And there's a better chance of spotting big foot tonight than senile SentryThink Aus shaded that day tbh
well you have the best in business at thatEither the weather saves us or our batsmen put up a glorious display of blockathon to draw this test.
He and h_hurricane are something like the Thylacine in this situation - people say they exist, but there’s never a verified sighting.And there's a better chance of spotting big foot tonight than senile Sentry
Yeah I don’t think anyone can doubt their ticker, that’s for sure.Very proud of the way the team fights and how the players keep stepping up all series though.
Green couldn't even get number 11. send him to Siberia with TrumpGee it’s quiet in here this evening compared with yesterday and every other day after the Melbourne test
My point was 1. that an umpire can ignore such boorish attitudes and actually do his bloody job and 2. citing someone who brought opprobium to the Australian side from overseas as having a credible attitude as to how the law should be approached is stupid and lacks awareness. The "if you can't stand it, get out" justification has also been used for our bad behaviour. The culture which produced such style justifications for everything was IMO normalised here first (the 80s W.I. were not liked for their actions, or intimidatory bowling would not have been the controversy in the late 80s that it was) but is now also widely accepted everywhere else (much like pad play spread from England in the late 50s): all the columns years ago about how the Indians were no longer going to be 'nice' [were they, really?] but give it as good as they got were with always with respect to Australia. You are looking into things a bit too literally by your comment above. Also, we got stuck with that opprobrium after everyone else caught on to the justifications. I am not saying no-one behaved badly or bowled loads of bouncers at tail-enders before we did, but that that attitude became "the proper way to play" here first.This is a peculiar reasoning on your and his part for umpires not enforcing the law. How, for example, can an umpire not enforcing it at Cape Town in a test vs SL be put down to the big, bad, naughty Australian team?
Cummins is not even in Top 10Is Cummins more accurate than mcgrath?
OkMy point was 1. that an umpire can ignore such boorish attitudes and actually do his bloody job and 2. citing someone who brought opprobium to the Australian side from overseas as having a credible attitude as to how the law should be approached is stupid and lacks awareness. The "if you can't stand it, get out" justification has also been used for our bad behaviour. The culture which produced such style justifications for everything was IMO normalised here first (the 80s W.I. were not liked for their actions, or intimidatory bowling would not have been the controversy in the late 80s that it was) but is now also widely accepted everywhere else (much like pad play spread from England in the late 50s): all the columns years ago about how the Indians were no longer going to be 'nice' [were they, really?] but give it as good as they got were with always with respect to Australia. You are looking into things a bit too literally by your comment above. Also, we got stuck with that opprobrium after everyone else caught on to the justifications. I am not saying no-one behaved badly or bowled loads of bouncers at tail-enders before we did, but that that attitude became "the proper way to play" here first.
My dude, I’m 75k posts in. I wouldn’t have 50k if I didn’t front every time australia fell in a hole in the past decadeYou weren’t chirping much in the last test either tbf
Ok. You were going to sooner or later.
you weren't aware of the rule change?Just watched the highlights
- lmao that India are allowed to replaced their **** keeper with a much better keeper who wasn't even named in the XI. Very Jadeja hamstring-concussion-ey.
- Marnus caught behind off Pant looks like it should have been out. Thought I saw a pretty obvious hot spot on the glove.
- OS will not be happy at all with India's running. Taking risky runs in Test matches is just not on.