Get back in the oven.You are a dire poster.
Ask yourself if you would have written differently if Hughes was not dismissed? As an Aussie supporter I think they showed a lot more common sense and respect for the bowlers, but yes they did not rotate the strike enoughIt has been a sensible and disciplined effort from the Aussie openers in this morning session, just doesn't look right with Watson being ultra-cautious. For me there is a balance to be made between careful and correctly cautious and going too much the other way and losing some intent. Now people may say crickey these Aussies can't win they gift their wickets in Melbourne and get slammed, then play with more caution at Sydney and they still get criticised (only by me though!). I am not being too critical, I'm not suggesting Watson continues driving at everything in his half, but shows intent even by way of rotating the strike and running positively.
It has been difficult with the ball seaming around, so you'd think get yourself down the other end and just keep the board ticking. Almost came to a standstill coming up to lunch. They played much more sensibly especially early, but neglected the importance of roatating the strike and showing controlled intent, imo.
Am I being unfair ?
wtf?usman's khawaja looks more pakistani than usman, i'll give thierry henry that.
No, they batted really patiently, but you have to get the right balance between the 2, otherwise you create too much pressure for yourself especially when your facing every delivery in a over.It has been a sensible and disciplined effort from the Aussie openers in this morning session, just doesn't look right with Watson being ultra-cautious. For me there is a balance to be made between careful and correctly cautious and going too much the other way and losing some intent. Now people may say crickey these Aussies can't win they gift their wickets in Melbourne and get slammed, then play with more caution at Sydney and they still get criticised (only by me though!). I am not being too critical, I'm not suggesting Watson continues driving at everything in his half, but shows intent even by way of rotating the strike and running positively.
It has been difficult with the ball seaming around, so you'd think get yourself down the other end and just keep the board ticking. Almost came to a standstill coming up to lunch. They played much more sensibly especially early, but neglected the importance of roatating the strike and showing controlled intent, imo.
Am I being unfair ?
You are a dire poster.wtf?
Get back in the oven.You are a dire poster.
I was typing that out before Hughes was dismissed, it wasn't a knee-jerk reaction to Hughes nicking off. They certainly batted better than they did in Melbourne just got a little stuck for me this morning, and if Watson goes on to build a massive innings then fair play, but at this rate he'll need the first three days to get there!Ask yourself if you would have written differently if Hughes was not dismissed? As an Aussie supporter I think they showed a lot more common sense and respect for the bowlers, but yes they did not rotate the strike enough
I think you are being unfair. You hit the nail on the spot in the section i've highlighted. You've got to credit the bowling, they kept it really tight like they have all winter.It has been a sensible and disciplined effort from the Aussie openers in this morning session, just doesn't look right with Watson being ultra-cautious. For me there is a balance to be made between careful and correctly cautious and going too much the other way and losing some intent. Now people may say crickey these Aussies can't win they gift their wickets in Melbourne and get slammed, then play with more caution at Sydney and they still get criticised (only by me though!). I am not being too critical, I'm not suggesting Watson continues driving at everything in his half, but shows intent even by way of rotating the strike and running positively.
It has been difficult with the ball seaming around, so you'd think get yourself down the other end and just keep the board ticking. Almost came to a standstill coming up to lunch. They played much more sensibly especially early, but neglected the importance of roatating the strike and showing controlled intent, imo.
Am I being unfair ?
It's not just this Test with Watson though. He doesn't rotate the strike anywhere near enough. Credit to the bowling obviously as I said in my following post.I think you are being unfair. You hit the nail on the spot in the section i've highlighted. You've got to credit the bowling, they kept it really tight like they have all winter.
Add to that Watson't run-outs. He'll be on Australia's most wanted if he runs out Hughes again. And it's not easy to move seaming the ball into gaps for singles; there is a bit of a ring field because of Strauss' tactics. They would be slammed if they were trying to guide the ball with wristy shots and getting a leading edge.