Arachnodouche
International Captain
Cowbelt TwitterHope you understand Hindi View attachment 39245View attachment 39246
Cowbelt TwitterHope you understand Hindi View attachment 39245View attachment 39246
WTF ? Didn’t expect this from you.Cowbelt Twitter
Cow urine states? That's better.WTF ? Didn’t expect this from you.
Aus won the test by bowling first last year .I know it's stating the obvious, but the 2-1 series score line once again supports the argument about the huge advantage of winning the toss in India (and of course batting). I recall OS in the past arguing this is some sort of myth but I've never seen any evidence to support this outside India still winning some games after losing the toss and batted second - but that's more of a function of how strong they are at home.
I stand to be corrected, but I'm assuming every Test win from an away team in India in the last decade or so has been achieved after they won the toss and batted.
Its a self defeating point tbh, as the toss advantage is usually nullified the most when you have tracks that turn consistently from day 1. And with the 9:30 AM winter starts to our tests, there is usually enough happening on day 1 with the moisture and overhead that bowlers (both pacers and spinners) get significant help off the pitch for the first session.I know it's stating the obvious, but the 2-1 series score line once again supports the argument about the huge advantage of winning the toss in India (and of course batting). I recall OS in the past arguing this is some sort of myth but I've never seen any evidence to support this outside India still winning some games after losing the toss and batted second - but that's more of a function of how strong they are at home.
I stand to be corrected, but I'm assuming every Test win from an away team in India in the last decade or so has been achieved after they won the toss and batted.
That's exactly what you expect from subpar people like himWTF ? Didn’t expect this from you.
Teams who can bat time after winning toss have an advantage. This eng team is not capable of batting for 130+ overs and grinding any strong team. In fact that's why they score quickly. Not an accusation or anything but this is how they maximize their output. Unfortunately it is dependent on the surface or the ball doing nothing and is not a great formula even on slightly hard conditions. Unless someone plays a great individual innings plus the opposition messing up.Aus won the test by bowling first last year .
Even England won Test series in 2012 by bowling first in both Test they won on that tour . I think there is enough correction for the day .
Of course some will never like it but I think a big part of the dislike is how up themselves England are about it. You could express practically all the same sentiments without sounding nearly as arrogant and hubristic but that's not McCullum's style. You can argue that they're boosting themselves with the bravado, but don't be surprised when people push back on the slightest perceived flaw despite the fact their results have been much better. It's annoying and gets responded to accordingly.There is a huge dislike for Bazball among traditionalists who do not want Test Cricket to be turned into a longer form of T20, I think a lot of critics do not care about the results Bazball have produced and will criticise it any given opportunity because they hate what it stands for. A lot of people believe that Bazball will eventually be used as justification to shorten Test Cricket from 5 days to 4 due to the high run rates. So in essence, the reason why Bazball is criticised isn't based on results (England have had a lot of success with it) but due to the fact that it never was or never will be accepted by some as the right way to play Test cricket.
You'd bloody well hope his career hadn't peaked at 21yo with only 7 games under his belt!Now I also feel the same. Hope he is good against short ball unlike KambliView attachment 39248
Kambli's had tbf.You'd bloody well hope his career hadn't peaked at 21yo with only 7 games under his belt!
- The test England won in this series, they won after conceding a near 200 run first innings lead. It'd be foolish to imply the toss had any role in their win because whatever advantage the toss gave them for batting first they completely squandered.I know it's stating the obvious, but the 2-1 series score line once again supports the argument about the huge advantage of winning the toss in India (and of course batting). I recall OS in the past arguing this is some sort of myth but I've never seen any evidence to support this outside India still winning some games after losing the toss and batted second - but that's more of a function of how strong they are at home.
I stand to be corrected, but I'm assuming every Test win from an away team in India in the last decade or so has been achieved after they won the toss and batted.
Yeah it does kind of *feel* like batting last is a lot harder than batting third but it doesn't really play out in results a lot. There aren't many Tests in India that make me think "gee they were lucky they won the toss there or the result would be different" at the end.- The test England won in this series, they won after conceding a near 200 run first innings lead. It'd be foolish to imply the toss had any role in their win because whatever advantage the toss gave them for batting first they completely squandered.
- Australia won a test last year after bowling first on a complete minefield of a pitch.
- The last team to win a series here was England in 2012 when they lost the toss and bowled first in both tests they won.
- The statistical evidence clearly points at there being no massive advantage. Post 2000, below are the match results for India winning and losing the toss at home:
Win toss : 33 wins, 7 losses, 14 draws
Lost toss : 35 wins, 8 losses, 15 draws
So yes. Still a myth.
It's because of the homogeneity as I said. There are pitches in non Asian countries than can either improve for batting or get worse for batting as the test match progresses. While this distribution exists in Asian pitches as well, it definitely skews more towards "bat first is a good idea".Yeah it does kind of *feel* like batting last is a lot harder than batting third but it doesn't really play out in results a lot. There aren't many Tests in India that make me think "gee they were lucky they won the toss there or the result would be different" at the end.
It definitely seems to be a team directive where mccullum has told them to act like alpha male dick-waving ***** as much as possible and follow some pre-defined set of guidelines for statements to the media which goes something like :Of course some will never like it but I think a big part of the dislike is how up themselves England are about it. You could express practically all the same sentiments without sounding nearly as arrogant and hubristic but that's not McCullum's style. You can argue that they're boosting themselves with the bravado, but don't be surprised when people push back on the slightest perceived flaw despite the fact their results have been much better. It's annoying and gets responded to accordingly.