thierry henry
International Coach
Yep, he had plenty of success with his approach (3 centuries in a year where he was only dismissed 7 times?). And 84 is a good strike-rate...but it's actually not that good for a guy scoring that well, if you see what I mean. Obviously in those (relatively few) innings he played in 2014, he executed his plan to perfection. He was able to start slow and accelerate, and yet his strike-rate was "only" 84, which represents about the optimum possible strike-rate he can aim for batting this way. It's far from ideal in the modern ODI game to:His batting in ODI's in the last year would suggest that Taylor isn't experiencing anything other than a ridiculous purple patch:
628 runs at an average of 89 and a strike rate of 84.
(a) Put yourself at risk of being dismissed for a low score while sucking up a lot of balls
(b) As a batsman once known for his potential to be spectacularly explosive, restrict your potential to play such an innings. Taylor's approach doesn't really seem adaptable to conditions anymore. Sometimes even 100(110) isn't that great of an innings.
Now, I'm fully aware of how nutty I sound right now, but I do think I'm onto something. Actually, I reckon I was involved in the exact same discussion about Jonathan Trott once and took the opposite position