How about plaing Bell or Pietersen at 3 and letting Shah come in down the order? Like thisDon't really see the need for such severity TBH. I have good reasons to think that there is a preferable option - one that has already been ruled-out by the non-inclusion of Key in the squad - to the selection of Strauss, or the selection of Shah.
If I haven't already said so in this thread (I definately have elsewhere), I'd prefer this:
Strauss
Cook
Vaughan
Pietersen
Collingwood
Bell
to this:
Cook
Vaughan
Shah
Pietersen
Collingwood
Bell
but it's very much a lesser-of-two-evils thing. I think there's a pretty good chance of failure (in some way, shape or form, be it Strauss or Vaughan) with either of the options the squad selected gives us. I won't be terribly happy at either - I will merely be slightly less unhappy at one than the other.
Actually id go one step further and suggest that in terms of form and fitness, Mark Ramprakash is currently the best player available for selection to the England side. Since there doesnt seem much of a chance for him to be selected, id settle for ShahShah for mine. Should've played in SL too, but Moores did a rather spectacular volte face based on Bopara scoring a few more runs in one of those beer-and-skittles warm ups before the test series.
The only thing that might save Strauss is that Mick has let it be known that he'd prefer to play at 3. Personally I think he needs to suck it up. Despite Richard's assertions Vaughan became the no 1 test bat of the back of his perfomance in the 02/3 Ashes as an opener.
Unfortunately for Vaughan, his best years are probably already past him, and there is absolutely no logical reason to have him taking up one of the most important positions in the side. Yes i agree that he is better at 3 than he is opening, but for the balance of the side he needs to open the batting. Even if his average falls by about 10 runs or so, he will still be doing a far more effective job than Strauss.It doesn't, though - the precise point I was making when I used that phrase was that the scorebook-average for 2002 and 2002\03 was deceiving. Vaughan did not bat anywhere near as well as an average of 76.65 suggests. His first-chance average in this time was a mere 53.44 - still excellent, yes, but nowhere near as good as the luck made it look. Therefore, people who looked purely at the scorebook might get the impression he'd batted with more distinction than he actually had.
What's more - and the point I was making with my previous post which you ignored - is that his opening record aside from this short period is roundly unimpressive. In his first 6 innings as an opener he averaged 21.83, and since his luck as an opener has dried-up, in 30 innings now, he's averaged a mere 30.75 in the position, compared to 39.56 elsewhere.
Vaughan has only had 1 short impressive stint as an opener (that not as impressive as might appear at first glance) and has also had a lot of mediocrity. It's a crying shame he wasted several prime years in the position.
Pietersen is not a test or ODI no 3. Whilst he might score runs at 3, his productivity will seriously dimish by batting (often) against the new ball.How about plaing Bell or Pietersen at 3 and letting Shah come in down the order? Like this
Cook
Vaughan
Bell
Pietersen
Collingwood
Shah
.or
Cook
Vaughan
Pietersen
Collingwood
Bell
Shah
No, never been in favour of either Pietersen at three or Bell in the top-order. And with Bell this dates back a long way, too - right as far as the 2002 season, 2 years before he made his Test debut.How about plaing Bell or Pietersen at 3 and letting Shah come in down the order? Like this
Cook
Vaughan
Bell
Pietersen
Collingwood
Shah
.or
Cook
Vaughan
Pietersen
Collingwood
Bell
Shah
If Strauss was the only option, yes, I'd agree (and of course, in the squad we currently have for this series, he is). But with Key available, I'd still prefer Vaughan at three.Unfortunately for Vaughan, his best years are probably already past him, and there is absolutely no logical reason to have him taking up one of the most important positions in the side. Yes i agree that he is better at 3 than he is opening, but for the balance of the side he needs to open the batting. Even if his average falls by about 10 runs or so, he will still be doing a far more effective job than Strauss.
Bell does have it in him to succeed at 3 or anywhere in the side really. There is no doubt about his class. But frequently, he comes in and gets bogged down and ends up like he did in Australia struggling to get the scoreboard ticking before throwing his wicket away after getting to 50, especially if the ball is moving around or if wickets are falling at the other end. The reason why he has been better at 6(although i would argue 5 would be better) is that he has been coming in against an older ball against bowlers who arent as fresh and in what can be termed as the 'Gilchrist effect' hes been able to score at better rates and consequently get more runs. In addition, he is arguably the best player of spin in the England side at present, and coming in against spin would add to and not shatter his confidence.In terms of where Vaughan bats, I like him at the top, although it would not trouble me too much should he come in at 3, but I also think Bell can be the long term number 3. Bell exudes such class at the crease and although at the moment you could say he is still an unfulfilled talent, the fact he averages in excess of 42 in Tests just shows how far people think he can go. Many would be happy with that average but people, myself included, still think he can improve much more. Has he the mental toughness to make these big scores ? I think so and would prolong his position at number 3.
I am not saying he does not have anything left to prove and he should bat at 3 regardless of future series'. Yes he does need to go on and get big hundreds, more chance of him doing that at 3 rather than 6. He does play spin well but would be harsh to punish him for being one of the best, by shoving him lower in the order. At 3 you have to be solid or positive, both of which he can do. Yes he has impressed at 6, but I believe we can get so much more out of Ian Bell at 3.Bell does have it in him to succeed at 3 or anywhere in the side really. There is no doubt about his class. But frequently, he comes in and gets bogged down and ends up like he did in Australia struggling to get the scoreboard ticking before throwing his wicket away after getting to 50, especially if the ball is moving around or if wickets are falling at the other end. The reason why he has been better at 6(although i would argue 5 would be better) is that he has been coming in against an older ball against bowlers who arent as fresh and in what can be termed as the 'Gilchrist effect' hes been able to score at better rates and consequently get more runs. In addition, he is arguably the best player of spin in the England side at present, and coming in against spin would add to and not shatter his confidence.
While Bell may not be the best at facing the new ball as is very strong though not guaranteed posiibility at 3 isn't he the best at palying the new ball besides Vaughan, and the specialist openers. Therefore in a situation where Shah is drafted in ahead of Strauss leaving only Vaughan and Cook to open would it be more sensible to send in Bell at three than ShahNo, never been in favour of either Pietersen at three or Bell in the top-order. And with Bell this dates back a long way, too - right as far as the 2002 season, 2 years before he made his Test debut.
Bell has always been better at five or six than he has at three, for Warwickshire or England. I was surprised when Bell got picked as a number-six batsman in Tests in the 2006 summer, but not at all surprised it was successful, if not perhaps as spectacularly successful as it was.
Well argued indeed, so just how successful ahs Shah been playing in the 3/4 position at Firtst class level?Thing about Shah is that he's always been - even when a junior player - a three or four batsman. And he's done his best work there, done excellent work in fact. Bell, as I say, has done better both domestically and internationally at five or six (as tec said, five would be ideal but currently Collingwood is ahead of him).
Just before he first came into the Warwickshire side, this was generally the top-six:
Powell
Knight
Wagh
Ostler
Penney
Hemp
Bell essentially replaced his fellow right-hander Penney (relegated to the role of one-day specialist) and Troughton his left-handed fellow Hemp (who soon returned to his first county, Glamorgan). And this worked brilliantly. But then they decided in their infinite wisdom to drop Ostler (and often Powell too) and promote Wagh to open and Bell to three. And it set Bell's career back 2 years.
Key... I wonder why the first chance average theory doesn't apply here...What I'd have preferred would have been had Strauss been excluded in favour of Robert Key, and Key opened with Cook. And if that'd worked in Sri Lanka, obviously we'd try it again now.
Shah not too shabby at slip, so at least one way or the other we will have a decent slip catcher this time outFFS. Grow a pair & make a choice already! There isn't a secret third option, it's a clear either-or shout. Try to see the positives each player brings, rather than the negatives. Strauss's slip-catching might work in his favour, for instance.
Where did I say it doesn't?Key... I wonder why the first chance average theory doesn't apply here...
Maybe they might, but I'm still not entirely certain they'd be right. As I say - for mine, it was the promotion to three that set Bell's career back so badly in 2002 and 2003 (let's not forget, there were one or two worries that he might have lost it completely and not be anything like the player he had looked like he was becoming - easy to forget now). Had he stayed at five, I honestly think that would never have happened. And who knows - maybe he might've got into the England side sooner that way, and not had the horrific Ashes 2005 he ended-up having.There is no question that Ian Bell is now a much better and more complete player than he was when he batted at five for Warks, something he has not done for a number of years now. So Warks must agree with the England side that he is clearly of most use to his side at number 3.
Well, Key averages 23 in 15 Tests using that theory. Not even Strauss' slump matches that.Where did I say it doesn't?