Shouted come on loudly when Ponting was caught down the leg side but given not out iirc. Yelled something when he was wrongly given against Symonds as well.Did he? He was still smiling when he got that howler.
@Topic Shaun Udal, anyone?
Did he? He was still smiling when he got that howler.
@Topic Shaun Udal, anyone?
That one, the home collapses against Pak and Eng under Chappell-Dravid. Those are the top 3 for me..
Clarke grounding Ganguly's catch. Ruined a pretty competitive series. I will forever be bitter.Shouted come on loudly when Ponting was caught down the leg side but given not out iirc. Yelled something when he was wrongly given against Symonds as well.
Man **** that match, seriously. Symonds caught behind, Symonds stumped, umpire taking Ponting's word when the **** literally didn't walk to a blatant edge, Dravid caught behind, third umpire giving a stumping not out, Jaffer out on a no-ball. waahhh.
Was there for the whole match. Viru was imperious but the lolapse was brutal to watch. The beers were lite as well. Lame.Collapses suck as a fan, but for me, letting the tail get away is more gut-wrenching. Generally a collapse has some aspect of awesome bowling involved. Tailender batting and recovering a score sometimes involves good batting, but generally is just woeful bowling plans / captains becoming idiots.
Not to distract from the thread though. One of the worst collapses as an Indian fan was this:
3rd Test: Australia v India at Melbourne, Dec 26-30, 2003 | Cricket Scorecard | ESPN Cricinfo
First innings went from 1-278 to all out 366. Cost India a first ever series win in Australia. Woeful.
It's a shame that the numerous and vocal "aussies and umps r cheaterz" contingent from India completely destroyed all credibility of the rest who were just voicing out their frustration with the umpiring blunders.I do want to see an angle which shows he grounded that catch. Clarke had some shocking non-catches in his time (one in an ODI against Nz springs to mind) but I can't recall an angle which showed for sure he didn't take that cleanly. Mind you, I'm not saying he did, just that I didn't think it was definitive.
I used to think the idea of taking a fielder's word was a good one re catches, but I don't any more. You have those ones where they don't know, and otherwise you're relying on the word of the least honest player to make sure it all goes smoothly.
Yeah, so annoying. Had every reason to be angry with the umpiring and we even had most of the public opinion on our side. Everyone was shitting on the umpires, neutrals and even most Aussies at the time. ****ed it up and lost support by employing the usual tactic of threatening to cancel the tour and bullying Bucknor out.It's a shame that the numerous and vocal "aussies and umps r cheaterz" contingent from India completely destroyed all credibility of the rest who were just voicing out their frustration with the umpiring blunders.
Fair shout, letting the tail get away can be pretty awful too - Edgbaston 2005 springs to mind and that was probably worse than any collapse I can think of right now, but generally I don't find them as gut-wrenching as collapses, probably because it's happened less in the matches I've been more emotionally invested in. Or rather, it may well have happened, but hasn't necessarily cost us the game.Collapses suck as a fan, but for me, letting the tail get away is more gut-wrenching. Generally a collapse has some aspect of awesome bowling involved. Tailender batting and recovering a score sometimes involves good batting, but generally is just woeful bowling plans / captains becoming idiots.
India supporters can take some more comfort knowing the whole episode basically ended Andrew Symonds as a force in international cricket.You **** s are forgetting that all the controversy and stupidity of Sydney gave way to one of the greatest ever test wins of an Indian side of all time. To win a test from that situation, on a track that was pretty flat and least suited to the Indians even then and with a totally rejigged batting line up and a young bowling line up, was just immensely immensely memorable. Say all you want, it will forever, to me, be the time Karma stuck it up to everyone who slagged off Indians during and after Sydney. The run that peaked with us being the world Test #1 and World Cup champions at the same time started off there, at Perth.