowds were the worst he experienced and the only country he felt threatened in.
He said fans screamed abuse and threw objects at him throughout the 1986 tour, and displayed offensive banners, one of which accused him of sinking the Rainbow Warrior.
"I had my wife over here and someone put a sign up saying 'Matthews F**** Chickens', and she had to go over and pull it down," the former offspinner said.
"I was man-handled in bars, I had a turd posted to me and then a bible packed with marijuana sent to me and I hurled it out the window and 10 minutes later the cops came and said they were doing a drug search.
Home town umpiring was rife all over the world tbf. Fred Goodall was probably no better than the Australians and would give front foot LBWs in an era where being on the front foot was taken into account. Now it isn't if you are in line you are out. Back then being very far forward indicated some sort of doubt.It seems bizarre and incredible to read all this now and think back on it, but the ODIs used to be this circus going around Australia and they were chanting "Hadlee's a wanker" at our champion at full volume for basically the entire match, match after match.
I guess Kiwi crowds had an attitude of dealing out retribution for Australian missdeeds. In our minds Australians were cheats, their umpires were certainly chests & it was just a matter of catching them in the act. I notice their comments on not understanding why he was so hated don't include any reference to Mathews's cheating incident.
If you see a video on YouTube of the entire 'underarm' over, earlier in the over Hadlee is given out LBW to a ball clearly pitching outside leg and Ian Chappell says something like "well Richard Hadlee will probably feel a little unlucky there, as he's been appealing for LBW all summer and hasn't been given a single one".
So he inflated his average by getting more runs?b) I would say his test match batting average would be 7-8 runs lower had he not run between the wickets like a jack rabbit. He absolutely pilfered runs and stole cheeky singles and turned ones in twos and twos into threes in test cricket. Where normal batsman would just concentrate on batting well to score runs his stellar batting average of 41 in the 1980s iirc, was artificially inflated through runs that didn't reflect his talent.
I think that covers it.
Yeah, I read Rod Marsh's book Gloves of Irony and was absolutely scathing of our umpiring. I sort of read it as perhaps an Aussie returning fire for everything Kiwi's would say about their umpires, as my recall of that era is hazy now. I recall the Springbok Tour and all the incredible drama and strife of that, I remember coming home from school and seeing Argentinian armoured vehicles in the Falklands on TV. I remember sitting up late at night with my Nana watching NZ (successfully) defend a total against Australia and marking off the runs on a piece of paper, my mum always heading off to bed whenever she could see we'd lost - always remarking that it was "all over bar the shouting", my brother inconsolable bawling his eyes out when Morrisons appeal on McDermott was turned down in the last Boxing Day Test we played at the MCG.Home town umpiring was rife all over the world tbf. Fred Goodall was probably no better than the Australians and would give front foot LBWs in an era where being on the front foot was taken into account. Now it isn't if you are in line you are out. Back then being very far forward indicated some sort of doubt.
But yes - Australian umpires were attrocious. So were the Pakistanis though, and the Indians at home were dubious. The English strangely were beyond reproach with stout men like Sheppard.
Cricket is like ski jumping for me. I give out points for style and effectiveness. Scoring a 40 by pilfering half of them against blokes who have been in the field for 110 overs before you walked out to bat impresses me less than a Michael Clarke innings of 40 with screaming on drives.So he inflated his average by getting more runs?
I remember the Springbok tour. Us kids at school were incredibly diplomatic about it. Being all of 7 years old of course we didn't have our own opinions and just went along with what ever the family view was. Yet in the playground it was quickly identified whether you were from a pro or anti family yet it stopped there, no discussion or debate just respect from 7 year olds that the country was divided and we weren't going to agree with each other about. I was from an "Anti" family and was taken on a protest walk at age 7 where the pro people lined the streets and made sarcastic comments at us. It was a time to tie your colours to the mast yet at the same time be a good sort about it to the other side.Yeah, I read Rod Marsh's book Gloves of Irony and was absolutely scathing of our umpiring. I sort of read it as perhaps an Aussie returning fire for everything Kiwi's would say about their umpires, as my recall of that era is hazy now. I recall the Springbok Tour and all the incredible drama and strife of that, I remember coming home from school and seeing Argentinian armoured vehicles in the Falklands on TV. I remember sitting up late at night with my Nana watching NZ (successfully) defend a total against Australia and marking off the runs on a piece of paper, my mum always heading off to bed whenever she could see we'd lost - always remarking that it was "all over bar the shouting", my brother inconsolable bawling his eyes out when Morrisons appeal on McDermott was turned down in the last Boxing Day Test we played at the MCG.