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You been reading KP's book?the poisonous trio. anderson, broad and swann.
You been reading KP's book?the poisonous trio. anderson, broad and swann.
You been reading KP's book?
Who the hell schedules a major awards ceremony during a first class match?I've always had a high regard for Chanderpaul, but buggering off to an awards ceremony in the middle of your innings takes some beating.
Apart from that, Boycott opens the batting from both ends, bats 3, captains the team, and at the end of the day takes the time to explain how great he was.
I've always sided with KP on that one. I find it very easy to believe Anderson, Broad, Swann and Prior being bullying ****s. KP may be selfish and divisive but I'd take him over those guys any day.heh.
something to it, especially for the seamers. so unnecessarily defensive with their fields at times.
YOU TAKE THAT BACK!1. Geoffrey Boycott *
2. Sunil Gavaskar
3. Jimmy Anderson
4. Sachin Tendulkar
4. Brian Lara
6. Dean Jones
7. Shiv Chanderpaul
8.
9. Richard Hadlee
10. Harbhajan Singh
11. Sydney Barnes
Really no idea who should take the gloves.
Socially speaking within the team set-up (as opposed to on the field where he was actually a good & gritty team-man), Adam Parore to take the gloves.1. Geoffrey Boycott *
2. Sunil Gavaskar
3. Jimmy Anderson
4. Sachin Tendulkar
4. Brian Lara
6. Dean Jones
7. Shiv Chanderpaul
8.
9. Richard Hadlee
10. Harbhajan Singh
11. Sydney Barnes
Really no idea who should take the gloves.
Swann has the best strike rate of any post-war English spin bowler (with 5+ wickets).Is it really true that those particular three English bowlers personally protected their averages, or is it not more true that both Strauss and Cook played a particularly dull variant of defensive cricket: basically bat the opposition out of the game then bog them down and frustrate them.
Well it, protecting bowling stats, is an accusation associated more with Anderson and to a lesser extent Broad, but the original poster included Swann for some reason.Swann has the best strike rate of any post-war English spin bowler (with 5+ wickets).
I hope including Lara is not based on one stupid innings. Lara had 4 yes 4 not outs in a 131 test career and in any of his big daddy knocks he could've exposed the tail, remained not out and protect his stats. Lara outside of cricket was probably a primadona, but on the field he was anything but selfish.1. Geoffrey Boycott *
2. Sunil Gavaskar
3. Jimmy Anderson
4. Sachin Tendulkar
4. Brian Lara
6. Dean Jones
7. Shiv Chanderpaul
8.
9. Richard Hadlee
10. Harbhajan Singh
11. Sydney Barnes
Really no idea who should take the gloves.
I haven't really thought of Anderson and Broad as selfish. They're just poor humans.Well it, protecting bowling stats, is an accusation associated more with Anderson and to a lesser extent Broad, but the original poster included Swann for some reason.
You really think it's that easy to just decide to expose the tail and get a guaranteed not out? How often do you think that actually happens?I hope including Lara is not based on one stupid innings. Lara had 4 yes 4 not outs in a 131 test career and in any of his big daddy knocks he could've exposed the tail, remained not out and protect his stats. Lara outside of cricket was probably a primadona, but on the field he was anything but selfish.
It's a bit of a situational thing, though, isn't it? There are times where every single run you can eke out of a tail-end partnership is going to be crucial, and times when it'll be less so. In cases of the former, you really should be focusing on shielding who's a far worse batsman than yourself, especially someone like McGrath who's batting ability peaked at 'adequate number 11'. If the match situation isn't so tight, by all means encourage the rabbit at the other end to believe in their abilities.Honestly never thought Steve Waugh was selfish. His whole mode of operating as a leader was to encourage others to believe in their abilities.
I mean McGrath went from being a complete bunny to a more accomplished bunny during his career. Going from averaging 2 a season to averaging 10+ might not sound much, but it means he was batting 5 times longer later in his career than he was earlier.
In addition, Waugh's teams contained a tail of Gilchrist (!), Warne, Lee/Kaspa/Bichel, Gillespie and McGrath. There was never really cause to shield any of them from the strike, because all of them apart from McGrath all could have been legit #8s with the bat. Waugh's philosophy was to put his faith in them and from a team perspective it worked. Think Waugh has been unfairly tarnished as someone chasing the red ink when in fact he believed in his players.
Bro Chanders a teammate and contemporary of Lara was rightfully labelled a selfish player, one of the reasons being that he never protected the tail when batting and appeared to play to be notout. Lara on the other hand was the complete opposite.You really think it's that easy to just decide to expose the tail and get a guaranteed not out? How often do you think that actually happens?