wellAlbidarned
International Coach
feels like Haze is starting to fall away a bit in his action
It's also the kind of batsmen that are at the crease, Pujara literally has refused to go after anything other than bad balls, which there haven't been much of, and Saha is also not the most aggressive batsmen.It looks impossible to get wickets on this track right now. Or make runs. Or do anything really. Not a great advert for exciting cricket, but variety is the spice of Test cricket and all that...
Dunno, I think both are possible, just Australia have been tight and these two have batted well.It looks impossible to get wickets on this track right now. Or make runs. Or do anything really. Not a great advert for exciting cricket, but variety is the spice of Test cricket and all that...
Nothing else seems to be working.Whats the point of bowling short balls on the leg side to a well set batsman who will just leave most of them?
Was always going to happen on a flat track. He didn't bowl Maxi in the ODIs recently.Smith really bowling his frontline 4 into the ground. Only two overs from Maxi seems crazy given the selectors obsession with an allrounder at 6 and the length of this current innings.
Aussies are playing for a draw at this point imo.Whats the point of bowling short balls on the leg side to a well set batsman who will just leave most of them?
I think the idea is to ask India to make the running, hope they make a mistake, try to put on 250 or so and then hope for something mad on the 5th afternoon.Yea Aus seem content just drying up runs here and taking time out of the game, which is weird. Have they settled for the draw already?
They may have assessed the deck as not likely to break up. It seems to be as flat as day two so far. Their primary method has been to keep things tight all series. If they tried to over attack here and it doesn't work, they'll be in deficit really quickly.Yea Aus seem content just drying up runs here and taking time out of the game, which is weird. Have they settled for the draw already?