Told you soIt's going to fail when Eng come up against Australia (as we are going to see now). Bazball is aggressive cricket and requires a lot of mental toughness (which this England side does have) to pull off (some mind games as well by putting the opposition on the backfoot with media talk). But Australia are generally the toughest side in terms of mental toughness and England will find it hard to win mind games against them.
So, bazball is coming to an end, at least for this series.
That sounds much like what Steve Waugh's Australians did. Batted aggressively but not stupidly. Almost never drew games unless they were heavily rain-affected, and would gift an overmatched opposition with a chance to try and force a result if necessary.It'll swing too far forward, get readjusted until a suitable middle ground of how to attack and still win Tests is found. You may find declaring 80 overs in on day 1 with a world batsman set on 110 is a swing too far forward, for example. That shooting your mouth off in the media (although it makes for great entertainment) is, too. Or at least against some teams.
This is the most logical thing I've ever heard on England's new philosophy. It's not rocket science. A guy with over 11K runs in test cricket falls prey to a 'trap', of which a few of his blokes have already succumbed to...This is definitely the way to go for some of the more limited players in the side like the openers and Brook.
Root, Bairstow and Stokes just have to be a bit more controlled - Bairstow in particular has shown that he can weather out good bowling before upping the ante. Was good to see Stokes do it as well.
It’ll hopefully settle into something less frantic and just an aggressive way to play.
I don't think it will really work without it being a "team" philosophy. If you reduce it back down to individual players strengths and weaknesses, you give the fielding team exactly the same opportunity to retain control of the game as they always did.This is definitely the way to go for some of the more limited players in the side like the openers and Brook.
Root, Bairstow and Stokes just have to be a bit more controlled - Bairstow in particular has shown that he can weather out good bowling before upping the ante. Was good to see Stokes do it as well.
It’ll hopefully settle into something less frantic and just an aggressive way to play.
Yep, that's true. I don't think that caught on because those guys were considered cricketing gods, no one thought the approach would catch on. Whilst Greatbatch, Jaysuriya, Kaluwitharana, their ODI gung-ho style was considered doable. As will it be with this England side.That sounds much like what Steve Waugh's Australians did. Batted aggressively but not stupidly. Almost never drew games unless they were heavily rain-affected, and would gift an overmatched opposition with a chance to try and force a result if necessary.
Easier to do when you've got Gilchrist, Warne and McGrath in your side though. Takes more balls to attempt it with an average team
I thought this from the start - not as much with Bairstow, but certainly Root and Stokes. To me, Root has underperformed under Baz, which is a bit crazy to say given he averages 62. But there are a tremendous amount of failures for a guy who's probably the best bat in the world when it does it properly. Joe Root reverse lapping a guy like Scott Boland bowling up and down is not the best use of ability. Same with Stokes, yes he's just played an out of this world knock going at the attack, but his last 18 months have been underperforming, too.This is definitely the way to go for some of the more limited players in the side like the openers and Brook.
Root, Bairstow and Stokes just have to be a bit more controlled - Bairstow in particular has shown that he can weather out good bowling before upping the ante. Was good to see Stokes do it as well.
It’ll hopefully settle into something less frantic and just an aggressive way to play.
This is also true, and tbf there is merit in programming the team and players to play in one particular way so they eliminate the need to think and overthink and get tangled up in their own minds as can be so common in cricket.I don't think it will really work without it being a "team" philosophy. If you reduce it back down to individual players strengths and weaknesses, you give the fielding team exactly the same opportunity to retain control of the game as they always did.
I think it can still be a team philosophy with exceptions. You pick a side with a plan to be aggressive as a rule, to take the game to the opposition...but you can still hedge those bets with someone like a Root or someone in the middle order who can be positive but equally can adapt to match situations and play tougher Test innings. I think the philosophy probably has to revolve around two attacking openers, otherwise as you say the fielding side can take control early and you're not setting an attacking tone. However, I still see the ability to let Root play the way that suits him best, which to me isn't happening now. And maybe Ben Foakes at 7 is a good foil for that, too.I don't think it will really work without it being a "team" philosophy. If you reduce it back down to individual players strengths and weaknesses, you give the fielding team exactly the same opportunity to retain control of the game as they always did.
That said, I don't think it'll last. And in 2 summers will just be remembered as an odd period of English cricketing history.
Losing, mostly.this approach could be better than whatever the **** it is they were doing before