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Best England side of this century

Better England side ( this century)


  • Total voters
    41

sledger

Spanish_Vicente
I'm sorry but Trescothick, Strauss and Vaughan (even though he never really reached his best whilst captain) absolutely were top class batters.
 

subshakerz

Hall of Fame Member
I'm not saying the result is null and void, just that there is a giant asterisk next to it. It needs to be factored in when assessing Strauss' side.
You either accept the result or you don't.
It definitely reflect on Strauss' side. The entire lineup wasn't settled against spin in the series, not just Ajmal, even Rahman took 19 wickets in the series and outbowled Ajmal in the 2nd and 3rd test.

In fact, Ajmal never had a series like that against any other opposition at UAE.
 
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reyrey

U19 Captain
The pace bowling attack from 2004-06 were genuinely scary. Harmison, Flintoff, Jones backed up by Hoggard frightened a lot of batsmen from that era with their pace, bounce, awkwardness and heavy ball bowling. They weren't without skill either.

I'll give them the edge over the other 2 teams unless it's a spin friendly track. 2010-12 with Swann and Monty give that team the edge
 

subshakerz

Hall of Fame Member
The pace bowling attack from 2004-06 were genuinely scary. Harmison, Flintoff, Jones backed up by Hoggard frightened a lot of batsmen from that era with their pace, bounce, awkwardness and heavy ball bowling. They weren't without skill either.

I'll give them the edge over the other 2 teams unless it's a spin friendly track. 2010-12 with Swann and Monty give that team the edge
Totally agree. Problem here is posters are just reading off the team sheet and assume 2010 England have the better attack.

The Vaughn side's pace attack simply clicked so well at once and had variety. Their only handicap was not having a spinner of Swanns level.
 

howitzer

State Captain
The pace bowling attack from 2004-06 were genuinely scary. Harmison, Flintoff, Jones backed up by Hoggard frightened a lot of batsmen from that era with their pace, bounce, awkwardness and heavy ball bowling. They weren't without skill either.

I'll give them the edge over the other 2 teams unless it's a spin friendly track. 2010-12 with Swann and Monty give that team the edge
That feeling when your fourth seamer is better than Lillee.
 

Adders

Cricketer Of The Year
2 names set the Strauss side apart from Vaughan's.......Prior and Swann.

They were both orders of magnitude better than their predecessor's. Argue all you like over the quicks or batting line ups from the 2 sides but having a world class spinner and keeper/bat is a massive plus in favour of team Strauss.
 

Chubb

International Regular
I'm sorry but Trescothick, Strauss and Vaughan (even though he never really reached his best whilst captain) absolutely were top class batters.
I think you'll find Trescothick has a very low First Chance Average and was lucky, nothing more #Richard
 

Spark

Global Moderator
Yet even with the chucking Ajmal wasn't this unconquerable threat as other teams negotiated him and that didnt meant that England were somehow destined to lose, Ajmal wasn't even the only spinner winning games for Pakistan that series. England werent that settled against spin at that point.

All those runs and scores in that series count and frankly it was partly through that UAE series that the side improved in subsequent SC tours.
Other sides being also good at batting against shotput does not have bearing on whether England's batting was good at cricket.
 

reyrey

U19 Captain
2 names set the Strauss side apart from Vaughan's.......Prior and Swann.

They were both orders of magnitude better than their predecessor's. Argue all you like over the quicks or batting line ups from the 2 sides but having a world class spinner and keeper/bat is a massive plus in favour of team Strauss.
And Flintoff does the same for Vaughans side. He averaged 40 with the bat and 28 with the ball under Vaughans captaincy and frightened the bejesus out of an ATG batting line up. No one is Strauss's side comes close to that. Bresnan the allrounder and Broad the enforcer are certainly not cutting it.
 

subshakerz

Hall of Fame Member
And Flintoff does the same for Vaughans side. He averaged 40 with the bat and 28 with the ball under Vaughans captaincy and frightened the bejesus out of an ATG batting line up. No one is Strauss's side comes close to that. Bresnan the allrounder and Broad the enforcer are certainly not cutting it.
The 2010 pace attack is being overrated. Didnt have much outside that glorious 2010 Ashes when it all came together. Anderson was excellent but the others were hit and miss.
 

reyrey

U19 Captain
The 2010 pace attack is being overrated. Didnt have much outside that glorious 2010 Ashes when it all came together. Anderson was excellent but the others were hit and miss.
Yeah, Broad had some truly magical bowling spells back then, but a good number of times he was very average. That's partly the teams fault for trying to make him an "enforcer" and also his for often bowling too short.

Bresnan was average and just in the right place at the right time. Tremlett was excellent for a few games, but didn't play enough to count.

That team won a lot thanks to scorecard pressure not bowling excellence.
 

Adders

Cricketer Of The Year
And Flintoff does the same for Vaughans side. He averaged 40 with the bat and 28 with the ball under Vaughans captaincy and frightened the bejesus out of an ATG batting line up. No one is Strauss's side comes close to that. Bresnan the allrounder and Broad the enforcer are certainly not cutting it.
Each to their own but I strongly disagree......as much as I love big Fred and what he did in 2005 is the stuff of legend I'm not buying that at all.

I think this case of pace infatuation tbh......your not rating the latter attack because their not all bowling 90 mph.

The step down from Swann to Giles and Prior to Geraint ****ing Jones is massive. And when you've got a bloke called James Anderson in the Strauss side there is no way you can claim in gulf in quality in favour of the earlier team. It's rubbish.
 

subshakerz

Hall of Fame Member
Yeah, Broad had some truly magical bowling spells back then, but a good number of times he was very average. That's partly the teams fault for trying to make him an "enforcer" and also his for often bowling too short.

Bresnan was average and just in the right place at the right time. Tremlett was excellent for a few games, but didn't play enough to count.

That team won a lot thanks to scorecard pressure not bowling excellence.
I think that Strauss team would have been beaten quite handedly by the Ashes 2005 side at home. As has been pointed out, they weren't the mentally strongest unit and I think this is the key distinguishing factor between the two teams that are roughly comparable in terms of overall teamsheet quality.
 

subshakerz

Hall of Fame Member
Each to their own but I strongly disagree......as much as I love big Fred and what he did in 2005 is the stuff of legend I'm not buying that at all.

I think this case of pace infatuation tbh......your not rating the latter attack because their not all bowling 90 mph.

The step down from Swann to Giles and Prior to Geraint ****ing Jones is massive. And when you've got a bloke called James Anderson in the Strauss side there is no way you can claim in gulf in quality in favour of the earlier team. It's rubbish.
Man for man, the Pakistan team of the mid-late nineties is way ahead of the team of the mid-late 80s. Yet I think the latter team would bring in better results as they close enough in quality, were better captained and mentally stronger.
 

reyrey

U19 Captain
Each to their own but I strongly disagree......as much as I love big Fred and what he did in 2005 is the stuff of legend I'm not buying that at all.

I think this case of pace infatuation tbh......your not rating the latter attack because their not all bowling 90 mph.

The step down from Swann to Giles and Prior to Geraint ****ing Jones is massive. And when you've got a bloke called James Anderson in the Strauss side there is no way you can claim in gulf in quality in favour of the earlier team. It's rubbish.
How did the almost identical England team from 2010-12 minus Strauss do against extreme pace in Australia in 2013? It basically ended careers.

Pace in the 2004-06 team was just an xfactor. They had plenty of skill too especially when it came to the old ball and reverse swing. Hoggard was also plenty good enough with the new ball to keep a young Anderson out of the side. It was a very balanced pace attack .

2004/06 vs 2010/12 comes down to a strong pace attack vs a strong batting line up that was exposed by extreme pace. Only one winner there IMO
 
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Adders

Cricketer Of The Year
Meh, don't even know why or how I got involved in this debate.......its like deciding which of my kids I like more ffs.
 

Molehill

Cricketer Of The Year
And Flintoff does the same for Vaughans side. He averaged 40 with the bat and 28 with the ball under Vaughans captaincy and frightened the bejesus out of an ATG batting line up. No one is Strauss's side comes close to that. Bresnan the allrounder and Broad the enforcer are certainly not cutting it.
They didn't need an all rounder. Swann was so much better than Giles that he could hold up an end in any conditions and you only needed 3 seamers to rotate around him. It was more like a classis Aussie side with Warne or Lyon. Plus the fact he batted at 10 and was a better bat than Giles too.

In that period you had Broad 27, Swann 22, Bresnan 26 batting averages. It was like having 3 mini all rounders below 7 frontline batsmen. As a batting line up it pisses all over 2005 and as Adders says, Swann and Prior are just so far improved from their 2005 contemporaries it doesn't bare comparison.
 

kevinw

State Captain
Combined team of the three eras.....

Trescothick (04-06)
Cook (10-12)
Trott (10-12)
Root (22-24)
Pietersen (04-06)
Flintoff (04-06)
Stokes (22-24) (c)
Prior (10-12)
Swann (10-12)
Anderson (22-24)
Broad (22-24)

My feeling is that Anderson/Broad were better bowlers later into their careers rather than earlier but please prove me wrong (I suspect both peaked somewhere in the middle of those eras). Prior at eight is a nice luxury if Stokes/Flintoff both bowl.
 

Molehill

Cricketer Of The Year
Combined team of the three eras.....

Trescothick (04-06)
Cook (10-12)
Trott (10-12)
Root (22-24)
Pietersen (04-06)
Flintoff (04-06)
Stokes (22-24) (c)
Prior (10-12)
Swann (10-12)
Anderson (22-24)
Broad (22-24)

My feeling is that Anderson/Broad were better bowlers later into their careers rather than earlier but please prove me wrong (I suspect both peaked somewhere in the middle of those eras). Prior at eight is a nice luxury if Stokes/Flintoff both bowl.
A couple of things worth considering on that team. KP averaged slightly more during the 10-12 era than 05-06 (a reminder his debut was the Ashes), but it doesn't make much difference. But he wasn't involved in the Test success before that series.

The other player to consider is Bell who averaged 65 in the 10-12 period (12 more than KP).
 

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