It's like a brick wall. You don't think tactics played a part in South Africa beating Australia in the match where Australia got rolled for 47 all out, despite Australia having set a credible 236 to win on a pitch that had seen the South Africans bundled out for 96 previously. That they did it with 3 down would indicate that they weren't particularly challenged in the field. You want me to assume that having Johnson charge in and be a demon unlike any bowler since probably Spofforth in cleaning up the Englishmen in a series was down to Clarke being a tactical genius because he only bowled Johnson 4 overs at a time.
This is why I don't think you watched that game. Australia were completely demoralised by 47ao, and it showed in the field (I think there were at least two, maybe three straightforward catches dropped). Tactics can only help if they're actually applied. Also, that Day 3 wicket was significantly less challenging than on Day 2, as the sun had baked out all the moisture in the surface and the weather had dramatically improved. Again, well known if you actually
watched that game.
You want me to assume that having Johnson charge in and be a demon unlike any bowler since probably Spofforth in cleaning up the Englishmen in a series was down to Clarke being a tactical genius because he only bowled Johnson 4 overs at a time.
No one is saying this, holy ****. Quit with this patently dishonest assertion, when
you were the one who claimed in the first place that Clarke deserved
no credit at all.
A lot of people seem to rate his tactics, I've argued his tactics weren't great in comparison to some of his contempories and definitely not on a wider scale of great captains in Cricket. For every "He threw the ball to Lyon and got a wicket", there seems to be a "South Africa doddled to victory against him on a challenging wicket"
You have a vastly warped understanding of tactics if you think they guarantee you a win every single time. Tactics can help you squeeze out an extra wicket here and there, and can restrict the run rate somewhat, give the bowling some direction. It does ****all if your bowlers suck, or can't follow your plans, or the opposition batsmen are good enough to counteract, or—most of all—your batting is too **** to give you a defendable score.
Again, I don't know if he counts as a great captain, because captaincy is much more than tactics. But he was
tactically superior to every other captain in modern cricket when it came to his specialty: shutting down batting sides on fast-scoring pitches.