sportychic33
State 12th Man
In a manner of speaking yes, the balls of his feet.His balls?
In a manner of speaking yes, the balls of his feet.His balls?
That is, if he could last a whole season to allow himself a chance of bowling as he can.Tudor certainly would if he bowled as he can more often.
Norbert Phillip was one that escaped my earlier thoughts to be honest.What about Stuart Turner?
Even when offering a threat, Tudor has sometimes been expensive. There honestly is virtually no way of telling how well he bowled unless you watched all or most of his deliveries.But he doesn't, and as a result there's not necessarily any reason to believe he was bowling at his best yesterday - as the fact that he was hit for 5.11 per over may suggest.
Not sure you entirely grasped what I was saying. I'm not saying Tudor is good enough - he's, unfortunately, shown not to be. But nonetheless, there's still the odd spell here and there where he can offer a massive threat. Who knows - maybe yesterday might have been one such spell.Exactly, if everyone bowled as well as they could each team'd be sensational. The ability to utilise the skills you have is one of the facets each player has to master. If he can't, then he's not good enough.
That too, of course, but the Mark Nicholas maxim of "when Tudor plays, he bowls well" isn't entirely true.That is, if he could last a whole season to allow himself a chance of bowling as he can.
Redmond is a handy part time spin bowler, and will fit nicely into the bowling attack option now that Styris and Astle have both retired. Being a spin bowler, it's a bonus, as far as variety and the pitch goes (if it suddenly takes spin).Well, the Essex-NZ game finishes in a fairly comfortable victory for NZ, by 92 runs. More disappointingly, 2 of the wickets go to Aaron Redmond, and just 1 each to Mills and Oram. Still, only Mason of the bowlers in this match has really enhanced his pedigree, taking 37-101-7. O'Brien gets 37.1-100-6, mind. But for a match where only James Marshall of the batsmen (note: batsmen - which Mills, for all his decent lower-order play, promotion to number-three in a Test-match and one-time First-Class average over 40, is not) passed 50, that has to be a little disappointing.
Yeah, but in a warm-up you want it more than ever, as this is where individual performance counts more than the result. In Tests, all wickets are the team's, but in tour-games, all wickets that don't go to a bowler are wastes of potential confidence-boosters.Redmond is a handy part time spin bowler, and will fit nicely into the bowling attack option now that Styris and Astle have both retired. Being a spin bowler, it's a bonus, as far as variety and the pitch goes (if it suddenly takes spin).
Naturally, you want your main bowers taking all the wickets, but they were given enough overs - Remond was given just six and managed two wickets. If he can do that in a test matc, I'd be more than happy.
I would say that the pressure is on Martin also for this next game. He may be the senior bowler, but if he doesn't perform whilst O'Brien/Mason (whoever plays) gets a bag, then I could very well see him losing his place for the first test.Pressure's now on Southee to perform in the Lions' game if he doesn't want to get pushed out by Mason + O Brien. Mills and Martin still the main bowlers for me.
I think the selectors will stick with Martin, but he seriously better get some wickets soon. Hope Mills gets a decent bag as well.I would say that the pressure is on Martin also for this next game. He may be the senior bowler, but if he doesn't perform whilst O'Brien/Mason (whoever plays) gets a bag, then I could very well see him losing his place for the first test.
Not sure, but hasn't every English player turned-down the IPL for now?Fair play to Ravi Bopara for turning down the IPL in order to keep himself in the frame for England - he's had a great start to the season and I'm sure that the selectors will be impressed by his loyalty and desire to play for his country.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/cricket/7385442.stm
Like most things surrounding this venture the info is cloudy and speculative.Fair play to Ravi Bopara for turning down the IPL in order to keep himself in the frame for England - he's had a great start to the season and I'm sure that the selectors will be impressed by his loyalty and desire to play for his country.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/cricket/7385442.stm