Jord
U19 Vice-Captain
Let's see how good you are when you play in the subcontinent, didn't exactly go well for you against Pakistan last season.Maybe if you were good like us you wouldn't have to worry, lol.
Let's see how good you are when you play in the subcontinent, didn't exactly go well for you against Pakistan last season.Maybe if you were good like us you wouldn't have to worry, lol.
Guessing you didn't watch Williamson's innings and what the ball was doing then.Australia bowled in conditions that had something in it for the bowler. It was hardly unplayable as a batsman.
Pitch has been no where near as big a factor as the difference in quality between the sides has.
This. It's not going to mean that poor sides can beat great sides but it is going to mean that potentially evenly matched teams aren't incredibly disadvantaged through a series by a pitch that only does something in the first sesson, or a pitch that completely breaks apart for the final innings.While I do think Australia are deserving of their position, irrespective of the toss, I would advocate for a revamp of the toss system in the next few years. I don't think the element of the toss is sacred to the game and there is an opportunity to breed competitiveness when there is a severe and perhaps terminal dearth of it in Test Cricket at the moment. Would the Windies suddenly start winning series? No, it's the furthest thing from a fix-all solution, but the odd series where teams have a right to feel legitimately hard done by from unlucky tosses would be eliminated.
Well this is a first.Let's see how good you are when you play in the subcontinent, didn't exactly go well for you against Pakistan last season.
Australia haven't had to play on a bad batting wicket since ultimately the UAE, where they got beaten by Pakistan. Full credit to them if practically all of their middle order continue to average in the high seventies in those conditions.Well this is a first.
Someone from outside India using the infamous "We'll see when you come to India"
This pitch was psychologically green until Baz walked to the crease.
????????????????Australia haven't had to play on a bad batting wicket since ultimately the UAE, where they got beaten by Pakistan. Full credit to them if practically all of their middle order continue to average in the high seventies in those conditions.
I wish people would stop saying this when it is patently false. A freak accident is not predictable. It's for all intents and purposes, random. It's when you are driving a car along minding your own business and an elephant that escaped from the zoo falls off the overpass above and crushes your car. It's when a meteorite descends through the atmosphere and hits you in the head.The Hughes incident was a massive tragedy and I think changed cricket and protection for the better but do keep in mind that it was an absolute freak accident.
That's cricket. Hilarious of you to suggest Australia hasn't fallen apart on wickets which have something in them in recent times. They do it a lot. But if NZ wants to hang its hat on winning a toss on a greenish pitch in order to win a test match, they probably need to look at the quality of the cricket they're playing, rather than lamenting being on the wrong side of a 50:50 coin toss.We'll see how you feel when you end up on the wrong side of it in a two test series, you're lucky in the sense that Australia plays enough five test series that the coin toss isn't as impactful to you guys as it has been for the unluckier nations who only get two to three test series.
Denial really is uglyAustralia haven't had to play on a bad batting wicket since ultimately the UAE, where they got beaten by Pakistan. Full credit to them if practically all of their middle order continue to average in the high seventies in those conditions.
Video highlights: Australia bowled out for 60, England dominate day one | Sport | NewshubThat's cricket. Hilarious of you to suggest Australia hasn't fallen apart on wickets which have something in them in recent times. They do it a lot. But if NZ wants to hang its hat on winning a toss on a greenish pitch in order to win a test match, they probably need to look at the quality of the cricket they're playing, rather than lamenting being on the wrong side of a 50:50 coin toss.
Australia was also two for SFA in Wellington day one and then NZ dropped Smith and had the Voges set back. That's not the pitch's fault, that's poor cricket with regards to the catch and bad luck re the no ball. But hen Voges made 200 plus runs without NZ creating another chance from him. NZ has bowled more poorly than Australia for the most part through the series. That's been the difference here so far.
Sure, it was moving more then, than it was now, but NZ were clearly spooked by being sent in. The psychological effect of McCullum's innings cannot be underestimated IMO.
Someone didn't watch the first session, the ball was swinging in, pitching and seaming away. The ball was moving back half a metre from the seam by the time it reached a batsman. You're saying "Well Baz just showed that it wasn't green" because you probably didn't watch the start of the match.