Jono
Virat Kohli (c)
"for narrative purposes" is a meaningless statementYeah.. This just exists for narrative purposes.Did we have a similar narrative for Yuvraj?
"for narrative purposes" is a meaningless statementYeah.. This just exists for narrative purposes.Did we have a similar narrative for Yuvraj?
I think 90s England was just especially weak vs spin. I agree that they are a bit underrated though.yeah, there were bad players(or at least players who never did anything to prove themselves as good) like the ones who were mentioned earlier like Salisbury and Maynard, but they only played a handful of tests.
Out of the blokes who played 40+ tests you can conjure up a solid XI, can't call many of them 'dreadful'
Ok. Let's put it another way. Which current teams do you think the English team of the 90s would beat? Or which of theb00s team do you think they would beat?yeah, there were bad players(or at least players who never did anything to prove themselves as good) like the ones who were mentioned earlier like Salisbury and Maynard, but they only played a handful of tests.
Out of the blokes who played 40+ tests you can conjure up a solid XI, can't call many of them 'dreadful'
Yea I think you're arguing something different here.Ok. Let's put it another way. Which current teams do you think the English team of the 90s would beat? Or which of theb00s team do you think they would beat?
this is what you said initially.here's one - England had bad players in the '90s
Ganguly went after victory and Dhoni waited for it.Ganguly being vastly superior to Dhoni as a Test captain.. he was certainly superior in some facets but going purely by results, you can make a decent argument for both of them.
I'd certainly trust Ganguly to get more out of a stronger side but Dhoni's tactics did work upto 2011, with a very mediocre attack to call upon throughout his reign.Ganguly went after victory and Dhoni waited for it.
LOL I remember arguing about Ishant and Broad being roughly comparable as bowlers around 2011. Safe to say that wasn't one of my better calls.Stuart Broad wouldn't get in the Indian side.
What are you talking about? Zak was a reverse swinging beast and Ishant Sharma looked genuinely world class for his first two years between 2008-2010. We also had Kumble bowling with Zak and Ish for a short time. Between 2008 to the 2011 WC, all our test players were at their best at the same time, maybe except for Dravid who was going through a lean patch. So, Dhoni was actually defensive with one of India's strongest sides.I'd certainly trust Ganguly to get more out of a stronger side but Dhoni's tactics did work upto 2011, with a very mediocre attack to call upon throughout his reign.