wellAlbidarned
International Coach
is it possible that visible trajectory changes can't be used as evidence?
That would be hilariousis it possible that visible trajectory changes can't be used as evidence?
"well the ball's gone to third slip but there's nothing on hotspot or snicko so I've got no evidence he's hit that"That would be hilarious
Of course not. LOL.is it possible that visible trajectory changes can't be used as evidence?
What happened?Ahahahahahahaha, Uni Oval does it again!!!!
Review for an lbw decision. No ball tracking available. Didn't matter as it was not out anyway, but it's becoming a real thing for this venue.What happened?
Nah Tom Latham was always a test prospect. He was up there with Williamson in terms of how he was rated as a youth.3 years ago Tom Latham was a T20 prospect at best. For a guy with an average technique and all the shots in the world to convert himself into a compact opening batsmen is special. For said player to dominate firstly the Plunkett Shield were openers are glorified meatshields and then to go on and score runs all over the world is incredible.
How good is the New Zealand setup for creating a team culture were that is possible, where firstly the coaches identify a potential talent, give him the signal to change trades, follow through when he scores runs and not disregard him when he failed first game. Beats the ego driven "professional environment" of yesteryear for sure.
Exactly...the fact I'm really miffed he's missed on 3 figures in both innings rather just being happy with a return of 88 & 71 shows the expectations we have of him these days.It is so good for NZ that an 88 and 71 from Williamson is a good but a little frustrating Test match for him.
Eh really? Who ever labeled him to be only a T20 prospect? I heard of the kids talent across all formats around 2010 IIRC.3 years ago Tom Latham was a T20 prospect at best. For a guy with an average technique and all the shots in the world to convert himself into a compact opening batsmen is special. For said player to dominate firstly the Plunkett Shield were openers are glorified meatshields and then to go on and score runs all over the world is incredible.
How good is the New Zealand setup for creating a team culture were that is possible, where firstly the coaches identify a potential talent, give him the signal to change trades, follow through when he scores runs and not disregard him when he failed first game. Beats the ego driven "professional environment" of yesteryear for sure.