This + similar posts deserves a proper response.When the general consensus from people who have played the game, are knowleadgable , who have been succesfull at the game, who love the game and who arent really biased cause they arent south african or indian is the pitch is bad, than i'd say chances are the pitch really is bad
Know you are exasperated by *****, but this is not true for CW Indian fans, from what I have seen. If you are talking about the majority of Indian fans, then it would be true.It's an Indian thing
Cricket fan says the pitch is poor and he/she is disappointed that the match will be a let down
Indian fan takes it as a personal insult and feigns indignation
Indian fan is then exasperated when team cant replicate same results overseas and trolls players
Wash/rinse/recycle
No one disappeared any where. ***** called me out. I explained why I believe the pitch is poor while Faf and Amla were still batting. Social appeared soon enough as well.Know you are exasperated by *****, but this is not true for CW Indian fans, from what I have seen. If you are talking about the majority of Indian fans, then it would be true.
The only thing that is insulting for mine is when, instead of arguing the merits of the argument, I have seen one opinion being formed and stuck to. This has been backed up by appealing to scorecards and authority figures and the few wickets that were lost to jaffas.
All of you disappeared when Du Plessis and Amla were batting today. And came out mud-slinging as soon as they got out. At least ***** was there all along, acknowledging the limits of the pitch, but arguing against it not being "a good pitch".
Aha. So he didn't call it unsafe or luck dependant did he?Besides, Pakistan legend Wasim Akram had compared the pitch to a akhara (wrestling pit) and called cricket's world body International Cricket Council (ICC) to "get into preparing Test pitches" in a newspaper article.
In his Times of India column, Akram wrote: "I think the ICC should ... get into preparing Test pitches all over the world, or start deducting points that will affect a team's ranking. Till then we will keep getting these akharas (wrestling pits) like the one in Jamtha, where the ball hardly comes on to the bat."
But there is plenty of evidence to suggest both Amla and ABDV (former in particular) are excellent players of spin. Evidence also suggests that Pujara is also a very good player of spin. Let's put it this way, you have some of the best test batsmen playing in this series, and we haven't had one single century and the series is almost over.Also I am baffled that people who claim to have watched this game actually think that the batsmen's lack of technique had nothing to do with their dismissals. Maybe it's a result of having been so used to watching guys like Rahane, Kohli, ABDV, Amla and Faf fill their boots on pitches with pace/bounce/swing/seam that we've all forgotten what batting against good spin bowling on spinning wickets looks like.
India were generally pretty dire batting in Sri Lanka against Herath and co too. Pujara and Vijay were the best batsmen on show there, no surprise they've been our best here too.
A pitch doesn't have to be unsafe to be poor. He thinks the ICC should deduct points from teams for such pitches. What else do you want him to say?Aha. So he didn't call it unsafe or luck dependant did he?
Thanks for proving my point.
Ok this is unfair. You are just going to dismiss every former player who has a different view as 'so called expert' or having an 'agenda' but Gavaskar is fine because he did not criticise the pitch. Gavaskar is not a so called expert but Akram is.Shock and horror - former fast bowler and batsmen raised up on fast bowling dislike a turning wicket.
They're criticising it for balance between bat and ball. They're not calling it unplayable or a lottery. Which is what you guys are. And you guys are wrong. So stop it.
No, I'm "waahing" because it staggers me that anyone could have his arguments disproved and still carry on the pretense that he's presented a valid opinion. This isn't kindergarten. There is only so many times one can insist that every kid gets to go home with a participation trophy.You have argued over a fair few posts yesterday actually. You think you are right, I think I am right. Only difference is you are wahhing when I disagree with you.
Who disappeared? I was there even though the Amla-Du Plessis partnership was used to disingenuously argue that the pitch wasn't that bad at all and only "application and technique" was needed. People like you even tried to lay the blame for their dismissals on bad batting and absolve the pitch. Yeah, I'd like to see Mishra bowl those deliveries anywhere else.All of you disappeared when Du Plessis and Amla were batting today. And came out mud-slinging as soon as they got out. At least ***** was there all along, acknowledging the limits of the pitch, but arguing against it not being "a good pitch".
Nothing has been 'disproved'. I am not your mum either who will tell your pitch is a garden of roses even when it is a pit of cowdung.No, I'm "waahing" because it staggers me that anyone could have his arguments disproved and still carry on the pretense that he's presented a valid opinion. This isn't kindergarten. There is only so many times one can insist that every kid gets to go home with a participation trophy.
NopeIf I am being cynical, I would probably put Channel 9's criticism of these pitches down to New Zealand matching Australia's score in the second test and scoring 600 plus. Had they folded like they did in the first test and Australia were 2-0, I doubt we would see these conversations because this has been the narrative for most of Australia's home wins over the last few years.
Win the toss, bat first, get 400-500 plus,
Bowl out opposition for <220
Then get a quickfire 250,
Bowl out opposition for another 200-250 runs and win by over 200 run margin.
Clearly winning the toss provides an incredible advantage to teams batting first. The only times when Australia haven't managed to pull it off were when Kohli or Williamson played out of their skins to match the score.