Evermind
International Debutant
You make your own luck just by being the best team, I suppose.
It's why teams like Chelski, Manure etc get all the disputed decisions going their way.
Never liked them (mostly cause of Schmeichel and Ferguson).
You make your own luck just by being the best team, I suppose.
It's why teams like Chelski, Manure etc get all the disputed decisions going their way.
All very nice in theory but when you're facing a team that is superior in every single department, you need them to play badly, or for you to play exceptionally well. And when the difference in ability is as massive as it is, you need luck. Having the right 'attitude' means squat when you can't back it up with ability.Look mate i agree with your views but still whatever has happened has happened and nothing can be done about that, everybody knows that the umpiring decisions robbed India big time but still you can't let your shoulders drop and you have keep your heads high and focus back on you game i know its not easy but a professional unit should be able to do that, and your point about no team being good enough to beat Australia might be a realistic one but if any team goes into a game with that sort of mindset then they have already lost the game.
Symmo was very very lucky today but then one can say he and Hogg had the right mindset even when their team was competly on the mat, they counter-attacked and rode their luck (to ridiculous proportions one might add) so having the right mindset is probably half the battle won!
I think only one person (widely regarded as a troll) did that.I don't mind people being upset with umpiring decisions, but I do find it annoying when that disappointment translates into accusing the umpires or the team of cheating,
Err, no one can deny that it had a very large part to play. 100+ runs for Symmo, 40+ for Ponting. The result might have been totally the opposite if big difference if Lee had come out to bat at 140/7 with no Symmo to keep him company at the other end.blaming the result of the day....on umpiring decisions,
Yeah, but don't you realise that it's all just wishing things were not the way they are. I mean, India has two choices: they can rue the decisions until the second coming, or they can try to apply themselves relentlessly and try to get back into the game. What are the chances that they'd have a success like the Australians did on the second day at the MCG, when they knew they had to bowl well or get walloped? Pretty good!All very nice in theory but when you're facing a team that is superior in every single department, you need them to play badly, or for you to play exceptionally well. And when the difference in ability is as massive as it is, you need luck. Having the right 'attitude' means squat when you can't back it up with ability.
I agree with most of it - I'd place most of the blame on the incompetent BCCI and lack of proper infastructure at the school level - except in the top private acadmies in big cities. If you count the people who actually have access to a real cricket ball and pads/helmet, I would bet that the cricket playing population is no bigger than Australia. I certainly never even saw a proper pair of cricket pads until I came to America of all places.
It's not about shrinking - though no doubt they could do a better job. It's about simply not having the ability to overcome setbacks against a vastly superior team.Yeah, but don't you realise that it's all just wishing things were not the way they are. I mean, India has two choices: they can rue the decisions until the second coming, or they can try to apply themselves relentlessly and try to get back into the game.
Yeah its not fair to say that umpires make made bad decisions intentionally because at the end of the day they are doing a performance oriented job and if their performance dips they would be out of their job, umpiring is one of most thankless jobs in international cricket you have to stand out their on the field throughout the day keeping your levels of concentration high and we talk about how the players suffer due to these packed schedules but hey... what about the umpires they are human beings too and considering that there aren't too many umpires in the elite panel of umpires so the same umpires are constantly travelling through the length and breadth of the globe to stand in different games which could really lead to serious physical and mental fatigue and the drastic fall in the standard of umpiring that we are seeing could be due to this very reason.It's generally accepted that Australia didn't get the rub of the green with umpiring decisions in the 2005 Ashes, for instance. There were plenty of complainers on this forum and elsewhere at the time, so it's not just Indian fans that take umpiring badly. Though honestly I don't remember any conspiracy theories about the umpires being cheats or anything in that series, at least not on this forum. It's still annoying when Australian fans blame umpires anyway, and a lot of the people who have minimal tolerance for complaints about umpiring in this series also found it annoying then.
I don't mind people being upset with umpiring decisions, but I do find it annoying when that disappointment translates into accusing the umpires or the team of cheating, blaming the result of the day/match/series entirely on umpiring decisions, or generally suggesting that Australia (or any other side for that matter) wins a lot because they "generally" get the better of umpiring decisions.
The last attitude in particular is very prevalent and very silly. TEC posted earlier in this thread that Australia "always get the rub of the green with umpiring decisions, injuries and everything else". Perhaps the reason Australia seems to be the luckier team is because they actually take advantage of breaks they get? As was mentioned earlier, Yuvraj got a major letoff at a key moment in the first test and got out next over. Symonds made an unbeaten century today. Australia are pretty good at staying motivated as well, and tend to stick through bad luck without just giving up, like India did in the evening session today. Luck happens, but if you are always getting the better side of 50/50 situations is generally because you're doing something better than the opposition. Maybe you're appealing better, maybe you just make minor breaks seem more significant by taking advantage of them, or minimise the damage of bad luck by sticking with the task at hand. And regarding injuries, training and general fitness obviously play a part, as well as squad depth.
Conspiracy theories were not waged during 2005 Ashes because it was two western nations going against each other. Suppose a third umpire who was Indian gave a wrong decision against Australia in India, I wouldn't be surprised if some Australian fans talked regarding conspiracies.It's generally accepted that Australia didn't get the rub of the green with umpiring decisions in the 2005 Ashes, for instance. There were plenty of complainers on this forum and elsewhere at the time, so it's not just Indian fans that take umpiring badly. Though honestly I don't remember any conspiracy theories about the umpires being cheats or anything in that series, at least not on this forum. It's still annoying when Australian fans blame umpires anyway, and a lot of the people who have minimal tolerance for complaints about umpiring in this series also found it annoying then.
I don't mind people being upset with umpiring decisions, but I do find it annoying when that disappointment translates into accusing the umpires or the team of cheating, blaming the result of the day/match/series entirely on umpiring decisions, or generally suggesting that Australia (or any other side for that matter) wins a lot because they "generally" get the better of umpiring decisions.
The last attitude in particular is very prevalent and very silly. TEC posted earlier in this thread that Australia "always get the rub of the green with umpiring decisions, injuries and everything else". Perhaps the reason Australia seems to be the luckier team is because they actually take advantage of breaks they get? As was mentioned earlier, Yuvraj got a major letoff at a key moment in the first test and got out next over. Symonds made an unbeaten century today. Australia are pretty good at staying motivated as well, and tend to stick through bad luck without just giving up, like India did in the evening session today. Luck happens, but if you are always getting the better side of 50/50 situations is generally because you're doing something better than the opposition. Maybe you're appealing better, maybe you just make minor breaks seem more significant by taking advantage of them, or minimise the damage of bad luck by sticking with the task at hand. And regarding injuries, training and general fitness obviously play a part, as well as squad depth.
Great postLook mate i agree with your views but still whatever has happened has happened and nothing can be done about that, everybody knows that the umpiring decisions robbed India big time but still you can't let your shoulders drop and you have keep your heads high and focus back on you game i know its not easy but a professional unit should be able to do that, and your point about no team being good enough to beat Australia might be a realistic one but if any team goes into a game with that sort of mindset then they have already lost the game.
Symmo was very very lucky today but then one can say he and Hogg had the right mindset even when their team was competly on the mat, they counter-attacked and rode their luck (to ridiculous proportions one might add) so having the right mindset is probably half the battle won!
The fact that they are massively more talented than anyone else might play a small part. I don't think its the Australian 'attitude' that makes them as good as they are. The behavior and never say die attitude is a result of their ability and success, not the other way around.The fact that Australia dont do the latter is why they're the world's best
I disagree. First of all, ability and success are not one and the same. Success comes from manifesting and harnessing ability consistently and repeatedly, under all circumstances, whether conducive or adverse. You have success because of a never-say-die attitude, not vice versa. And the reason teams like India don't is simply because they don't press their advantage and perform to the best of their ability.The fact that they are massively more talented than anyone else might play a small part. I don't think its the Australian 'attitude' that makes them as good as they are. The behavior and never say die attitude is a result of their ability and success, not the other way around.
But how do you think they started doing it? It's not a "benefit" - every advantage has been earned. They were pretty down about 20 years ago, and didn't have the luxury of having batsmen all the way down to #11. They've done it before, and at some point they had to start from scratch. No reason that another team can't do it either.In port, success breeds confidence - very rarely the other way around. Especially the type of success that Aussies have been used to. They are at the point now that they don't really care - they can see themselves winning from any position of weakness they may find themselves in because they've done it before. Most other teams don't have that benefit.
It's good that you're realistic about it. Because honestly, bad umpiring or not, 97% chance Australia would still win this game, because India would find a way to screw up.I admire the Aussie team big time. Umpiring was bad, but realistically speaking, India really aren't anywhere near Australia in any of the three departments and you can't win when you have that. So its not use to blame the umpiring, except to let out all the frustration (which is fair enough ).
They did by having talent and getting the right type of players. The reason other teams can't do it because they don't have the steady supply of exceptional players that the Aussie domestic system generates.But how do you think they started doing it? It's not a "benefit" - every advantage has been earned. They were pretty down about 20 years ago, and didn't have the luxury of having batsmen all the way down to #11. They've done it before, and at some point they had to start from scratch. No reason that another team can't do it either.
More like Australia would have found a way to win. Unless you think that everyone other team in the world except Australia simply screws up and Australia doesn't. It's more likely that Australia are just good enough to pull through more than the other team screwing enough.It's good that you're realistic about it. Because honestly, bad umpiring or not, 97% chance Australia would still win this game, because India would find a way to screw up.
I was actually referring to the current series when i made that statement, but i dont mind extending the injuries aspect to generalize that statement. Its pretty obvious IMO that some teams- England and NZ in particular(and now Pakistan) havent had the rub of the green in terms of injuries. You cannot just wash it away as plain 'fitness and training'. Simon Jones for example is known to have the best fitness regimen in all of England, yet he somehow manages to trip on a banana peel, pull a hamstring during practice and tear his knee ligament when sliding to save a boundary. Personally if you think that is down to plain 'fitness' then that is just delusion. Whether you like it or not, England have lost or had many of their players suffer seriously shortened careers as a result of injuries- Gough, Flintoff, Jones, White, and Atherton. Similarly, NZ well i cant think of one NZ fast bowler (successful or otherwise) who has had an injury-free career in the last decade. When you start losing once-in-a-lifetime players from injury then you know that you have problems. On the other hand, Watson aside I am having a hard time coming up with Australian names who have suffered adverse consequences from injury in the last decade. Surely its not just down to a better fitness program or better bowling actions.The last attitude in particular is very prevalent and very silly. TEC posted earlier in this thread that Australia "always get the rub of the green with umpiring decisions, injuries and everything else". Perhaps the reason Australia seems to be the luckier team is because they actually take advantage of breaks they get? As was mentioned earlier, Yuvraj got a major letoff at a key moment in the first test and got out next over. Symonds made an unbeaten century today. Australia are pretty good at staying motivated as well, and tend to stick through bad luck without just giving up, like India did in the evening session today. Luck happens, but if you are always getting the better side of 50/50 situations is generally because you're doing something better than the opposition. Maybe you're appealing better, maybe you just make minor breaks seem more significant by taking advantage of them, or minimise the damage of bad luck by sticking with the task at hand. And regarding injuries, training and general fitness obviously play a part, as well as squad depth.
Haha, remember using a similar argument myself against Richard years ago when he was having a moan about Sehwag and his first chance average and all that. I still feel it's a valid line of thought (though I must concede that Richard was right about Sehwag) and I agree with you here as well. Bad umpiring decisions **** me right off, especially the run of crap ones Sachin got last year whenever he got near a century, but it's definitely part of the game and for now you just have to roll with it. It works both ways, as mentioned, and we might well see Australia get a hoard of crap decisions in their first innings as well. **** happens, especially in Cricket, it's how you deal with it and fight back that counts, and unfortunately for India we're not capable of doing it very well at the moment.The last attitude in particular is very prevalent and very silly. TEC posted earlier in this thread that Australia "always get the rub of the green with umpiring decisions, injuries and everything else". Perhaps the reason Australia seems to be the luckier team is because they actually take advantage of breaks they get?
SS,They did by having talent and getting the right type of players. The reason other teams can't do it because they don't have the steady supply of exceptional players that the Aussie domestic system generates.
More like Australia would have found a way to win. Unless you think that everyone other team in the world except Australia simply screws up and Australia doesn't. It's more likely that Australia are just good enough to pull through more than the other team screwing enough.
I would say they would have had a 70% chance to win. It's hard to recover from a sub-200 score, but their bowlers are good enough to do it.
And the sporting scene in Australia is heads and shoulders above most developed countries - let alone a poor one like India.SS,
difference is in "expectations" and "self-belief"
Generally (notice I didnt say all), Australians believe that they have the "right" (as do the Kiwis) to compete at the highest level against anyone no matter what the odds or disparity in skill levels.
For example, people soon forget that Australia's team of paupers were robbed of the chance of taking the ultimate world champions Italy to a penalty shoot-out in the quarters of the last soccer world cup.
We outperformed any no.of countries with infinite budgets, talent and interest.
Why?
Because the players wanted it (and in spite of having ZERO ground root support), and as a result they achieved above their station
Well, I had forgotten that the burning desire for success in sport was unique to the Australian psyche.Australia has 20 million people, bugger all money but huge desire.
The number of people who have access to proper cricket equipment is probably the same in both countries. And I would be that the number of people who have access to proper coaching is likely higher in Australia.Our players perform or they get dropped
India has 1.2 billion, most of the money in world cricket and a comfort zone
Does any of the above excuse lack of fitness, technique, or desire? (BTW, very few 13 yos in Oz play against real cricket balls, available or not)And the sporting scene in Australia is heads and shoulders above most developed countries - let alone a poor one like India.
Well, I had forgotten that the burning desire for success in sport was unique to the Australian psyche.
The number of people who have access to proper cricket equipment is probably the same in both countries. And I would be that the number of people who have access to proper coaching is likely higher in Australia.
I had never seen a real cricket ball or a real cricket pad when I was growing up in India even though I played cricket every day (with a rubber ball) and being massively interested. Forget playing with them, I had never seen them. How many 13 year old kids in Australia would be in the same situation? Why do you think such a large percentage of Indian Test players have been from one city (Mumbai)?
Desire no. But then I'd dispute the notion that Australia simply want it more than everyone else. The other two: yes. It's not emphasized, though you would hope that by the time people get to the FC level or above, they'd have that sorted out. But the coaching even at FC level is oftentimes not up to par (that's the BCCI's problem).Does any of the above excuse lack of fitness, technique, or desire?