Coaches play a part in plenty of bowling strategies, fielding placements and plans etc. Captain still bears the brunt when they go wrong and is sung in glory when they go right.I think there was perhaps more than meets the eye going on there (probably been heavily reported on since tbf so I could be wrong) and I struggle with the concept that chimpy took that decision all by himself with no pressure from anywhere else.
That was a masterstroke, quite a positive move hidden under the pretence of being defensive if you ask me.India put themselves in an unloseable position in that series when Dhoni choked them with the genius 8-1 field on day 3, thereby securing an 80 odd run lead.
Not really. It's "you just guaranteed us winning the series", which is exactly what he did.My interpretation of 'cheers for the series' is 'we definitely would not have won but for what you did.'
Absolutely not manipulating anything.
awta.my interpretation of 'cheers for the series' is 'we definitely would not have won but for what you did.'
absolutely not manipulating anything.
It was not unloseable, and every post in the tour thread by both Australian and Indian posters will show you that. When Sachin was run out and with the way Watson and Krejza was bowling, there was definitely a chance of India losing that test.India put themselves in an unloseable position in that series when Dhoni choked them with the genius 8-1 field on day 3, thereby securing an 80 odd run lead.
Yeah, of course this is true, but I guess what I'm trying to get at is was it really Ponting's decision? I dunno.Coaches play a part in plenty of bowling strategies, fielding placements and plans etc. Captain still bears the brunt when they go wrong and is sung in glory when they go right.
Same deal here. Ponting's team, he lives by the sword and dies by the sword.
Completely disagree, but there you go.Not really. It's "you just guaranteed us winning the series", which is exactly what he did.
Not invincible, but still favourites to set a 300+ target and win the game. Any bookie that thought otherwise is an idiot.When Sachin fell India were basically 6 down with a lead of 272 with the last 6 wickets falling for 50 runs, and the last 3 wickets falling for 3 runs. Clearly invincible from that position
Was definitely a "leadership team" decision (i.e. Ponting, Nielsen and Clarke) but if Ponting had the balls he could have easily said no. He definitely had the authority.Yeah, of course this is true, but I guess what I'm trying to get at is was it really Ponting's decision? I dunno.
Now, that I was unaware of.. you might have a point there. Anyway, we'll never know.I also put into evidence the fact that India collapsed pretty much immediately after Watson was brought back into the attack following the fiasco.
It removed any chance of them winning, and they had to win to draw the series and keep the trophy.Well, that's revisionist. His decision were farcical but it's hardly conclusive that Australia would have gone on to win.
Yup.Ponting's comical ineptitude by itself turned a very decent chance at a drawn series into an almost guaranteed loss. It was comfortably the worst piece of captaincy I've ever seen, and off the top of my head I can't think of anything else before my time that would come close. AFAIC that incident alone is enough to justify Ponting's inclusion in the "worst captain ever" debate.
Well, there are no 'guarantees' in the actual 'scientific' meaning of the term. Yes, Hussey could have taken 6/9 and won the series.No, that's not the point. Nothing Ponting did guaranteed anything.
See now you're changing your words.Not invincible, but still favourites to set a 300+ target and win the game. Any bookie that thought otherwise is an idiot.