honestbharani
Whatever it takes!!!
looking forward it, Sir..My new feature Virender Sehwag - Redefining Test Batsmanship is an attempt to analyse Sehwag's batting. It may be up in a few days.
looking forward it, Sir..My new feature Virender Sehwag - Redefining Test Batsmanship is an attempt to analyse Sehwag's batting. It may be up in a few days.
That's why cricket needs more Akrams, Vaases, Reids and Brackens. Tight lengths, big inswingers and deadly accuracy, and we are missing them big time now.He cant play the incoming deliveries from a good length that well. It is obvious
85% will struggle. But the 15% who show the adability are the great batsmen.I had very little respect for Sehwag as a batsman in 2002 when people actually started talking about him.
It did not change until the 2004 series against Pakistan.
I have had this discussion countless times with a friend and both of us had reservations about him initially but gradually we have both come to regard him as a great test opener.
Yes has has some technical flaws, some serious ones, but I think his gift which is his fantastic hand eye co ordination far outweighs those flaws in most conditions and allows him to maintain an average of over 50.
Yes he will struggle under unfriendly conditions, when the ball is seaming around a little bit, but so will more than 85 % of today's batsmen.
When the ball starts seaming around laterally, I have seen Sangakkara, Jayawardene, Katich, Younis, Yousuf, Sehwag, Pieterson all struggle. And I think all of them average over 50 in test cricket.
So its not a big deal really, they are called unfriendly conditions for a reason :P
KP has not done well in the subcontinent.85% will struggle. But the 15% who show the adability are the great batsmen.
On Katich & KP, they have done well in bowler friendly conditions againts quality pace attacks.
Ha. Firsly not sure how you are equating runs in the sub-continent againts runs vs quality pace attacks.KP has not done well in the subcontinent.
KP batting againts Warne & Murali is second only Brian Lara, so you oughta chill son..cricinfo said:Malinga to Pietersen, OUT, what a peach ... a snorter than cuts back from short of a length, Pietersen jerks back in a bid to get out of the line, off his feet, and Daryl Harper decides that it flicked his glove on the way through. That was as close to unplayable as you can get.
85% will struggle. But the 15% who show the adability are the great batsmen.
On Katich & KP, they have done well in bowler friendly conditions againts quality pace attacks.
Batted better than his average suggested tbf in that series. Plus PAK beat us in 05 with pace & reverse swing rather than spin.He didn't do so well in Pakistan either as I remember it, but fair call on India last year
Well technically the Oval 06 test when Asif ducked KP. He scored a hot 96 in the second innings. Although you could argue, the pitch flattened out by then.Black_Warrior said:I have seen KP struggle in seaming conditions at home, against Asif, against SA. Not to say he cant score in them, he plays test matches he will probably score a century.
Katich had his struggles indeed vs AUS in 05 Ashes. But since he has returned he has scored runs in ENG & SA againts the moving ball, so he also is safe.Black_Warrior said:Same with Katich.
True. But how small the 15/10/20 % is those few guys who have showed adaptability in this 2000s era to score tough runs againts top attacks in difficult conditons - rather not when the pitch is flat. For eg Ponting, Dravid, Sangakkara, KP, Hayden, Kallis, Chanderpaul, Langer etc etc...they are the very good/excellent/great batsmen.Black_Warrior said:But if you are only going to consider the top 15% as the greats, then thats fair enough but its a very high standard and many of today's greats, averaging over 50 will struggle to make it to that list, including the names I mentioned.
Runs against quality spin value less than tha of quality pace?Ha. Firsly not sure how you are equating runs in the sub-continent againts runs vs quality pace attacks.
He was worked over by Lankans, because he have stirred them up with his sledging. Spinners spun that little bit more and pacers were that 3-4k faster at him. It was a massive flop becuase his technique was opened up like a can by Vaas, Malinga and particularly Murali. All five dismissals barring one against Malinga, was due to poor technique and Vaas and Murali exploiting it.But Indeed. Averaging 40 in IND is pretty poor. You probably where in mars when scored that brillaint 144 last winter as well.
His failure in SRI 07/08 was nothing more than ablimp. He got some fantastic deleveries rather than any struggles technically or anything. Especially a ball Malinga got him with in the final test:
Probably you have not seen Sidhu, Azhar, Ganguly, Ranatunga play these guys.KP batting againts Warne & Murali is second only Brian Lara, so you oughta chill son..
No. Although runs againts a qualtiy pace attack i.e (McGrath/Gillespie/Kasper on seamer is slightly harder than vs Kumble/Harbhajan on a Mumbai turner.Runs against quality spin value less than tha of quality pace?.
The sledging is true. But i disagree that KP was exposed technically, his technique is perfect per se. But the only problems he ever has is mental (thats why the sledging sort of worked, why Yubraj got him LBW a few times in IND last winter & why he keeps holding out stupidly to joke spinenrs like Harris). KP got out to good balls in that series almost all the time.He was worked over by Lankans, because he have stirred them up with his sledging. Spinners spun that little bit more and pacers were that 3-4k faster at him. It was a massive flop becuase his technique was opened up like a can by Vaas, Malinga and particularly Murali. All five dismissals barring one against Malinga, was due to poor technique and Vaas and Murali exploiting it.
Have seen Sidhu & Azhar play Warne - not Murali. The domination is comparable indeed. But hey smoked hollywood in 98 given as the Warne/Murali debate goes, since he was the a one-man attack then (no McGrath, Fleming, Gillespie). In those conditions he could not contain those batsmen.Probably you have not seen Sidhu, Azhar, Ganguly, Ranatunga play these guys.
You are going to have to rephrase that. I missed your point!True. But how small the 15/10/20 % is those few guys who have showed adaptability in this 2000s era to score tough runs againts top attacks in difficult conditons - rather not when the pitch is flat. For eg Ponting, Dravid, Sangakkara, KP, Hayden, Kallis, Chanderpaul, Langer etc etc...they are the very good/excellent/great batsmen.
Indian bowling attack is among the best at home, especially the spinners.Ha. Firsly not sure how you are equating runs in the sub-continent againts runs vs quality pace attacks.
But Indeed. Averaging 40 in IND is pretty poor. You probably where in mars when scored that brillaint 144 last winter as well.
His failure in SRI 07/08 was nothing more than ablimp. He got some fantastic deleveries rather than any struggles technically or anything. Especially a ball Malinga got him with in the final test:
KP batting againts Warne & Murali is second only Brian Lara, so you oughta chill son..
Broadly speaking in terms of historical tradition, Pakistan is not equable with India and Sri Lanka. Traditionally the latter two are spin-havens; traditionally Pakistani decks offer nothing to bowlers of any kind and success there depends on swing (far more often the reverse than conventional variety).Subcontinent is not just about India mate. You are fooling yourselves. Look at his performances in Pakistan and Sri Lanka as well.
Yeah, think it was started about a year before this thread. And I'm sure those with long memories remember the Afridi version as well.C_C had a similar thread as well a while back, I think.
I think you have generalised it a bit. The tracks in north India like Mohali (of the 90s) and Kolkota (again early ones) except Delhi did resemble the pitches in Pakistan. It is just that India did not have the bowlers to utilise them. You may also check the number of Pakistani batsmen who have done well in india and vice versa and this is mainly because of the easiness of adaptability in the two countries.Broadly speaking in terms of historical tradition, Pakistan is not equable with India and Sri Lanka. Traditionally the latter two are spin-havens; traditionally Pakistani decks offer nothing to bowlers of any kind and success there depends on swing (far more often the reverse than conventional variety).
Of course of late the Indian deck that turns properly has been a rare thing, and decks in India have tended to conform more to the Pakistani tradition than their own.