S.Kennedy
International Vice-Captain
They were beaten 3-0!!Nor did South Africa disgrace themselves in India.
They were beaten 3-0!!Nor did South Africa disgrace themselves in India.
Oh it happened, & the reasons were perfectly clear, SA were missing their two premier bowlers.Apparently England's 2-1 victory in South Africa did not happen now, for reasons which are not entirely clear.
Why do you reckon DRS will help India away? Isn't it just the application of the same software for everyone, everywhere?Now that India has started using DRS (which truly helps) and that Kohli will be captain in the away tours, you can almost see the away record improving to some degree at least, unless ofcourse couple of the seamers break down (including Shami), in which case it would be the same old.
At the very least I see India winning in NZ, but apparently India are not scheduled to tour NZ at all..
Yeah look, the away record thing may well improve, but if it does it won't be because of an improvement in pace bowling. The Wheel is Forever.We'll need to wait and see obviously, but I can see India improving their overseas record massively under Kohli.
Also considering Shami and B Kumar's recent development, their fast bowling stocks are looking better.
Jadeja in particular hits the pad an awful lot, I can see him getting more wickets under DRS, especially when batsmen are well forward.Why do you reckon DRS will help India away? Isn't it just the application of the same software for everyone, everywhere?
Without DRS, the home tends to benefit more.. than the away team as the marginal decisions or the benefit of doubt (given by umpires) tends to go more in their favour even when the batsman is actually out. (ball hitting leg stump or impact being inside the line but due to benefit of doubt was adjudged to be too close/ risky to give out).Why do you reckon DRS will help India away? Isn't it just the application of the same software for everyone, everywhere?
Without DRS, the home tends to benefit more.. than the away team as the marginal decisions or the benefit of doubt (given by umpires) tends to go more in their favour even when the batsman is actually out. (ball hitting leg stump or impact being inside the line but due to benefit of doubt was adjudged to be too close/ risky to give out).
So the umpires are more cautious with LBWs and thus you see teams racking up bigger scores against the weaker Indian bowling which creates fewer chances away from Asia.
But with DRS, suppose Aus is 240/4 and a LBW decision is not given. Thanks to DRS now, India reviews and the decision is over-turned, so instead of it typically becoming 550/8 at SCG under the no DRS system, it changes to 400 all out..
Or the umpires are happier to give decisions or they can be more aggressive with their decisions, rather than playing on the safe side because there is a safety net with Drs
I don't actually agree with any of this, but thanks for explaining your reasoning. Dar gave Smith out here vs SA when he was a million miles down the track, as an example. I mean, there have been neutral umpires for over a decade now.Without DRS, the home tends to benefit more.. than the away team as the marginal decisions or the benefit of doubt (given by umpires) tends to go more in their favour even when the batsman is actually out. (ball hitting leg stump or impact being inside the line but due to benefit of doubt was adjudged to be too close/ risky to give out).
So the umpires are more cautious with LBWs and thus you see teams racking up bigger scores against the weaker Indian bowling which creates fewer chances away from Asia.
But with DRS, suppose Aus is 240/4 and a LBW decision is not given. Thanks to DRS now, India reviews and the decision is over-turned, so instead of it typically becoming 550/8 at SCG under the no DRS system, it changes to 400 all out..
Or the umpires are happier to give decisions or they can be more aggressive with their decisions, rather than playing on the safe side because there is a safety net with Drs
lol wutWithout DRS, the home tends to benefit more.. than the away team as the marginal decisions or the benefit of doubt (given by umpires) tends to go more in their favour even when the batsman is actually out. (ball hitting leg stump or impact being inside the line but due to benefit of doubt was adjudged to be too close/ risky to give out).
So the umpires are more cautious with LBWs and thus you see teams racking up bigger scores against the weaker Indian bowling which creates fewer chances away from Asia.
But with DRS, suppose Aus is 240/4 and a LBW decision is not given. Thanks to DRS now, India reviews and the decision is over-turned, so instead of it typically becoming 550/8 at SCG under the no DRS system, it changes to 400 all out..
Or the umpires are happier to give decisions or they can be more aggressive with their decisions, rather than playing on the safe side because there is a safety net with Drs
I don't understand this logic at all. DRS will be available for both teams playing the game, not just for India. It's not going to help India any more than it helps the other team.To some degree, Indian bowling will benefit.
It may not make too much of a difference to the outcome though more often than not, but sometimes a single wicket can change the whole momentum.
And given how hopeless Indian bowling usually is away from home, any move or anything that can get them more wickets is gonna help, no?
Yup, Indian batsmen could suffer a bit, as they do benefit from the odd decision.I don't actually agree with any of this, but thanks for explaining your reasoning. Dar gave Smith out here vs SA when he was a million miles down the track, as an example. I mean, there have been neutral umpires for over a decade now.
Do you now think India will start to go worse at home, because the marginal calls will begin to go against them with DRS?
Can we have half a point back for each of the first three tests here then where one of Anderson or Broad were unavailable?Oh it happened, & the reasons were perfectly clear, SA were missing their two premier bowlers.
Be a bit like them playing India with Ashwin & Jadeja unavailable.
Yea, but I am comparing it to the scenario without DRS. Umpires were giving fewer LBWs, fewer decisions because there was benefit of the doubt thing.. which would slightly help batsmen, especially home batsmen.lol wut
I don't think any of this has any basis in reality
I don't understand this logic at all. DRS will be available for both teams playing the game, not just for India. It's not going to help India any more than it helps the other team.
South Africa were without their top bowlers at "home", where they are twice as lethal.Can we have half a point back for each of the first three tests here then where one of Anderson or Broad were unavailable?
Fair point, hadn't realized Anderson's figures were so bad on that tour.South Africa were without their top bowlers at "home", where they are twice as lethal.
Don't think England seamers could have done much and we have seen Anderson pick up 4 wickets in 3 games @54.
If Swann was still around and still quality bowler, and had to miss the series, then...