Oi!! If your names not Benchy you've got no business making fun at Jonos expense Max. Don't get ideas above your station son.This is all very nice but a 'real' cricket fan has to hate Jono or consider him irrelevant
My joke actually got Hurricane's endorsement (unless he was being ironic), so I think I'm pretty safe on that one tbfOi!! If your names not Benchy you've got no business making fun at Jonos expense Max. Don't get ideas above your station son.
Yeah but no one calls Jono a big babyGlad I'm not the only one who thinks jono's a ****.
Perhaps you're one of the pros Max?? Hurricane should give us a list so we all know who can or can't call Jono a ****??My joke actually got Hurricane's endorsement (unless he was being ironic), so I think I'm pretty safe on that one tbf
Yeah but no one calls Jono a big baby
I think this argument is neither here nor there personally. I've seen a lot of international stars look genuinely disappointed to lose meaningless domestic t20 and IPL, BBL matches. The adverse impact either victory or defeat on their emotional state is not something one should use in an argument to justify which format of cricket is more fulfilling and rewarding in general.
I did say no professional sportsman likes losing (not sure about Salman Butt ) and they do get disappointed even in the IPLs and BBLs as you rightly mention. I was talking about how they reacted. The only two times I've seen players get so emotional in recent years have been India after the 2011 WC and Australia after the recent Ashes win.Whilst I'm not trying to diminish Sangakkara or Jayawardenes reaction to the win, that emotion must be put into context with their retirements from this form. When you play your last game for your country as we've seen many times before it is a very emotional event win or lose. Of course I'm not denying that emotion wasn't vastly heightened by winning a WC final though.
Both you and Jono have adopted this line of argument "see how much it means to the players, so it must be important" And it's not really working for me. Go and watch any park cricket or football grand final and you will see the same sorts of celebrations after a win.......it doesn't matter what the level, format or contest, when you get a team of players heavily invested in it, it will mean everything to them...........that alone doesn't make it important or significant in the grand scheme of things.
I think you've pretty much got it right with your list of importance of events for Aus (Eng the same of course) and India (all sub cont sides the same with the exception of India/Pak test series) so we pretty much agree here anyway. But you can see wild celebrations in your lowest ranked contest, the jam ODI's.......check out Australia's celebrations after James Faulkners heroics in the ODI game in Brisbane this summer.
Just for the record I don't think that. I may not think that highly of T20 as a contest but I'm not that stuck in my ways or arrogant even to dismiss it like that. I really think this WC needs to be every 4 years though which would give it more importance and relevance.then how long are we going to say it doesn't count or it is a joke format?
Man that's actually a tough question. We have both agreed that the ODI WC comes next after the Ashes in importance for us, and considering England have never won a ODI WC that would be an incredible thing to achieve. But having said that winning in India I rate a bigger success than the 2010/11 Ashes win (FMD, both seem like another lifetime away now )Out of curiosity, would you swap the test series win in India for a WC(the proper one)? Why or why not?
Very funny Anushka.They celebrated harder after they won the game against us in the last over of that match in the Asia Cup than they did in the final. What do you have to say about that?
I don't think that's really true. The skills are different, sure, but they have to be deployed over a shorter time period and as so much less consistently in order to be successful. You must agree that it's far more likely for an upset to occur in T20 than Tests? I think that shows that skill between the best players and the average players is smaller.This might be surprising from someone many here might consider a Test/FC cricket snob, but I actually do disagree with that. It's doesn't require more skill; it just requires different skills - skills that are more admirable perhaps, and skills that are more applicable to the traditional ethos of cricket definitely, but not necessarily more.
The difference between the best and worst players in Test cricket is not really any bigger than the difference between the best and worst players in international T20 cricket for mine, indicating the amount of skill required is pretty similar. Some of the world's best Test players are terrible T20 players for no lack of trying to improve their games; it's just a matter of different demands for different games.
I don't think it shows that at all; I just think it shows the games are shorter. It's not harder to be a good Test player than it is to be a good T20 player. It's easier to fluke a good one-off performance in T20 cricket, but that's not quite the same thing. A Test is about the length of eleven T20 matches, so a fairer comparison in terms of "likelihood of upset" would be to see how often an underdog won an eleven-game T20 series as opposed to how often an underdog won a Test.I don't think that's really true. The skills are different, sure, but they have to be deployed over a shorter time period and as so much less consistently in order to be successful. You must agree that it's far more likely for an upset to occur in T20 than Tests? I think that shows that skill between the best players and the average players is smaller.
Michael Clarke, Che Pujara, VVS Laxman, Vernon Philander and James Anderson spring to mind immediately - world class Test players who aren't/weren't anywhere close to making their nation's T20 sides once the dust settled. Chris Rogers is not quite a world class batsman either, but he's the second best Test opener in Australia and can't get himself selected in an eight-team domestic T20 competition even when the limited overs international players aren't available for it and he's contracted to the worst side is the competition.As for the latter point - I'm struggling to think of any. Established Test players are often a bit less less effective in T20, and can get overlooked in favour of somewhat better suited (usually just younger) options, but is there really a Test player who was outright terrible in the format?
There's an argument that the compressed, random nature of T20 does make it easier to be a good T20 player, though - lower skill ceilings and all that.I don't think it shows that at all; I just think it shows the games are shorter. It's not harder to be a good Test player than it is to be a good T20 player. It's easier to fluke a good one-off performance in T20 cricket, but that's not quite the same thing. A Test is about the length of eleven T20 matches, so a fairer comparison in terms of "likelihood of upset" would be to see how often an underdog won an eleven-game T20 series as opposed to how often an underdog won a Test.
Oh, there's an argument? Well that's my mind changed.There's an argument that the compressed, random nature of T20 does make it easier to be a good T20 player, though - lower skill ceilings and all that.
How about you??, 4 ODI WC wins and only 1 recent Indian test series win.........does that change it for you??
It's easier to succeed on a one-off basis. I don't think it's easier to actually be a good player over any sort of sustained period though; over time we've seen the gap between the best and worst players in terms of average performance or frequency of outstanding performance be quite similar to that in Test cricket IMO.Prince Ews, if it's easier to fluke a good performance in T20 doesn't it logically follow that it is therefore easier to succeed in that format?