Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
I realise that. But the batting was nowhere near as terrific as the drops made it look, and the bowling was actually damn good on a flat pitch - it's just that if you drop that many catches, well, as I say, your only chance of getting 20 wickets in three days is if batsmen make a habit of leaving straight balls.I was just testing to see if you'd fall for the "enforced the follow-on" bait.
I don't dispute that dropped catches played a part in that game. The point is that to ridicule those who suggest that there may have been other possible causes is, well, ridiculous. For instance, terrific rearguard batting by the Sri Lankans, an unthreatening pitch, the England bowlers not bowling (even) better than they did, the timing of the declaration, the decision to enforce the follow-on, etc etc etc etc.
Without my mother I wouldn't be here. But that doesn't mean that my mother is the only reason I'm here. My father and/or a passing milkman had an important role to play too.
It irritated me the way people criticised Flintoff's captaincy and the bowling because of that, when all the annoyance should have been channelled towards the missed chances, as they rendered anything else, however good it was, useless. You could've had Malcolm Marshall and Imran Khan bowling under Mike Brearley's captaincy and if those catches had been dropped you'd still never win a game.