marc71178
Eyes not spreadsheets
I love it when people you haven't seen for ages suddenly turn up on here solely to push their own agenda and stick the boot in...I love it when people use isolated incidents to make a point.
I love it when people you haven't seen for ages suddenly turn up on here solely to push their own agenda and stick the boot in...I love it when people use isolated incidents to make a point.
I love it when people use isolated incidents to make a point.I love it when people you haven't seen for ages suddenly turn up on here solely to push their own agenda and stick the boot in...
Yes he is.Clarkes a class act but he's not in the same class as your pontings borders or waughs.
No I didn't and I don't believe that one dreadful series says a lot about Clarke as a player who has 8500 runs at 50 over 100 test matches. I am not aware of what the fitness status is on Clarke but if he remains fit and continues to play, I do expect him to score some runs and bat much better than he has this year.Hm, get where you're coming from. But you have to remember in 2011-12, it was pretty much unanimous that Clarke was the best in the world. He smashed around everyone, not just India like you insinuated. No one expected that to continue but I doubt anyone expected a dropoff this sharp. Even with Ponting and Tendulkar, they never quite reached tailender levels of awful. They just become below par, not utter ****e like Clarke has become. I doubt even you thought Clarke's decline would be this sharp.
The underrating of Younis Khan is going to get close to hitting ridiculous levels.Clarke and KP would be slightly ahead of YK for me just about, but Sanga tier above them all comfortably.
So you are questioning whether Younis knows the UAE ground better than any other test players? He has as much knowledge of those conditions as any player in history of the game. If that is your definition of home advantage then a handful of players ever get that. Mark Wood had never played at Cardiff before the Ashes series in a first class game. Would that not count as 'home advantage' for him then no matter what pitches are like?But what about YK's runs in India and Sri Lanka where a lot of overseas batsmen have failed? Why doesn't he get credit for those runs because they are not 'difficult' enough as Adelaide?
And there's a lot more to 'home conditions' than what is favourable. England got a favourable pitch in MCG 2010 but would you call that 'home conditions'? Home conditions also involves playing in conditions you started as a first class cricketer, where you played all your life, where you know the ground inside out, its tricks and secrets.
Countries Michael Clarke averages over 50 in: AustraliaSo you are questioning whether Younis knows the UAE ground better than any other test players? He has as much knowledge of those conditions as any player in history of the game. If that is your definition of home advantage then a handful of players ever get that. Mark Wood had never played at Cardiff before the Ashes series in a first class game. Would that not count as 'home advantage' for him then no matter what pitches are like?
So what you're basically saying is that Clarke averages 25.5 in Bangladesh and under 50 in New Zealand?Clarke averages 49.5 in NZ and has never batted in Zimbabwe and has two innings in Bangladesh including a not out 23. Younis record is excellent on the road, and his purple patch of last few years has been great but Clarke at his best is a better player for me.