OverratedSanity
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Yeah I definitely disagree with it too, but it's not as if Cook didn't have any reasons to do what he did.
Id love if this match ended in a draw with England needing 2 wickets or something on day 5 so this can be revisited. Batting for 40 overs for maybe 200 runs when you can instead knock over a fragile top order and have Pakistan 3 down is a no brainer for me. The conditions were good for bowling throught day 3 anyway so it's not like anyone's knackered.Blimey the whining at this is becoming an epidemic. It's not the right decision for me, but it really isn't the Earth-shatteringly awful thing that some are making it to be.
I don't get the comparison tbh.Presumably the whingers also get pissed off when a batsman doesn't retire out when on 200 odd? He has enough runs, should get on with the game, right?
Unless he needs to, he'll just carry on playing cricket as normal.
Extend the same thought to captaincy.
That's fine, it's the moaning that's winding me up, from professional circles as much as here. On the Guardian cricket page - usually quite a good source for cricket, other habits aside - their headline for the day's play is about not enforcing rather than the more pertinent news of Pakistan having been bowled out. There's then a bonus opinion piece on that decision, rather than anything that might have decided the game. I'm annoyed because England effectively won a test yesterday and the principle message from the media is moaning.I don't get the comparison tbh.
I really don't give a tinker's re the declaration. I wouldn't do it principally because of the weather, but the onfield skipper has a better idea of how his bowlers are doing and also whether the opposition are as cooked as they seem to be from a distance. If it rains for a session or two and they miss the win, he'll have to wear it but I suspect they'll win with a leg in the air anyway.
What would you class as an unnecessarily early declaration? Unless the batting conditions have changed a lot overnight I would think they'll bat out the first session and then declare sometime during the second, could be reasonably early in the session though.I'm fine with batting again as long as there isn't an unnecessarily early declaration to follow it, which I suspect there may be.
That's probably the case. A session of batting typically would probably see them 580ish ahead which would leave plenty of runs even for 5 sessions of bowling. They may give it a few whacks to aim for the mental barrier of 600. It's not likely to matter much.What would you class as an unnecessarily early declaration? Unless the batting conditions have changed a lot overnight I would think they'll bat out the first session and then declare sometime during the second, could be reasonably early in the session though.
Yeah, I can't put it better than that. Fully agree.That's probably the case. A session of batting typically would probably see them 580ish ahead which would leave plenty of runs even for 5 sessions of bowling. They may give it a few whacks to aim for the mental barrier of 600. It's not likely to matter much.
Can't speak for PEWS but I think he and I agree that an unnecessarily early declaration is one that doesn't actually give you more time to bowl the opposition out because they would chase the score before the end of the game (eg setting 450 in 5 sessions - if a side bats for 5 sessions they will have got the score anyway, so you haven't actually saved yourself time).
I didn't see the last session, but it sounds to me like he didn't need to go to sweeps and lifts because Pakistan failed what you'd think was their one job last night of not feeding his scoring areas.One aspect where Cook is beyond criticism for mine is in the way he's batting at the moment. Doesn't enforce then comes out and scores at a run-a-ball without really lashing Pakistan, just upped his usual rate because the situation demands it. Probably more demoralising than if he'd come out playing reverse sweeps and lifts over 3rd man because it suggests he and by extension his team are in control. Leading from the front and absolutely what you want to see from the skipper.
That got him as far as 24 and from there he was cruisingMohammad Amir to Cook, FOUR, offers up some width and Cook crashes it away with a square cut
Rahat Ali to Cook, FOUR, cut away in front of square as he takes advantage of some more width
Rahat Ali to Cook, FOUR, width, and Cook chinese-cuts that all the way past his off stump and through fine leg for four! That was going to be four regardless, because Cook never misses out on those
Rahat Ali to Cook, FOUR, short and clobbered, utterly middled through midwicket.
I don't agree with Scaly but I also disagree with this. I disagree with Scaly for other reasons, I don't think it is fair to say that if England win Scaly is wrong.And saying the result is irrelevant to the quality of the decision is somewhat foolish; captains are there to do what they think will get results. If we draw this match then this decision will rightly be looked at. If we win it, then job done. I am not for a minute saying actions should solely be judged on results, but in sports the ends justify the means.
That's not the same thing.Presumably the whingers also get pissed off when a batsman doesn't retire out when on 200 odd? He has enough runs, should get on with the game, right?
Unless he needs to, he'll just carry on playing cricket as normal.
Extend the same thought to captaincy.