And with his dropped couple of catches, one of which cost the third test, he actually had a quantifiable negative impact on the series. Fair effort.yeah harris should never have gone over in the first place... harris is an awful test batsman full stop and in england was always going to fail there on account of the swinging ball
He was infuriatingly bad against the short ball though. That's really not excusable in an Australian opener.In fairness to Harris he actually did pretty well in the home summer. Didn't kick on with any of his starts and missed out in the one Test where he could've dominated but it wasn't like he was completely dogshit in his Test pre-England.
Don't want to see him again for a while though.
the flip side is you still hear some people some harshly Ferguson was treated, even though the selection never really made sense in the first placeThis "can't be dropped after one test" thing really should be dropped as an idea. If you're not good enough, you're not good enough. Frankly Harris should have never been picked after the previous home summer. And Victorian cricket need to start producing some more testing wickets for their batsmen to bat on because there's no way Harris is of the same quality as some other opening batsmen around the country (Hughes, Burns and even Bancroft).
Yeah he was treated harshly and probably should have got more games if the selectors truly believed that he was in the top 6 batsmen in the country.the flip side is you still hear some people some harshly Ferguson was treated, even though the selection never really made sense in the first place
the other thing is it kinds seems like they've picked a part of the organisation that CA would prefer funded, as opposed to Premier Cricket.On the surface it looks really bad but I'd be curious to know how essential all these positions are when you consider how bloated admin is in sporting organisations
Ehh, kinda disagree. Dropping a batsman after one Test is almost always dumb - unless they're a one-for-one replacement for an injury or something. The nature of batting being so high variance means that if failing in a single Test is enough to convince a selector that, actually they weren't cut out for Tests after all, they probably shouldn't have been picked in the first place.This "can't be dropped after one test" thing really should be dropped as an idea. If you're not good enough, you're not good enough. Frankly Harris should have never been picked after the previous home summer. And Victorian cricket need to start producing some more testing wickets for their batsmen to bat on because there's no way Harris is of the same quality as some other opening batsmen around the country (Hughes, Burns and even Bancroft).
I mean, Ferguson either shouldn't have been picked in the first place or given at least the series imo. To me, the double-failure in that game shouldn't have been enough for the selectors to justifiably be in a position of saying "well last week we genuinely thought he was the best option, and now we genuinely think he isn't".the flip side is you still hear some people some harshly Ferguson was treated, even though the selection never really made sense in the first place
Jeez, would be funny if that all that diving around the field in a meaningless match wrecked his career, wouldn't it?Jhye Richardson has had another operation in an attempt to rectify his ongoing shoulder issues.
Ehh, kinda disagree. Dropping a batsman after one Test is almost always dumb - unless they're a one-for-one replacement for an injury or something. The nature of batting being so high variance means that if failing in a single Test is enough to convince a selector that, actually they weren't cut out for Tests after all, they probably shouldn't have been picked in the first place.
I mean, Ferguson either shouldn't have been picked in the first place or given at least the series imo. To me, the double-failure in that game shouldn't have been enough for the selectors to justifiably be in a position of saying "well last week we genuinely thought he was the best option, and now we genuinely think he isn't".
The only other scenarios I can think of in which I'd support a batsman being "dropped" after one Test would be:Ehh, kinda disagree. Dropping a batsman after one Test is almost always dumb - unless they're a one-for-one replacement for an injury or something. The nature of batting being so high variance means that if failing in a single Test is enough to convince a selector that, actually they weren't cut out for Tests after all, they probably shouldn't have been picked in the first place.
This is especially true given he got run out once IMO.I mean, Ferguson either shouldn't have been picked in the first place or given at least the series imo. To me, the double-failure in that game shouldn't have been enough for the selectors to justifiably be in a position of saying "well last week we genuinely thought he was the best option, and now we genuinely think he isn't".
Yeah, no disagreement from me there.The Ferguson case isn't that simple. There were other factors, primarily the pressure on the side (and selectors) after such an embarrassing loss and poor batting performance, which prompted them to change as much of the batting order as they could justify (bringing in Renshaw, Handscomb, Maddinson and Wade I think?). He shouldn't have been dropped though, just like Smith shouldn't have been banned for a year. It was an overreaction to a perceived disaster.
Yeah, I think we broadly agree on this. Where we might be differing is that I don't think one Test is typically going to provide enough evidence that it was a mistake - particularly in a Test where the guy got run out by, iirc, a very good piece of fielding in the middle of a lol-lapse.Ferguson was terribly treated, I'll grant you that. Selection policy should not be decided by a Steve Smith press conference.
I genuinely believe he shouldn't have been picked in the first place but he should never have been dropped after that test.
But my point is that you should always pick the best side and if you've made a mistake it's better to correct that sooner rather than later. Ideally the selectors would be more proactive about making the best choice in the first place.