Richard said:
Lara who was horribly out of touch at the time, and aside from his 400* did little of note; Chanderpaul who was so badly out of touch that he was dropped; Sarwan who's far from a proven Test-class batsman; and Gayle who's nothing of the sort either; Fleming who opened (a position for which he's not suited) most of the time?
No, I think not.
Oh, sorry, I was under the impression that in the year before England's first test in the West Indies, Lara averaged
72!
And in between the two series' between West Indies and England, Lara made a century in one of the only 2 innings that he batted in!
Sort of blows that theory way doesn't it?
Sehwag was due to bat as terribly as he did against us. Simple as. He's been doing far, far better than he deserves to have done for quite some time.
Tendulkar at the moment is categorically not one of the best batsmen in The World.
What d'you mean "I can't dismiss batsmen who are dropped"? You mean I can't say that Laxman and Ganguly's non-presence means India are weaker now than they were not so long ago? Sorry, pal - I can, and I have. And I'm right. Laxman and Ganguly were a potent force not long ago, and India are much lesser for their absence.
Sehwag was DUE to bat terribly against us? Who says? Richard? Who are you? Again, if you'd like to be embarassed again with statistics, let's do just that. Sehwag averaged
63 in the year before the First Test against England. I suppose that's a fluke?
When I say 'can't dismiss batsmen who are dropped' I mean that you cannot say how well these players would have done when they simply didn't play. If you want me to be pedantic, Laxman averaged 0 against England. Job done I'd say.
Yousuf certainly doesn't have a great record against any decent side. He'd done well in 1 series, in Pakistan, before now.
Younis not doing much was NOT down to good bowling, he just didn't play as well as he normally does.
Oh, oh oh, but Yousuf certainly does have a great record against England. He averages
59 against us! Wrong again.
And maybe Younis 'didn't play as well as he normally does' because he wasn't allowed to. Again, you're just reinforcing my point.
Err, Hayden's weakness isn't exactly hard to exploit - I've been pointing it out for the last 5 years.
LOLZ. You'd think Fletcher or someone from the ECB would have given you the call up back then in that case wouldn't you!?!?
Martyn and Gilchrist were due some failure. Gilchrist had averaged 107 in his last 8 Tests. That simply cannot go on forever. Martyn had averaged about 70 for a while - that, too, had to stop somewhere. Incidentally - with Gilchrist, he's carried on failing.
Ponting, of course, has been exceptionally lucky of late and that's made his average look better than it deserves to. Fact is, though, since the start of 2004, Ponting hasn't been anywhere near as good as he was in the preceding 18 months.
Haha. So it ISN'T surprising that Gilchrist averaged about 20 in the Ashes because he'd averaged 107 in his last 8 matches? Bizarre logic indeed. I'd think that meant that he was in FANTASTIC nick. Maybe not. Or maybe (
just maybe), the plans were laid down in the OD series, carried on in the Tests and Gilchrist lacked the talent/intelligence/nerve to change his tactics?
Yes, Ponting has been EXCEPTIONALLY lucky! One or two big knocks may signal a slight bit of fortune, but to average a whopping
76 in the last season is a big feat for someone, who I assume by your statement, couldn't even hit it off the cut square! Amazing really.
A good England attack, what? England by and large bowled rubbish in South Africa. Harmison and Giles got what they deserved, Flintoff and Jones were flattered by their figures, because SA didn't bat that well.
This is getting tiresome. Maybe they didn't bat that well because England bowled well? I realise that Harmison especially was poor on that tour, but England still managed to win comfortably.
Such convincing evidence as to why...
Haha, well it certainly seems that way doesn't it?