aussie said:
Well think about this then both India has the biggest turners in the world & the two greatest spinners of all-time Shane Warne & Muttiah Muralitharan when they were in top form & had the best backup in support, i.e:
Warne had the best seam attack to with in India in his career in 2004
Muralitharan had his old champion Vaas in 2005
Yet they both averaged over 30, note i'm not comparing MacGill to them all i'm saying is that even though the pitch is a turner averaging 29 isn't a bad effort especially looking at the fact that he took wickets.
And yet... how many real turners have Murali and Warne ever faced India on?
In any case... the Indian batting-line-up the two of them faced in 2004\05 and 2005\06 was a shadow of the brilliant ones of the 1990s and early 2000s.
Certainly there have been times when Murali and Warne have taken wickets - plenty of them - against India. Indeed, Murali's recent record against India is very good (last 6 games has 39 wickets at 24.10).
Warne in his career has had 10 poor games against India and 4 good ones... 2 of those were when he was poor against anyone (1991\92); the next 3 were when he had weight and shoulder problems; 1 (The SCG 1999\2000) was where not a single authentic wicket fell to a spinner in the entire game; 2 more of those were in 2000\01 where he was totally off-the-boil (IIRR had just returned from injury again).
I've always thought Warne's problems against India have been somewhat exaggerated.
Ha, now how the hell did you come to the conclusion after what i stated that MacGill bowled rubbish that entire game & then took a few tailend wickets?
Taking no wickets; because Aus won the game someone had to find some praise for him so said "he supported Warne well", then got a tailender or two.
I mentioned before thats how MacGill bowls, if he doesn't get top order wickets he is very effective at cleaning up the tail. When he isn't e.g India 2003/04, WI 2003 1st, 2nd, 4th test he doesn't even do that.
MacGill certainly troubled the top order of the World XI batsmen, the delivery that got Inzi stumped was beauty of a leg-break.
That's as maybe, but it was still a huge error and no authentic top-order wickets were taken by him in the match.
A bowler who's only really that useful for cleaning-up the tail, incidentally, isn't much use in Tests.
They would play their strokes yea , but they aren't batsmen who can take it to oppositon bowlers even at their best. South Africa in every series i can remember dating back to the unofficial world championship series in 2001/02 season have always batted like that. Againts all the major test playing nations in most conditions except ZIM & BAN they play like that unless the opposition bowl trash
like pakistan did here or what England bowled on occassions in 2003, when they bat they are generally a defensive in their approach.
As I say - in the current age that's not true of anyone any more.
If Smith, de Villiers, Gibbs, Prince, Boucher, Pollock or anyone else who happens to be picked score runs, they score them at more than 50-per-100. At least.
Thats true but even againts poor attacks on flat patches South still bat that way. In the West Indies last year they batted like that.
I hardly think so - those pitches were mostly incredibly slow (Antigua excepted, obviously) and and made quick scoring very, very hard (and in the First Test they were only batting for a draw, so you'd expect slow scoring).