• Welcome to the Cricket Web forums, one of the biggest forums in the world dedicated to cricket.

    You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join the Cricket Web community today!

    If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

*Official* First Test at the Gabba

Furball

Evil Scotsman
If any Australian quick is under pressure, surely it has to be Hilfenhaus? Has been rubbish this Test, and doesn't have anywhere near the credit in the bank that Johnson has.
 

Spark

Global Moderator
I like how Hilf is bowling right now. Just aim for that crack every ball, and let the pitch make the odd one do something strange.
 

Sam Handwich

School Boy/Girl Cricketer
Is this speed gun right and this is the bowlers genuine pace or is it wonky? I remember Johnson consistently being at 90mph anytime I've seen him.
 

Blocky

Banned
Pace does strange things to batsmen. No-one likes facing 90mph plus missiles aimed at their throat region, or crushing into their toes. Some guys pace probably has been over-rated in the past, but bowlers such as Holding, Croft, Roberts and a number of other WI bowlers. Jeff Thompson, Allan Donald, Waqar, and plenty of others were real quicks. Even Shaun Tait, but only in two over bursts.
Those guys are still around - just so happens that most of them are more Heath Davis than Allan Donald, i.e, they've got the pace but they're so loose with it and such scatter guns that they can't reliably do a job for you, or in Shaun Tait's instance, so incredibly prone to injury that 2 over spells is all you get

It also doesn't help today that cricketers do play a lot more than they ever have and can be prone to injuries through that, i.e Shane Bond, Brett Lee, Shoaib Akhtar, Shaun Tait, Peter Siddle, Dale Steyn himself, Simon Jones, Andrew Flintoff.

Bowling fast today generally means missing 1 out of every 3 games while you're available and only playing half as long as your compatriots.
 

Blocky

Banned
Time to feed Mitchell Johnson a wicket or potentially make his bowling look more threatening if you're in the England side? Surely you want this guy playing against you in the next match
 

GotSpin

Hall of Fame Member
Those guys are still around - just so happens that most of them are more Heath Davis than Allan Donald, i.e, they've got the pace but they're so loose with it and such scatter guns that they can't reliably do a job for you, or in Shaun Tait's instance, so incredibly prone to injury that 2 over spells is all you get

It also doesn't help today that cricketers do play a lot more than they ever have and can be prone to injuries through that, i.e Shane Bond, Brett Lee, Shoaib Akhtar, Shaun Tait, Peter Siddle, Dale Steyn himself, Simon Jones, Andrew Flintoff.

Bowling fast today generally means missing 1 out of every 3 games while you're available and only playing half as long as your compatriots.
Bet you pace bowlers in the past played just as much and didn't break nearly as often. Bowlers spend too much time doing weights, too much time with media commitments and not enough time simply bowling
 

Somerset

Cricketer Of The Year
No. Would be ridiculously generous. Why risk going 1-0 behind in a 5 match series?

Ideally, bat all day, giving your bowling attack a rest with the Test in Adelaide starting on Friday. Australia would have been in the field for 2 days, hardly ideal with the 2nd Test starting in 4 days on a pitch that will be a complete featherbed.
That'd be my approach too - I'd imagine England'll only feel safe when they're 250 ahead and I don't think that'll happen until midway through the second session. IMO that gives them nowhere near enough time to bowl Australia out, especially given how easily the batting has become on this pitch; so might as well tire Australia's bowlers out and really test their spirits by batting all day.
 

Blocky

Banned
Bet you pace bowlers in the past played just as much and didn't break nearly as often. Bowlers spend too much time doing weights, too much time with media commitments and not enough time simply bowling
Different style of play in the past, the only guys who got near that amount of play were those playing County + Home Domestic + International like Richard Hadlee. In his case, he admitted to tapering off and picking his matches at domestic and county level but I also agree with your point, bowlers these days do everything possible to avoid bowling in practice, they'll do weights, running and simulation instead of just grabbing a ball and bowling.

Hadlee said he'd bowl between 36 and 120 balls a day, every day, even in the off season when he wasn't playing a game. He'd do it between 75 and 95 % intensity also, rather than just roll his arm over.
 

Blocky

Banned
Another four of them. A third man or a floating slip perhaps?
Ponting never employs this type of tactic, in my view when you've got a guy like Siddle who does get thick edges quite often, you'd do well to have a third man or fly slip in place because chances are you'll get a chance there and if not, you'll cut down possibly up to 100 runs.
 

Furball

Evil Scotsman
That'd be my approach too - I'd imagine England'll only feel safe when they're 250 ahead and I don't think that'll happen until midway through the second session. IMO that gives them nowhere near enough time to bowl Australia out, especially given how easily the batting has become on this pitch; so might as well tire Australia's bowlers out and really test their spirits by batting all day.
The pitch looks like it could be dangerous, the Australian bowlers are just bowling absolute rubbish.

The only way I can see England setting a target that looks reasonably safe whilst potentially giving themselves enough time to bowl Australia out is by smashing 160 runs in the next hour. 300 lead, 60 overs to bowl out Australia - however, given that would be almost impossible, there's absolutely no value in any declaration from an England POV.
 

Top