Oh I see now. You're just making somethin up to whinge and bitch about and try to make yourself feel superior.All I'm saying, and I was pretty implicit in it, is that the average Australian cricket fan is far less learned than any other nation in the world. Good luck to them if they're happy with it.
I don't watch overseas Tests either. But I read, I listen, I take in information. It seems to me, after living in Australia for 2+ years, that the public only knows what the CH9 team tells them. And that's SFA. Except that their team is awesome, the Marshes are really great and that Michael Slater likes to giggle a lot.
Yeah, he is.Haha, I can understand the logic behind this. We are a bit homer-ish about Tim, it'd be fair to admit. All I meant though is a guy who takes 5-for and scores 70 on debut isn't exactly an unknown.
That wasn't prior to his debut. It was 6 months after. As I said, he was one of the first in Test history to take 5-for and score 50 on debut. Apparently that's unknown.He was labelled unheralded because that's exactly what he was. I can't think of many players, from any nation, who's been massively hyped prior to their international debuts. Ajantha Mendis is probably the closest I can think of.
edit: probably Phil Hughes as well.
Furball is Scottish ffs. He just disagrees with you; you can't make it nationalistic here.That wasn't prior to his debut. It was 6 months after. As I said, he was one of the first in Test history to take 5-for and score 50 on debut. Apparently that's unknown.
There's really no need to get defensive, Jedi. If someone said to me that our All Blacks fans are arrogant and unneccesarily gloat, I'd agree. If they said we're unreasonably pessimistic about our cricket side, I'd agree. Just cop it. Or say your cricket side is superior and that's all that matters. It's cool. I'm not saying just we are more learned, I'm saying every nation is. I'm just offering an insight from someone who lived there and was able to get a real gauge.
So what? Test cricket is full of players who've done amazingly on debut before fading into obscurity because they were actually a bit **** and their Test performance was a massive outlier.That wasn't prior to his debut. It was 6 months after. As I said, he was one of the first in Test history to take 5-for and score 50 on debut. Apparently that's unknown.
There's really no need to get defensive, Jedi. If someone said to me that our All Blacks fans are arrogant and unneccesarily gloat, I'd agree. If they said we're unreasonably pessimistic about our cricket side, I'd agree. Just cop it. Or say your cricket side is superior and that's all that matters. It's cool. I'm not saying just we are more learned, I'm saying every nation is. I'm just offering an insight from someone who lived there and was able to get a real gauge.
Ah yeah my bad.He addressed Jedi there, at the start of the second paragraph.
Games played in Australia, and the Ashes in England, are on FTA.What do you guys get covered on FTA vs pay TV anyway?
Right, I'm a lot closer to seeing your point - fair enough. It's something that annoyed me when I lived there (in terms of the jingoistic approach and lack of worldly knowledge on the game) and now I can appreciate why when your average fan is just tuning in and out of it on free TV, rather than consciously paying for the privilege and therefore more likely to ingest more from across the world. Suppose that stands to reason that with the Big Bash presented so well on FTA as well, that there's not a lot of time for anything else.The majority of Australian cricket watchers are casual fans for whom cricket is just something vaguely interesting to have on during the day during the summer, so don't actually care about the sport at all because their emotional investment in it is low.
For other fans whose only other access to cricket is on pay TV, the fact that they have to pay money to access the sport at all on TV means they're naturally more invested in the sport as a whole, plus they get equal and equivalent access to global cricket that the vast majority of Australian cricket watchers do not.
This really should not be hard to understand unless you're out to prove that Australian cricket culture is preternaturally inferior and a stain on global cricket, of course.
Sorry, I should have made it clear that I was referring to all sports (particularly sports that would be of interest to the general Australian public), not just cricket. IIRC NRL is shown on Channel 9 as well, for example, isn't it?Games played in Australia, and the Ashes in England, are on FTA.
Most other cricket ends up on pay TV but sometimes they will decide not to buy the rights to certain series if they're not going to rate, or don't show a session here or a session here if it clashes with something else they'd rather show.
I know how you feel bro, for an intelligent conversation about cricket here requires a trip down to centrelink and find a Kiwi.Right, I'm a lot closer to seeing your point - fair enough. It's something that annoyed me when I lived there (in terms of the jingoistic approach and lack of worldly knowledge on the game) and now I can appreciate why when your average fan is just tuning in and out of it on free TV, rather than consciously paying for the privilege and therefore more likely to ingest more from across the world. Suppose that stands to reason that with the Big Bash presented so well on FTA as well, that there's not a lot of time for anything else.
What I'm saying with Tim, was it was disrespectful to say he's unheralded when the bloke had played the way he did on debut. It was lazy journalism where people who write and commentate on the game, and get paid well to do so, are obligated to be better informed.
Would Smith and Waddle know their Jake Dorans from their Gurinder Sandhus though? I very much doubt it. Cricket is just sort of senile and chauvinistically slow on the uptake, "High Tory" in most places.Right, I'm a lot closer to seeing your point - fair enough. It's something that annoyed me when I lived there (in terms of the jingoistic approach and lack of worldly knowledge on the game) and now I can appreciate why when your average fan is just tuning in and out of it on free TV, rather than consciously paying for the privilege and therefore more likely to ingest more from across the world. Suppose that stands to reason that with the Big Bash presented so well on FTA as well, that there's not a lot of time for anything else.
What I'm saying with Tim, was it was disrespectful to say he's unheralded when the bloke had played the way he did on debut. It was lazy journalism where people who write and commentate on the game, and get paid well to do so, are obligated to be better informed.
Ian Smith's Eternal Inferiority Complex Player Notes:Ch9 NZ XI for Perth:
Mark Latham
Martin Crowe (the only NZ batsman Australians know, also related to famous Australian actor Russell Crowe)
Kane Richardson
Ross "Out of Form" Taylor
Brendon "he only plays one way this guy (despite playing plenty of innings that weren't that way mind you)" McCullum
Aussie Luke Ronchi (hes played a lot of his cricket here x1000)
Brad Haddin
Daniel Vettori (nz have never had another spinner have they? so that has to be Vettori bowling)
Mitch Johnson/Starc/Marsh
Tim Tam
Trent Bond
The full anti-siphoning list is here: https://www.comlaw.gov.au/Details/F2010L03383Sorry, I should have made it clear that I was referring to all sports (particularly sports that would be of interest to the general Australian public), not just cricket. IIRC NRL is shown on Channel 9 as well, for example, isn't it?