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International Captain
TNT is kinda right for (maybe) the wrong reason.
Warner was an 8 for mine. He pretty much did nothing wrong for 113 runs bar one ball that held up on him and he popped up. Yeah getting out for 26 isn't going to win too many games, but unbeaten 87s in the fourth innings to win aren't nothing. It might look like downhill skiing but one loose shot and it could have been so different.
A few of the things that really impressed me about Warner were:
- singles. A big lesson for pretty much everyone else on that pitch (bar God of course). Davey, especially early on wasn't leaving much, but neither was he playing his usual four shots. He was just dropping it into a gap and grabbing the single. Turned over the strike, eased the pressure on himself and allowed him to score at 4 rpo despite not playing many aggressive shots.
- fixed his problem. Between the first and second innings he changed how he played the ball he got out to. There was no question of popping one up to midwicket in the second dig. He was pulling them. Sure it's obvious and easy to say. But to do it in the middle of a test match is quality.
- patience. Not a word usually associated with D Warner, nor anyone scoring at 4 rpo in a Test match where the average rate was 2.5. And yet he was so patient. He didn't go chasing balls or looking for big shots. He wasn't in Smith's zen trance state patient of course, but he played the ball on it's merits. Even at the end when the old Warner would have been looking to pop a few into the crowd to get his ton he was still just pushing them into the gaps for a single. That is bad news for England.
So yeah Broad and Anderson were very good. Warner was better overall.
Warner was an 8 for mine. He pretty much did nothing wrong for 113 runs bar one ball that held up on him and he popped up. Yeah getting out for 26 isn't going to win too many games, but unbeaten 87s in the fourth innings to win aren't nothing. It might look like downhill skiing but one loose shot and it could have been so different.
A few of the things that really impressed me about Warner were:
- singles. A big lesson for pretty much everyone else on that pitch (bar God of course). Davey, especially early on wasn't leaving much, but neither was he playing his usual four shots. He was just dropping it into a gap and grabbing the single. Turned over the strike, eased the pressure on himself and allowed him to score at 4 rpo despite not playing many aggressive shots.
- fixed his problem. Between the first and second innings he changed how he played the ball he got out to. There was no question of popping one up to midwicket in the second dig. He was pulling them. Sure it's obvious and easy to say. But to do it in the middle of a test match is quality.
- patience. Not a word usually associated with D Warner, nor anyone scoring at 4 rpo in a Test match where the average rate was 2.5. And yet he was so patient. He didn't go chasing balls or looking for big shots. He wasn't in Smith's zen trance state patient of course, but he played the ball on it's merits. Even at the end when the old Warner would have been looking to pop a few into the crowd to get his ton he was still just pushing them into the gaps for a single. That is bad news for England.
So yeah Broad and Anderson were very good. Warner was better overall.