Teja.
Global Moderator
Yes, that is a particular weakness. The current Indian batting line up sucks at batting time even on flatter tracks against good bowling away from home.And somehow this Indian team can't take advantage of dead pitches?
Yes, that is a particular weakness. The current Indian batting line up sucks at batting time even on flatter tracks against good bowling away from home.And somehow this Indian team can't take advantage of dead pitches?
lol firstly, all the ****ing time you doIt's weird to see people put a constant disclaimer that McGrath was not present in the 03 series. Obviously that was important but Sachin was injured with his tennis elbow issues and didn't play most of the 2004/05 India series as well yet you don't see people constantly specifying that it was a 'Sachin-less India' that Australia beat.
The fixation is a bit weird.
At least we won there the 2nd time with Lord Thakur and co to disabuse this notion for that series.It's weird to see people put a constant disclaimer that McGrath was not present whenever mentioning the 03 series. Obviously that was important but Sachin was injured with his tennis elbow issues and didn't play most of the 2004/05 India series as well yet you don't see people constantly specifying that it was a 'Sachin-less India' that Australia beat.
The fixation is a bit weird.
No. Flat conditions will only neutralize Indian bowlers who are so conditions dependent (just look at their poor record in home tests), but Indian batting is fully defined by their 30 averaging middle order bats (nvm that India beat a full strength Australia with those three batsman averaging in the 30's).And somehow this Indian team can't take advantage of dead pitches? That's my question to the rest tbh, not just you.
What batting lineup hasn't had bad games before? Waugh's Aussies got ran through by Agarkar, while Ponting's Aussies got choked out after Clarke's 6-9 and got beaten at Perth by Irfan Pathan and co. Doesn't suddenly mean we think they were bad. India's batting lineup also has changed quite a bit so I find it strange to feel this way about an Indian lineup that at home can consistently smash teams with big scores and make smaller scores look big.Yes, that is a particular weakness. The current Indian batting line up sucks at batting time even on flatter tracks against good bowling away from home.
Please be realistic. This middle order in current form is not competing with Australian ATG side in Australia.What batting lineup hasn't had bad games before? Waugh's Aussies got ran through by Agarkar, while Ponting's Aussies got choked out after Clarke's 6-9 and got beaten at Perth by Irfan Pathan and co. Doesn't suddenly mean we think they were bad. India's batting lineup also has changed quite a bit so I find it strange to feel this way about an Indian lineup that at home can consistently smash teams with big scores and make smaller scores look big.
When was the last time this actually happened with any consistency against a good team? 2018? 2019? That absolutely does not count as "the current team".I find it strange to feel this way about an Indian lineup that at home can consistently smash teams with big scores and make smaller scores look big.
Again, 2 years of Tests vs over 20 years of Tests for Waugh/Ponting. Kohli's India deserves much more time than that to be fair.Please be realistic. This middle order in current form is not competing with Australian ATG side in Australia.
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Again, Adelaide 2003/Perth 2008. And that Chennai Test we lost was the 2nd in 9 years going back to Dhoni. These are hardly points you want to make.When was the last time this actually happened with any consistency against a good team? 2018? 2019? That absolutely does not count as "the current team".
And, you know, the last Test India played on a batting-friendly pitch at home, it lost. To England.
And you're using that as a point in favour of Kohli's India? This is hilariousAgain, 2 years of Tests vs over 20 years of Tests for Waugh/Ponting. Kohli's India deserves much more time than that to be fair.
Wtf is this even meant to mean. Yes, Pujara and Rahane are definitely going to score double hundreds in Australia despite apparently no longer being deserving of a place in the XI because Dravid did so once.Again, Adelaide 2003/Perth 2008. And that Chennai Test we lost was the 2nd in 9 years going back to Dhoni. These are hardly points you want to make.
That's exactly why I brought up that Chennai Test though. Given the opportunity to make a big score they... didn't, and once again the lower order bailed them out. They're in legitimately poor form regardless of conditions. Pujara in particular, it doesn't really matter what the conditions are, the bloke can't get it off the square at the moment.The reason this middle order is currently not scoring big is because the pitches aren't flat at all -anywhere they have played recently, including India. In fact, they have been playing in bowler friendly conditions.
Give them the roads of yesteryears or the flat pitches from India South Africa series in 2019, you will see BIG scores from the Indian batsmen again, most of their averages for the year will be 50+, no doubt in my mind.
Check this out
South African cricket team in India in 2019–20 - Wikipedia
en.m.wikipedia.org
Late 2019 on flat pitches, the same team, posting totals of 502/7, 323/4, 601/5 & 497/9. This was against Philander, Rabada, Nortje and co.
Guess the bowling isn't actually as good as we thought thenThe reason this middle order is currently not scoring big is because the pitches aren't flat at all -anywhere they have played recently, including India. In fact, they have been playing in bowler friendly conditions.
Basically I feel you are conflating two different eras. The era in which our 3-5 were firing on all cylinders and we were scoring 700 for fun at home did not have our current pace attack or Ashwin being a crucial bowler away from home and we lost in England/SA.Again, 2 years of Tests vs over 20 years of Tests for Waugh/Ponting. Kohli's India deserves much more time than that to be fair.
I'm not the one hyperfocused on using 2 years alone to judge a batting lineup as bad and avoid doing the same for other lineups. Pick a set timeframe for both and do the comparisons fairlt, if India is worse they're worse by actual data, not some random wishful thinking.And you're using that as a point in favour of Kohli's India? This is hilarious
This isn't being done for the past sides you're comparimg them to though? @Chrish is also comparing eras not specific lineups with arbitrarily rigid definitions either. Our bowling lineup hasn't suddenly lost 3-4 years of good form just because you want to point out the GMOI are bad right now. Either you make things specific for both sides or you give credit for their past success with the bat while acknowledging that they are bad now.Wtf is this even meant to mean. Yes, Pujara and Rahane are definitely going to score double hundreds in Australia despite apparently no longer being deserving of a place in the XI because Dravid did so once.
You don't get to arbitrarily rope in as long as time period as you need to make your point, when talking about the current side we focus on the current players in their current form. Otherwise this will become a meaningless whack-a-mole game which can only end up being a hodgepodge mess of a team that never took the field in a real cricket game. If you want to point out how outstanding the current Indian pace bowling attack is, which fair it really is, then you also have to take how poor the middle order is. It's a package deal.