At what point do you get shifty at Finn Allen? If he reigned it in 10% (after getting through power play, and then losing Kane) would we be looking 230/4 rather than 190?
I don't profess to bea t20 batting tactics expert. It's just elevator music to me. But I assume someone has data on that sort of stuff.
Is it normal in t20 to reign it back a bit if u get thru powerplay? Like a modern N Astle? Or does everyone keep thrashing relentlessly regardless? (And data/analysis backs that as a correct approach?).
Just seems impossible, to me, for 2 set batsmen to NOT get 2 boundaries an over at Sneddon Park without much risk. Surely you 'earn the right' to then just astle it for 10 overs.
Reward doesn't come without risk in any aspect of life, no question. But to me, Finn's development will come through playing the percentages much better, and being smarter about the way he uses his talents. He's been bowled 11 times in 37 innings. That's three less than Kane from 87 innings, or to compare closer apples with apples, Gup has 17 from 118 innings.
In Finn's last 19 T20I innings, he's been bowled 8 times, lbw another two, and was bowled off a no ball in another.
I actually didn't have any issue with him continuing to play the same way through the middle orders. That's his job, it's a small enough ground, Pakistan's line-up is hittable enough that we were set up for 220 or so with him batting that way. But the shot he played to get out was poor. If you sky one charging, trying to hit in your zone, no issue. If you splice one hooking, OK, as long as it's a shot you play well and is lucrative for you. Sometimes you'll scratch one behind trying to cut. But to miss straight ones, as he did here, off the no ball at Eden Park, that's holding him back from being a more effective run scorer. He needs the foundation of a decent defensive technique, and the judgement of when to use it, to go to the next level.
I actually think he doesn't watch the ball hard enough. Seems to be done by changes of pace, like he was really undone by the (admittedly outstanding and unseen before) slower ball at Eden Park, and Usama bowled one 10km quicker he didn't pick up on. I remember an ex-player saying that some batsmen watch the area around the ball, but the greats watch the ball, the seam, much more intently and can react to it better as a result.