Of course not.Mr Miyagi, it’s hardly a revolutionary position to think that by having your best players back it will improve your side.
The last time we took an odi series seriously was the last WCAnd what about India in late 2017? What about in Australia in 2018?
If you think all the problems are resolved with a few fancy players back - good luck in the World Cup - it will go like the Champs Trophy 2017 did for Australia against England.
Too slow has been the pattern for Australian ODI games for over a year now. That is why Australia is sliding to 6th.
I'm not trolling you or CA fans. It is how I see it. Teams are out strike rating Australia with the bat regularly.
Finch was part of the problem vs England despite all his runs. He didn't score them quickly enough. Two centuries in the first 2 games, 2 losses. Not enough runs.The last time we took an odi series seriously was the last WC
Every other one is characterised by injury management, experimentation and minimal preparation
Btw, simple solution to s/r is to have Warner, Finch and Maxi in the top 4
I don’t think that we’ll win the next one
Nah we’ll win it with a leg in the air.The last time we took an odi series seriously was the last WC
Every other one is characterised by injury management, experimentation and minimal preparation
Btw, simple solution to s/r is to have Warner, Finch and Maxi in the top 4
I don’t think that we’ll win the next one anyway
LolFinch was part of the problem vs England despite all his runs. He didn't score them quickly enough. Two centuries in the first 2 games, 2 losses. Not enough runs.
1st ODI (D/N), England tour of Australia and New Zealand at Melbourne, Jan 14 2018 | Match Summary | ESPNCricinfo
2nd ODI (D/N), England tour of Australia and New Zealand at Brisbane, Jan 19 2018 | Match Summary | ESPNCricinfo
This one isn't Finch at all - it is just bizarre besides Paine:
3rd ODI (D/N), England tour of Australia and New Zealand at Sydney, Jan 21 2018 | Match Summary | ESPNCricinfo
Even with them in your side you got smashed so hardly improve that much anyway.Mr Miyagi, it’s hardly a revolutionary position to think that by having your best players back it will improve your side.
Looks about right. Cummins and Stoinis are your other options and probably come in for MMarsh and/or Agar in most conditions IMO.Something close to full strength:
Warner
Short
TPC
Memeswell
Arun
MMarsh
Carey
Agar
Starc
Tye
Haze
Cummins there or thereabouts but not really sold on his LO bowling tbh.
I think Miyagi's actually pretty much spot on with everything. Except the bolded, because they simply haven't got their "fancy seam attack" together often, if at all, to know if it's a "viable strategy".Actual XI? Dunno. I don't care for Australian domestic cricket that much of late. These days I prefer the IPL to the BBL.
But for me the obvious solution to score faster is to risk batting deeper and sacrifice bowling and use the same talented players in Finch, Stoinis, Maxwell and more.
But, Carey for Paine is an obvious try out.
Stoinis and Maxwell getting through overs is an obvious try out.
Zampa aint performing and Agar is getting some runs, but I would be telling them all to score faster.
Finch probably back to opening. Short is an issue, whether it is India he struggles with or spin in general. That needs a resolution.
But I would make sure that I stack the batting to a minimum of 8 with Agar, definitely not 7 like the first odi.
Mitch Marsh when playing has to pull the trigger more. So does Finch. So does Smith.
I'm not an Aussie selector, but we can all see they're not scoring fast enough. So they need to fix it, because their fancy seam attack is not doing a Hasan Ali type win often enough to remain a viable strategy right now.
You seem to say "goodnight" a lot and then keep postingFinch was part of the problem vs England despite all his runs. He didn't score them quickly enough. Two centuries in the first 2 games, 2 losses. Not enough runs.
1st ODI (D/N), England tour of Australia and New Zealand at Melbourne, Jan 14 2018 | Match Summary | ESPNCricinfo
2nd ODI (D/N), England tour of Australia and New Zealand at Brisbane, Jan 19 2018 | Match Summary | ESPNCricinfo
This one isn't Finch at all - it is just bizarre besides Paine:
3rd ODI (D/N), England tour of Australia and New Zealand at Sydney, Jan 21 2018 | Match Summary | ESPNCricinfo
Stoinis scored his 147 at 7, but given he has been one of the higher strikers, I don't think it is daft if he bats higher neither.One of the problems with the bat deep strategy is that I have a feeling that whoever bats at 7 and 8 will whinge about it. Carey will just do it because he's a champ but ask M Marsh or Stoinis to do it and they'll probably crack the ****s. And Langer won't make them anyway because they're WA boys and if they want to bat top 5 then they'll get it, **** the team.
If we can get away without a specialist spinner that'd be my option. Cummins, Starc, Haze, Tye is a world class attack. Or just pick 3 of them and have an all-rounder (Carey, Stoinis, MMarsh) at 8. As Miyagi suggests if you bat that deep you can get away with 20 overs an innings of Stoinis, MMarsh, Maxwell & Short.
Yeah he did so terribly that Pune made the final against all expectations.Yes I did watch. I saw a guy who struggled to keep up with the SR of the English team. I saw him choke and splutter in the IPL as well last year and take games deep only to lose.
Steve Smith has a SR problem on flat pitches in limited overs cricket. I don't doubt he is a magnificent batting talent with the ability to make huge scores and lots of them. But speed of scoring, that is SR, is a problem for him when things are easy it would appear.
Now he might get you past Pakistan's fearsome bowling attack and weak batting for a win. But what is he going to do when Eng, Ind, SA or even lil old NZ get lucky with a Munro/Guptill bashathon?
Ahhh - yes the IPL final, remind us how they went:Yeah he did so terribly that Pune made the final against all expectations.
If you think Steve Smith has a SR problem in LO cricket you're deluding yourself. Then again, Smith has only won one more World Cup than New Zealand.
Also our number 8 is usually Plunkett who is a great lower order slogger or Willey who is capable and both are front line bowlers well one is and the other attempts to be.some stats post the 2015 World Cup
across all of One Day cricket, the person batting at 8 faces an average of 16 balls an innings. the person batting at 8 for australia faces an average of 14 balls an innings. the person batting at 8 for england faces an average of 19 balls an innings. note that I'm saying innings, a third of the time, England's number 8 hasn't been required to bat. so per match, england's number 8 is facing an average of 13 balls a match.
It's such a non issue. England is in a unique position with an amazing keeper batting at 5/6 and Ben Stokes filling the other spot, and then rolling with two spinners who Can Bat, so their structure works for them (unless they're playing Scotland). if australia ever bats MMarsh or Stonis at 8, the people responsible should fired out of a ****ing cannon. it's such a stupidly conservative thing Paul Ketting should be coming into this thread to lambaste it
Actually it is Woakes - who has averaged over 40 there for the past 3 years striking at over 100 including 4 50's and a hs of 95. Willey has been 9, and Plunkett with Rashid the jack.Also our number 8 is usually Plunkett who is a great lower order slogger or Willey who is capable and both are front line bowlers well one is and the other attempts to be.
Ooops yeah realised after I posted that Plunkett is usually 9. Mad batting line up but think we are a proper bowler short so will be found out in a knockout game in World Cup.Actually it is Woakes - who has averaged over 40 there ffor the past 3 years striking at over 100 including 4 50's and a hs of 95. Willey has been 9, and Plunkett with Rashid the jack.