sure, but you can say that about any wicket. too many grassy ones devalue seam bowling skill and makes spin irrelevant, too many flat decks devalues batting skill and makes bowling irrelevant, too many bouncy tracks makes overspin/back of a length bowling/backfoot play the dominant forces.I think it's fine, and possibly even good - once in a while. But you can't have it too often - it devalues skill.
must have been back when I was defending the spinning nagpur wicket and was drawing comparisons with the kind of pitches where jesse ryder look unplayable.Am I crazy or has cnerd123 **** all over crazy green tracks before
You started a thread on that & we're discussing it in there though?More than pitch , we need to discuss about Pink ball .
Yes and no. This was the shortest game since 1935. Joe root took 5/8 in the first innings. The whataboutism doesn’t work. If the ball is so inconsistent for the fast bowlers that it’s also luck, then yes. And those pitches are also bad. And there’s been a few of them. And those pitches are fine once in a while too because it’s entertaining.sure, but you can say that about any wicket. too many grassy ones devalue seam bowling skill and makes spin irrelevant, too many flat decks devalues batting skill and makes bowling irrelevant, too many bouncy tracks makes overspin/back of a length bowling/backfoot play the dominant forces.
I don't even think this pitch negated skill alltogether. It just required a different set of skills that the batsmen by and large didn't have. And that's fine every now and then, as you say.
Nagpur v Chelmsford?must have been back when I was defending the spinning nagpur wicket and was drawing comparisons with the kind of pitches where jesse ryder look unplayable.
Ima stop you right therewhere a less skilled player outperforms a more skilled one
Washington Sundar outbowled Nathan Lyon
To be fair two of those innings were from England.Eh I do feel it's kind of hard to take such games entirely seriously as a result. I don't know if it's a great advertisement of the game to have two day games where both sides can't even get to 150.
So, in short, both teams struggled to compile respectable scores on the same pitch.To be fair two of those innings were from England.
India collapsed bad which we are very prone to doing these days it seems, especially with our batting not clicking.
Yeah but most of the collapses happened long before the lights came on. England were bowled out during day light hours and so was India on Day 2.All of this is true but the mitigating circumstance here is the pink ball and the day-night conditions. We don't still know if it was the pitch alone that caused all of this and you have to give the benefit of doubt for a new stadium as well as the curator and the guys working may still be figuring out how the soil behaves over multiple days and how much grass and water is needed etc. And the pink ball lacquer-straight ball connection has already been made by multiple players.
Washington Sundar has played a key role in the two GREATEST victories of the Indian side - The Nidahas Trophy and the Gabba Test. He is already better than Lyon forever.Washington Sundar outbowled Nathan Lyon
Still the pink ball, mate, which is the point. And I actually think the dew would have negated the spinners a bit, as we saw during the Virat-Rohit partnership. A pity we basically had only one session in the night for the test. So in a way, the batsmen never gave themselves the opportunity to be out there batting when the pitch might have been at its best for batting.Yeah but most of the collapses happened long before the lights came on. England were bowled out during day light hours and so was India on Day 2.
Yes but the percentage of the turning ball would have been negated for sure though and the bowlers cant impart enough revs when the ball is wet too. Those things would have come into play had the batsmen been there for that period. Not defending the pitch, I have already said it is a bad pitch all things considered but its kinda sad that the batsmen never got a chance at a time when it might have been at its best for batting.It's not like there was any discernible difference in how likely the ball was to skid on when the lights came on that I could see. People have posited all sorts of explanations but I still think that it was totally random whether a ball would turn or not.