Prince EWS
Global Moderator
Ahh, didn't know that. Fair play.Lol a couple of people beat you to it by nine days
Ahh, didn't know that. Fair play.Lol a couple of people beat you to it by nine days
Aha. Well, my excuse is that this thread is moving so fast I can't be looking at these pesky edits and I'm sticking to it.Hence my edit - made before you pointed it out.
Was referring to Hauritz playing a test match, not his selection for ODIs. EDIT: Which I realise doesn't make sense because selecting someone with an international ODI cap to their name for a test is not really "plucking them from obscurity", even if it seemed an unlikely thing to occur.
Reckon Miller was a pretty remarkable case, especially as he did so well once he got in and became a huge cult figure - completing the rags to riches story.
McGain was slightly undervalued, and just in the wrong place in the right time. I think for a bit he'd been written off as a guy who was always going to be a very good district player, but didn't have the tools for FC cricket. This is bowling every week on first day pitches though, and he's deceiving at times. His action looks so simple that you think he won't be doing that much with the ball. He knows his game inside out, and I'd be very confident of an honest performance from him if he were to be picked out of nowhere. However, they have to go with Hogg.
Isn't Ishant Sharma supposed to be 6'4"? ,ie a little over 1.9m. If he matures (ie not on this tour) and stays fit, he could fix that.http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/story/0,22606,22889037-5006372,00.html
Yea, can't disagree from an Aussie point of view. As an Indian supporter, I would be downright giddy if the surface was slow, low and offered turn. I would actually say that you shouldn't really prepare pitches that offer sideways movement, but more bounce and pace. Indian batsmen of late have been decent at the sideway movement stuff (see England tour), but they struggle a lot if someone is bowling 90+mph balls that go past their noses (see how much they struggled with Tremmlet with his height, even if he wasn't express). Obviously both sideways and up and down might be ideal, but Indian bowlers can utilize the swing pretty well these days....but we lack the really tall bowlers, or the really fast bowlers.
exactly, sideways movement would mean nothing... India have some bowlers that can exploit that really well and no batsmen likes sideways movement...http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/story/0,22606,22889037-5006372,00.html
Yea, can't disagree from an Aussie point of view. As an Indian supporter, I would be downright giddy if the surface was slow, low and offered turn. I would actually say that you shouldn't really prepare pitches that offer sideways movement, but more bounce and pace. Indian batsmen of late have been decent at the sideway movement stuff (see England tour), but they struggle a lot if someone is bowling 90+mph balls that go past their noses (see how much they struggled with Tremmlet with his height, even if he wasn't express). Obviously both sideways and up and down might be ideal, but Indian bowlers can utilize the swing pretty well these days....but we lack the really tall bowlers, or the really fast bowlers.
Yeah Ishant is 6"4. Pankaj Singh who's another upcoming paceman is 6"6. They'd have to be among the tallest pacemen produced by India.Isn't Ishant Sharma supposed to be 6'4"? ,ie a little over 1.9m. If he matures (ie not on this tour) and stays fit, he could fix that.
good work.Don't know what all the fuss concerning the 4th bowler is about.....
It should be a straight swap, McGain for McGill. Gain a lot, lose the fish.
I am pretty sure it's an unwritten Australian selection policy that they must select a Macca in our attack. If it ain't MacGill, it's McGrath or it's McDermott and even McIntyre. Hopefully McDonald would keep the Macca flame goin in the future. So, unfortunately for the other contenders - Hogg, Tait, Hilfenahus, Noffke - due to their vagaries of their last name and their inability to co-operate under the Macca umbrella they shall not be considered for McBoxing Day..
The problem is that with their height, they will always do well against Indian domestic batsmen and so domestic performances cannot be taken at face value because other countries will play them well.Yeah Ishant is 6"4. Pankaj Singh who's another upcoming paceman is 6"6. They'd have to be among the tallest pacemen produced by India.
Agreed, one of irfan's best TBH.good work.Don't know what all the fuss concerning the 4th bowler is about.....
It should be a straight swap, McGain for McGill. Gain a lot, lose the fish.
I am pretty sure it's an unwritten Australian selection policy that they must select a Macca in our attack. If it ain't MacGill, it's McGrath or it's McDermott and even McIntyre. Hopefully McDonald would keep the Macca flame goin in the future. So, unfortunately for the other contenders - Hogg, Tait, Hilfenahus, Noffke - due to their vagaries of their last name and their inability to co-operate under the Macca umbrella they shall not be considered for McBoxing Day..
And keeps his front-foot in the right place...Isn't Ishant Sharma supposed to be 6'4"? ,ie a little over 1.9m. If he matures (ie not on this tour) and stays fit, he could fix that.
All well and good, but for one thing you can't manufacture a surface that has bounce, the soil has to be in the right condition.http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/story/0,22606,22889037-5006372,00.html
Yea, can't disagree from an Aussie point of view. As an Indian supporter, I would be downright giddy if the surface was slow, low and offered turn. I would actually say that you shouldn't really prepare pitches that offer sideways movement, but more bounce and pace. Indian batsmen of late have been decent at the sideway movement stuff (see England tour), but they struggle a lot if someone is bowling 90+mph balls that go past their noses (see how much they struggled with Tremmlet with his height, even if he wasn't express). Obviously both sideways and up and down might be ideal, but Indian bowlers can utilize the swing pretty well these days....but we lack the really tall bowlers, or the really fast bowlers.
And his backfoot pointing in the right direction.And keeps his front-foot in the right place...
agreed....especially when the opposition are the aussies.And keeps his front-foot in the right place...
Honestly, I don't see Sharma doing anything of note against Australia, he's far, far too unrefined. The no-balls are just the worst of it.