tooextracool said:
who the hell are you talking about? geoff allott has never had a series before or after the wc where he had an ER of below 4.40 let alone a whole period.
No, but AFTER WC99 his OVERALL economy-rate was precisely what I said it was.
and it did, because his career ER was complete rubbish. and please the same person who says that oram can only bowl on seamer friendly wickets in ODIs and is therefore useless now says that good figures are good figures, whether or not the pitch is seamer friendly
Noticed how I've reassesed Oram, given that I've realised it's frankly impossible (especially with you around) to think along those lines?
no the point is that you make him out to be this great player based on 1 series on seamer friendly pitches, no matter how rubbish he was before. and as ive explained the fact that his test record was poor too would suggest that he hadnt improved as a bowler, simply benefited from seamer friendly wickets. we can only look at his record and say that he was rubbish, 1 series on seamer friendly wickets proves nothing, let alone putting him down as one of the great players of the decade.
Which I didn't - I just said he contributed (very sparely - given he only played a handful of games) to a great decade for bowling.
I make it out on this single series because it forms such a large part of his career.
why would it have had? he never showed any improvement in tests even before the injury. and he never looked like taking wickets in tests, even while he was destroying sides in ODIs. no allott was rubbish period.
Which says one thing - he was bowling better in one form than the other.
And either could have changed - or it could have remained the same.
We'll never know.
and will you stop looking at 1 series on seamer friendly wickets to make him out as a great bowler? look at any other ODI series or any other test series instead.
No, I'll not look at Tests, it's very simple in Tests - he wasn't any good.
I'll keep looking at 1 series in ODIs, yes - because it forms such a large part of his career.
yes which is what ive done with allott, ive removed the part where he had any amount of success and looked at the rest of it. hes been rubbish for all the rest of it and the pattern continues in both form of the game. hence he was never going to amount to anything.
And the part you've removed forms a damn sight more than you seem to think.
You can't remove 1\3rd of someone's career.
the same people on here who you've claimed know nothing about cricket? on several occasions when ive asked you to take a poll of how many people agree with your opinion, you've said that what other people on here think is irrelevant. hence if other people think that any random idiot that you like knows quite a bit, is also irrelevant.
I've said it where, precisely?
I've said other people's ideas about what is fact is irrelevant (so if you've said "let's have a poll on whether Ealham bowled at the death" I've said that's pointless), but I've never disregarded other people's opinions, especially where they have access to stuff I don't - like watching Australian domestic cricket.
maybe you should have seen him bat since then. if you are so shallow to think that someone is useless against spin based on 2 games against rubbish spinners from 5 years agol then you are the idiot that you've made yourself out to be. id much rather use a performance against murali in SL and kumble on a sydney turner to judge a players prowess against spin, than use a performance against salisbury.
Are you ever going to get this right?
One, how the hell does it help you even if Brown, Swann and Salisbury were useless? It just means he was even worse if he struggled against them.
Two, it wasn't 5 years ago - there were TWO instances, THREE years apart, in which
nothing had changed, in which he was clearly very uncomfortable against spin, in both 2000 and 2003. If I'd had the chance to watch him in 2003\04 I would have done - sadly I didn't. So the first chance I had to see that he'd improved against spin was the SCG Test. But I wasn't prepared to say someone had improved because of a single game, when he'd been poor against spin for a long time before that.
Now, however, I've seen enough evidence that he quite clearly has improved.