For all that I don't like Giles, I still admit he flights it.iamdavid said:He'll never just dart it in like some cough*Giles*cough left arm spinners do.
*didiamdavid said:"flight"
ahem
Throwing it up at 85 kph at the leg stump with 5 men on the onside dosent count , that is negative bowling , waiting for a mistake rather than trying to attack , that is what Giles does.
Nothing is sure in cricket, you should know that by now. IMO Sachin has got as good of a chance to take Warne apart again this time, Warne will have alot to prove after his return and the spotlight will be on him in spinner friendly conditions.Surely Warne can't go to pieces 3 series' out of 3?
I personally don't rate Lehmann as much of a bowler and I don't think the Indians will either. He is likely to get a few wickets but at a high-ish cost. I fully expect Lehmann to get the same treatment as Macgill got. As Macgill said "It's not as if they don't know what I'm bowling, it's just that they don't care!"IMO Australia don't have any specialist fingerspinners whose ability significantly outweighs Lehmann's. There is no point picking a specialist spinner if you have a batsman who can do almost as good a job.
Real shame people have to say that.Neil Pickup said:(Giles) Bowled much more positively this winter.
I don't dispute anything about this post except the most important part - he can't give it more of a rip than Giles, for instance, because unless he's got abnormally long fingers it's not physically possible.iamdavid said:IMO Xavier Doherty is the best finger spining prospect in Australia , he's not your average finger spinner (ie Hauritz).
Has decent control (well better than Casson at least) , his ability to flight the ball is superb , he makes it dip perfectly & gets some nice drift in to the right handers.
He gives it more of a rip than the usual finger spinner & the fact he bowls a little slower means he generally still gets some pretty nice turn.
What impresses me the most is the attitude , he's a fighter , he'll always be throwing it up & always looking to buy a wicket , he'll never just dart it in like some cough*Giles*cough left arm spinners do.
He's a superb thinker , has a lot of ability & is potentially a pretty handy bat.
Absolute rubbish in the feild , but Im a big fan & I reckon he'll play for Australia within 5 years.
Well, I just think laws of averages state that such a good bowler can't bowl as poorly as he has in the same country three times out of three. It would be too much of a coincidence.KishanTeli said:Nothing is sure in cricket, you should know that by now. IMO Sachin has got as good of a chance to take Warne apart again this time, Warne will have alot to prove after his return and the spotlight will be on him in spinner friendly conditions.
Lehmann is far more accurate than MacGill.I personally don't rate Lehmann as much of a bowler and I don't think the Indians will either. He is likely to get a few wickets but at a high-ish cost. I fully expect Lehmann to get the same treatment as Macgill got. As Macgill said "It's not as if they don't know what I'm bowling, it's just that they don't care!"
Very true IMO. I really don't rate MacGill. He bowles 5 dots, building pressure, and the bowls a 40 m.p.h. long hop outside leg. He takes wickets, but at a high cost.Richard said:Lehmann is far more accurate than MacGill.
All right, even on a Sri Lankan or Indian wicket he won't turn it like MacGill will in Australia, but a bit less turn and a lot more accuracy is a worthwhile exchange.
IMO Lehmann in Sri Lanka is a better bowler than MacGill anywhere. And this applies to many fingerspinners.
It is that Warne has bowled poorly, or Sachin has batted well? I would chose Sachin has batted well because as soon as Warne has come into the attack Sachin has gone after him and not let him settle, much how Sehwag did to Macgill.Well, I just think laws of averages state that such a good bowler can't bowl as poorly as he has in the same country three times out of three. It would be too much of a coincidence.
very true. put simply sachin has outplayed warne. if warne were to have come back last year and australia toured india the same year i would say warne would be odds-on to win. great bowlers don't have be outplayed without ever getting revenge. and with saching being horribly out of form i think warne would have hid him. but it's difficult. because i'd still rate sachin out of form as good. sachin currently is somewhat unstoppable however. warne will just be thankful his first tour is sri lanka and not india i guess.KishanTeli said:It is that Warne has bowled poorly, or Sachin has batted well? I would chose Sachin has batted well because as soon as Warne has come into the attack Sachin has gone after him and not let him settle, much how Sehwag did to Macgill.
Although I do agree that the laws of averages will prevail sooner or later, if this not this time then next time.
But the Indian batsmen are simply better players full stop though!Richard said:Hence you'd expect Sri Lankan batsmen to be slightly better players of spin than Indian ones.
With our brilliant attack of Johnson, Giles, Batty, Hoggard, Flintoff, etc.? :PNeil Pickup said:The long Sri Lankan tail that England frequently failed to bowl out? :P
Then I fear for world cricket :PNeil Pickup said:It's nonetheless one of the stronger ones in World Cricket.