GIMH
Norwood's on Fire
There was no Ashes tour of 06/07Yeah - how did that Ashes tour of 06/07 work out for Fred?
The three or four years where he averaged 40 with the bat and 27 with the ball probably justified his selection though.
There was no Ashes tour of 06/07Yeah - how did that Ashes tour of 06/07 work out for Fred?
nah but you see Mythical N. Six was averaging 41 with the bat and so clearly the 1 extra run per innings on average is worth more than an extra Test class bowler, increased pressure on the batsmen and increased intensity from the bowlers. i'm sure england would have won every test in that series if only for that 1 extra run.There was no Ashes tour of 06/07
The three or four years where he averaged 40 with the bat and 27 with the ball probably justified his selection though.
Apples and Oranges.Yea no you have no clue.
Ishant Sharma gives you 20 overs a day. Heck he'll give you 30. You'd actually pick him over a 15 over a day Mitchell Johnson. Insane.
WI, but they aren't a decent side. And honestly they'll probably end up doing it anyway once Holder's batting improves a bit more.And yea it's not 15 good 5 crap. It's 15 at 100% or 20 at 80%. And if you have a batsman who is a good enough bowler to hold up an end, only then will you play him over a slightly better batsman. That's why India haven't done it yet. They don't have any options. Every other team has adopted it.
BD FTR are loaded with allrounders. As are Zimbabwe. It is literally only India who stick to just 4 bowlers and it always backfires on them.
Ha. Love your work. The batting allrounder does not average 30-35 in your eyes, but 40 or over. And the next best batsmen only averages 41. Love it. Brilliant stuff. Totally a fair comparison and assessment. You have quite some objectivity here.nah but you see Mythical N. Six was averaging 41 with the bat and so clearly the 1 extra run per innings on average is worth more than an extra Test class bowler, increased pressure on the batsmen and increased intensity from the bowlers. i'm sure england would have won every test in that series if only for that 1 extra run.
You mean you shouldn't just select the best six batsmen in the country regardless of any other considerations, but make a judgement based on what each player brings to the side in order to maximise winning chances?Ha. Love your work. The batting allrounder does not average 30-35 in your eyes, but 40 or over. And the next best batsmen only averages 41. Love it. Brilliant stuff. Totally a fair comparison and assessment. You have quite some objectivity here.
not every bowler is capable of 100% at any timetbf Ishant Sharma is at 100% all the time too but yea....
Mitch Marsh is averaging 37 with the bat and 164 with the ball. Good luck with that.You mean you shouldn't just select the best six batsmen in the country regardless of any other considerations, but make a judgement based on what each player brings to the side in order to maximise winning chances?
What a shock! If only five different people hadn't said it about thirty times in the space of two hours...
not every bowler is capable of 100% at any time
No ****ing ****. No one is arguing otherwise.I would rather bowl to him and face his bowling than someone like Pattinson.
As you are more than well aware - there are no absolutes. Its a starting guideline. We all appreciate that the Australian batting line up is not as strong as it once was.Have you noticed that we don't have six batsmen averaging 45-50? If we did then I would absolutely pick six batsmen and try to eke out a few via Clarke and Smith. But we don't.
You select teams based on the actual flesh and blood players you have, not on theoretical players you would like to have and assume fit into this prefabricated team you have built already.
If you think Mitch Marsh isn't good enough to fill that role that's an entirely different matter and a perfectly reasonable thing to argue, plenty would agree. But this theory you're advancing is that you pick your six best pure batsmen come rain hail or shine, even if (for example) you have a marginally worse batsman who brings extra bowling to the side is insane. As is this new theory that you should pick that marginally worse batsman as a third seamer instead of your actual third seamer which never, ever works in practice.
No ****ing ****. No one is arguing otherwise.
Notice the lack of "should we pick Mitch Marsh or James Pattinson/Josh Hazlewood/Mitch Starc" debates as a result.
I mean that's a bit of a cop out given how the thread is clearly titled "AUSTRALIA, time to end the allrounder thing"4 best bowlers and 6 best batsmen. It works far more effectively in the long term over the full wide array of scenarios than bits and pieces cricketers.
With 4 front line bowlers, no team should need a batting allrounder to balance. There is something going wrong with the attack should the need for a batting all rounder arise.Well at least we're getting somewhere.
Not every attack needs a batting all-rounder to balance. But this attack, for reasons fairly unique to this attack (I don't think any other bowler in the world is used like Johnson is preferably used by Clarke, and is as reliant on fragile bowlers), a fifth bowler is really, really useful. Not mandatory. Useful. More useful than a slightly better batsman would be.