Mr Mxyzptlk said:
And yet we've already resolved that MacGill could have done as poorly. Therefore at that stage (after 2 Tests), there was no way of saying that MacGill would have been the better option to go with. Yes, he deserved a chance to replace Gillespie, but there's an argument that so did Tait and practically any other bowler.
In hindsight, no, Tait isn't a better bowler. At the time I'd never seen him before and wasn't about to judge.
The options were Tait and Macgill by the 3rd test to be honest, certainly Gillespie didnt deserve to play the 3rd test match. Considering how many wickets the fast bowlers had taken for Australia as opposed to Warne and considering Englands history against leg spin and Macgill it should have been a no brainer IMO.
As far as you not seeing Tait is concerned, its rather irrelevant, because the Australian selectors had. Old trafford and Oval have both been known to help the spinners, yet Macgill wasnt picked. Also if we are to use what you said earlier about Ian Bell v Thorpe, who would you rather have? Someone who has test match experience and has bowled well in tests before or a relatively unknown debutant?
Mr Mxyzptlk said:
Anyone watching the Ashes would have seen that England certainly did not look fools against legspin as they have in the past. Rather, they looked quite competent for the most part (bar Bell).
If they looked quite competent then howcome they lost 20 wickets in 4 tests on absolute roads to warne?
Also Strauss was so poor against Warne for most of the series that he was nicknamed 'Daryll'. He was also only dismissed about 6 times by him in the series.
Id also be grateful to hear which one of Atherton, Trescothick, Hussain, Butcher(post 2001), Ramprakash(post 2001), Stewart, White, John Crawley and Michael Vaughan- our regular players on our last 2 Ashes series before 2005 looked like greater fools against leg spin than the side that played in 2005.
And please, no uneducated guesses like John Crawley who was arguably one of the best players of leg spin in the country.