honestbharani
Whatever it takes!!!
I honestly felt the only reason they would drop Broad was to get Woakes in at 8 for the batting insurance. Never thought he would be dropped for Wood, of all people.
i think the west indies made a mistake picking their attack for days 1 and 2. i think they will miss cornwall, even if it's just because the quicks might be huffing and puffing if the english dig in. the english can stick around, even if they don't score many.Ultimately though the real damage - aside from the obvious, which is Root missing makes for a very fragile top order - is that England decided last week that we were going to pick an attack to bowl second in a high scoring game, and then never reconsider that when the weather on the first two days looked like making a mockery of that. Batting first wasn't just an error based on the conditions on the morning, it's also a poor reading of the players that both sides have avaiable.
The West Indies adapted their plan and we didn't. It rather feels like Stokes had his plan for the game given to him and understandably for a stand-in captain didn't adjust on the morning of the Test, even though that's presumably why we retained a 13-man squad in the first place.
Archer and Wood having a higher ceiling and with more variety than Broad and Woakes makes a lot of sense as a game plan if you expect the game to be 400 plays 350. As it is, it's more like an early season game where the bowlers can not only get a lot out of the conditions but also have a responsibility to do so without conceding runs. Bowlers who 'take the pitch out of the equation' can be a negative too.
hard agree, he's a great find.Fwiw I thought Dom Bess did a lot right yesterday and played a significant role in keeping England in the game.
With a stronger batting lineup they shouldn't have any problems chasing 200, this isn't a minefield by any imagination and I don't see it breaking up significantly.If England make 300, do we fancy Windies chasing 200? I actually think they might pull it off.
I mean they're missing both Bravo and Hetmeyer right now, otherwise it's pretty settledi don't think the windies will chase 200 in the last innings. they're a very speculative batting side in that upper middle order, which is why so few of their young batsmen have stuck in test cricket. they play shots until they get out.
i hope brooks gets a hunger for runs because he's got the ability.
in those countries like every other visiting offie? most likely. in england? nah, at least not by the aussies.Bess isn't good enough for me. Would get thrashed by Australia and India
they're both very speculative batsmen in how they play, especially hetmeyer.I mean they're missing both Bravo and Hetmeyer right now, otherwise it's pretty settled
My first thoughts when Broad was excluded and they went with Wood and Archer was one of excitement rather than genuine hope that was the right configuration. Love watching two bowlers when bowling flat out getting It down there over 90mph, however, the reality was that Broad simply had to play here. Was a big call and while it was exciting it wrong to leave Broad out on this pitch where he has the variation and skills to make a real impact on the game and given recent form he was very unlucky to miss out.i know selectors feel more comfortable when you have some extreme pace in the bank but i thought playing both was definitely an error and you could even argue broad is intimidating enough with his bounce to play anderson-broad-woakes-bess and get both bowling allrounders in there.
england is probably one of the most forgiving places for not having extreme pace as well thanks to the conditions and the duke ball swinging for longer (not to say england never has flat or tough decks - lords and cardiff spring to mind historically - but this one here doesn't require extreme speed imo).
Largely agree with this, it's an orthodox field against two pretty unorthodox players.if they're gonna keep straying into burns' and sibley's strength they need to put some fielders in the way, plus it might encourage them to follow the ball with their hands more if a gap on the offside is in the back of their mind.