What's impressed me most about Ambrose so far is that he's scored runs at times when England were in serious trouble. The important thing for a keeper-batsman for me is someone who catches everything adequately behind the stumps, and gets your team out of a hole when you slump to 100/5 on the first morning of a test.I think the concept of wicket keeper batsmen needs to be re-addressed by some. Expecting someone who is picked to stand behind the stumps and concentrate on catching a ball for half a game (give or take a bit) to do the job that 6 other people have been especially for.
Obviously, you don't want a complete rabbit of a keeper, batting wise, but obviously not everyone can score with such consistency as someone like Gilchrist did.
Ideally, I'd prefer a keeper who is more than competent at his keeping duties (top 3 keeper in the country, ideally) and has enough batting skill to rotate the strike to give the top order batsmen the job of doing what they're suppose to, and when the tail is in, to try and score runs as best as they can in the situation.
Otherwise you may as well pick a batsman who, when fielding, doesn't have the odd trundle and train them to be a keeper
And to say it again... that, basically, is what Ambrose currently is.Ideally, I'd prefer a keeper who is more than competent at his keeping duties (top 3 keeper in the country, ideally) and has enough batting skill to rotate the strike to give the top order batsmen the job of doing what they're suppose to, and when the tail is in, to try and score runs as best as they can in the situation.
All what you are saying is correct, but the concept is basically directed towards what the best ENG XI is. Such as if ENG believe they can manage with 6 bats, Freddie @ 7 & 4 bowlers then the best glovesman in the land regardless of his batting-ability (although one would hope in this modern age he isn't a rabbit) should be picked.I think the concept of wicket keeper batsmen needs to be re-addressed by some. Expecting someone who is picked to stand behind the stumps and concentrate on catching a ball for half a game (give or take a bit) to do the job that 6 other people have been especially for.
Obviously, you don't want a complete rabbit of a keeper, batting wise, but obviously not everyone can score with such consistency as someone like Gilchrist did.
Ideally, I'd prefer a keeper who is more than competent at his keeping duties (top 3 keeper in the country, ideally) and has enough batting skill to rotate the strike to give the top order batsmen the job of doing what they're suppose to, and when the tail is in, to try and score runs as best as they can in the situation.
Otherwise you may as well pick a batsman who, when fielding, doesn't have the odd trundle and train them to be a keeper
I agree entirely. If your keeper can't bat you get into all sorts of problems with the balance of the team, and you create problems elsewhere in the team. In particular you start having to compromise on which bowlers to pick - could you, for instance, play Sidebottom, Panesar and Anderson in the same team as a keeper that's a rubbish batsman?Never any excuse for blindly picking any old wicketkeeper regardless of his batting ability as far as I'm concerned.
And welcome to Planet Compromise...Alternatively, if you had an attack comprising of Flintoff and Broad then you would realistically only need a keeper who could average 20. That is assuming Broad learns to become a Test-class bowler...
Well, Chris Martin still gets a game for New Zealand.I agree with you. I suppose my point is that a lot of "purists" say that you should pick your best keeper, regardless of batting ability. But I think that's over-simplistic. Why should the same logic not apply equally to fast bowlers? Or to batsmen? (- would Collingwood have ever been picked if he couldn't bowl a bit and field like a demon?)
I'm fairly confident when I say the days of the wicketkeeper who averages 20 with the bat yet gets a decent-length Test career are gone.Alternatively, if you had an attack comprising of Flintoff and Broad then you would realistically only need a keeper who could average 20. That is assuming Broad learns to become a Test-class bowler...
That's really quite interesting.The Wisden Cricketer has done a cost-benefit analysis of England's keepers since 2001/02 (up to 8 June 08).
They've taken the keeper's batting average and deducted from it the runs scored by opposition batsmen per Test after being given let-offs by him.
The method of calculation is ropey and controversial to say the least (in a number of respects it over-states the cost of missed chances) but here goes anyway:
Stewart: +27.13
Read: +18.21
Ambrose: +15.27
Jones: +7.03
Foster: +6.40
Prior: -22.56
That's very interesting indeed, thanks. It's definitely ropey, as are all methods of measuring wicket keeping skill that i've seen. But the results are largely what one would have expected...The Wisden Cricketer has done a cost-benefit analysis of England's keepers since 2001/02 (up to 8 June 08).
They've taken the keeper's batting average and deducted from it the runs scored by opposition batsmen per Test after being given let-offs by him.
The method of calculation is ropey and controversial to say the least (in a number of respects it over-states the cost of missed chances) but here goes anyway:
Stewart: +27.13
Read: +18.21
Ambrose: +15.27
Jones: +7.03
Foster: +6.40
Prior: -22.56
I wish we could just see batting-average, number of Tests, and number of dropped-catches\missed-stumpings.