CaptainGrumpy
Banned
you don't really get crack, do you?
Last edited:
you don't really get crack, do you?
Nothing wrong with a platform and big guns to come in later on. Does mean you'd probably have to play Anderson instead of Elliot as the batting all-rounder. Elliot looked very easy to tie down when I saw him at Edgbaston earlier in the year.There's no doubt opening with Guptill/Latham is philosophically completely different to Guptill/McCullum in terms of the innings strategy, it really depends which way you want to go.
I'm kind of split on this one. I do see some value in the more solid & consistent albeit less devastating and flamboyant starts Guptill and Latham could give us.
Guptill & McCullum will get you to 130/1 from 20 on a good day and 70/3 on a bad one, whereas Guptill/Latham will more often than not get you to around 90/1, with the added bonus of McCullum still to bat down the order.
Other than the fact this excludes every single and all chasing teams in any and every single ODI tying any and every single match and then being in a possible position to win it before being dimissed all out, it then it goes further downhill.My philosophy is pretty simple: strike rate is meaningless if you're all out
This person has moderator status on CW. God saves us all.(before the 45th).
Yeah the problem is not his 71 to 72 SR batting at 2. Its his mid 80's SR potential that he could possibly hit at one day that is causing the issue for debate.If Latham can strike in the mid-80s, he'll be fine.
Yes, this is what I said. He actually gets to 50 off around 55-60 balls, then tends to slow down. He's a very good player of spin (you can't score consecutive hundreds in the UAE if you're not) but does seem to slow down in the middle overs.Also noteworthy is that he drops back below the career strike rate from Ball 69-73 (visible in the very thin yellow line dropping below the green). Going through the ball-by-ball, there's lots of dots to spinners in the middle overs, so I suspect that explains that quirk. And that's Latham's area to work on, as I think everyone is noting.
Edit!Yes, this is what I said. He actually gets to 50 off around 55-60 balls, then tends to slow down. He's a very good player of spin (you can't score consecutive hundreds in the UAE if you're not) but does seem to slow down in the middle overs.
When Tom Latham strikes at around 72 when the team is chasing 280+ or 300+, the longer he bats for, the greater the scoreboard pressure is on the middle order.Since when was a strike rate of 80 as an opener considered poor?
again, CG has been looking at scorecards not watching matches.
When Williamson averaged in the low 40s in ODIs (not that long ago) his SR was about 80. As his average has gone up thanks to playing bigger innings his SR has gone up as well (now over 84).No, Latham will be fine. I remember 2-3 years ago Simon Doull saying KW should only play test cricket (lowish s/r) and now he is one of the best odi batsmen in the world and NZ's best ever.
A 60 off 80 means that the innings 20 runs behind the Required Run Rate. Elliot, Anderson and Ronchi hitting at 110 for 20 overs, is 132 runs, or 12 runs ahead of the innings required run rate at the start. That leaves a short fall of 8 runs. It also ignores whether Guptill, Kane, Taylor and whoever else have managed a 100 SR.When Williamson averaged in the low 40s in ODIs (not that long ago) his SR was about 80. As his average has gone up thanks to playing bigger innings his SR has gone up as well (now over 84).
I expect the same thing will happen to Latham, only to a lesser degree.
Also saying "SR of 75 = 225 after 50 overs" misses out several things. Extras, most notably. It also ignores that openers are setting a platform for the batsmen at 5 and later to score heavily. A Latham 60 (80) is a fine innings, even when chasing 300, if you have Elliott, Anderson, Ronchi et al. all hitting at 110 or higher for 20 overs.
A shortfall of 8 runs if there are zero extras. Which is exceptionally unlikely. 12-15 extras is more like the average, which means a win. Moreover, scoring 100 runs off the last 10 is becoming common, so 132 off 20 overs is probably an underestimate. A further point is that a Latham 60 (80) leaves a platform for KW, Taylor and Elliott to score faster as the need to preserve wickets is less of a factor (assuming Guptill goes averagely well).A 60 off 80 means that the innings 20 runs behind the Required Run Rate. Elliot, Anderson and Ronchi hitting at 110 for 20 overs, is 132 runs, or 12 runs ahead of the innings required run rate at the start. That leaves a short fall of 8 runs. It also ignores whether Guptill, Kane, Taylor and whoever else have managed a 100 SR.