Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
Problem has been, people of that mind have been at the helm.Pedro Delgado said:Good job I'm not at the helm then, otherwise we'd be awful at OD cricket. Oh, hang on..
Problem has been, people of that mind have been at the helm.Pedro Delgado said:Good job I'm not at the helm then, otherwise we'd be awful at OD cricket. Oh, hang on..
England last beat Pakistan at home in 1982, though they should have won a decade later (only a near-unthinkable 9th-wicket stand between the two Ws turned defeat to victory for Pakistan in the first result-Test).jamesryfler said:England start favourites granted but Pakistan have a pretty good record in England ( I don't think England have beaten them at home for a very long time)
Well... as I've just said, if we could've polished-off the tail in the Second Test in 1992 we'd have won that series.wpdavid said:It's no accident that we haven't won a home series against Pakisatn since 1982.
Dasa said:(assuming Shoaib won't be fit)
A convincing scoreline, but not unusually it said little about the cricket played.Armadillo said:I don't think Pakistan should be written off in this series, infact I think they will pose a more than potent threat to England. 2-0 is a pretty convincing scoreline, even if it was in completely different conditions.
Will it? We've not seen proper amounts of conventional swing in England for quite a while (2000 was the last time).Francis said:New conditions though... the ball will swing.
Mohammad Yousuf is nowhere near as good as Younis Khan for a century - one is a flat-track, weak-attack bully; the other is a very, very fine batsman.players like Mohammad Yousuf (still getting used to the name) and Yunis Khan are always good for a century
Actually you can, because the first test at Nagpur was well contested on a reasonable pitch. It involved several battles between good bowling and good batting, unlike the first two tests in the India-Pakistan series, where bowling didn't stand much of a genuine chance.marc71178 said:OK then, so if the 3rd Test is a flat track and a high scoring draw, I assume that will mean you can't call India's 1-0 victory over England a series win then.
The "blueprint for cricket" written after '99 must've have included ODI's then. I must say I'm jolly happy at where we find ourselves in the test arena, and am pretty indifferent to our positon in the limited-overs format.Richard said:Problem has been, people of that mind have been at the helm.
Yet we nearly could've had one had Dravid accelerated a bit earlier ...Richard said:Nagpur was a flat enough pitch. Not stupid like the First and Second Pak-Ind Tests, but still plenty flat that a result was never likely.
Bit of a Younis Khan fan aren't you Richard?Richard said:Err, what? Younis has played 2 Tests in England (both 5 years ago - hardly "recent") and did well in both.
Yes, he didn't do much in an extremely limited county stint but I'm willing to bet quite a bit that'd have been different if he'd had a decent-length one.
How were England the better side in the 2nd test, when they was a good chance they were going to lose, were it not for KP and Flintoff standing tall? Yeah they got a 2nd innings lead (thanks to the ridiculous run out of Inzy) but they were 4-20 in their 2nd innings at one stage! A loss was on the cards until England fought hard for the draw.Richard said:A convincing scoreline, but not unusually it said little about the cricket played.
England were much the better side in the first 2 Tests and even at Lahore should easily have secured the draw.
But you see that argument is only valid when it's discussing India losing.Richard said:Nagpur was a flat enough pitch. Not stupid like the First and Second Pak-Ind Tests, but still plenty flat that a result was never likely.
That target was always going to be out of reach - Flintoff made sure with his declaration.adharcric said:Yet we nearly could've had one had Dravid accelerated a bit earlier ...
it wont? The batting has been poor the moment England dropped Thorpe, and it hasnt changed since.Swervy said:I think you will find that a full strength England batting line up at home wont be weak...
actually incase you havent noticed, we've failed miserably in the subcontinent because we cant bat.Tom Halsey said:I don't think much has changed from the Ashes really. I think we're big favourites.
I don't think anyone was really expecting us to do well in Asia, because we haven't got any spinners ourselves, and we can't play spin ourselves (as Warne had already demonstrated in The Ashes).
In all other conditions, we're 2nd best.
Against spin.tooextracool said:actually incase you havent noticed, we've failed miserably in the subcontinent because we cant bat.
probably a converted one because not long ago he was calling for his head.Armadillo said:Bit of a Younis Khan fan aren't you Richard?
have you been preoccupied during the winter?Tom Halsey said:Against spin.
For the most part we've looked okay against pace.