Mister Wright said:
No. Watch Clarke against spin, he is a brilliant player of spin. He is definite with his foot work, he's forward and his back, which gives him wonderful postition to play shots against spin. With the quicks he is left stranded, the front foot doesn't come forward enough on most occasions and he gets caught, and often has to feel for the ball outside off stump. When the ball is pitched either full or short of a good length that is when he gets into a lot of trouble.
if his front foot came fully forward he would pull a hayden and have himself plumb lbw. its obvious that his half forward technique is working for him because only twice in his career hes got himself out lbw, and on one of those occasions he failed to read which way the ball was going.
as far as the feeling for the ball outside off stump is concerned, i dont see it being technical, i think he just needs to choose which ball he needs to play and which ball he needs to leave.
Mister Wright said:
It is a technical flaw when you play away from your body. Look at the best batsman to have ever played the game; Lara, Tendulkar, Waugh etc, they all played from their body. Even though Lara's backlift took his hands well away from his body, as the bat comes down he plays with an arc with his hands coming from his body when he plays a shot. It is something Clarke, Martyn, Langer & Gilchrist do a lot, play away fromt their body and it is their most common dismissal to the quicks. You rarely see batsman like Hayden & Ponting play away from their body, they usually get out snicking with poor shot selection rather than any technical flaws. That has more to do with temprement than technical weakness, which Clarke definitely has against the spinners.
are you serious?
steve waugh played from his body? ive seen waugh on plenty of occasions play without any footwork and away from his body(unless you mean mark waugh). you dont always have to have the best footwork, you just need to get yourself in a comfortable position to be able to play your shot. clarke's footwork might not be very good, but he still gets himself into a good enough position to be able to play his shots.
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Mister Wright said:
That's because he usually gets out nicking or bowled. However if he continues to play half-forward, half back we will see him out LBW more often..
will we really? i dont see it happening to be honest. the best way to play swing is to get your front pad out of the way and play it late both of which clarke has been far more adept at doing than anyone else including ponting in the australian side.
Mister Wright said:
More a case of the other batsman not being on top of their games and the bowlers being excellent than Clarke performing exceptionally well.
so what your saying is that by averaging nearly 40 against this 'excellent bowling', he still isnt ready for test cricket and should be dropped?
just analyse his dismissals all series:
Lords-failed to read an inswinger, lbw. 2nd inning score 91 before unluckily edging a ball onto his stumps
Edgbaston- out to giles 1st innings, played all around a slower ball yorker in the 2nd
OT- comes straight off the sick bed and doesnt pick a slower ball and hits it straight to flintoff, 2nd innings lets a searing reverse inswinger go onto his stumps
TB- 1st innings was the only instance of him being lbw to a ball coming in on the angle(which you've been indicating is his weakness), he had 36 on the board already.
2nd inning gets a perfect outswinger that he edges, again he had 56 on the board by then and had batted a very long time.
other than 1 occasion it appears as though every other instance was a case off poor temperament.