True he did play a lot of his cricket in "slower times" where a wicket was more valued than run-rate, but his captaincy did coincide with Aus playing the far more agressive version of cricket of 4 an over.marc71178 said:Yes, but a lot of his career was played at a time of slower rates around the world, and he's still got a higher rate.
marc71178 said:Not anyone, no.
I think by general fair minded cricket analysts they are rated about right.Craig said:This has been on my mind for quite a while and the question for me is, is South Africa the most over-rated team on the international circut?
Thats a decent assessment of the team 5-10 years ago. The nature of the team has changed dramatically over the past few years.Arjun said:The South Africans, for a start, are a well-composed team, where every player serves a purpose. Unlike teams with stronger individual selections, such as England, they actually combine well.
You must never have seen Australia or India play then. SA batting is NOT special.open365 said:I think South Africa are genraly over-rated and i think they underperform a lot.
I mean, i don't think i've ever seen a side with as many players avergaing over or close to 50 as SA have, on paper they are a lot better than they are in practice.
Well by that criteria, SA will never challenge.oz_fan said:If South Africa are to challenge the likes of Australia, Gibbs needs to value his wicket more, Pollock needs to return to somewhat near his best and Steyn has to provide good support for Ntini. (Boje, Botha, etc) they never make an impact.
Well he is only 22 really, and already is getting more and more accurate and had a very good Test series against NZ, you can't surely write him off this early?Goughy said:And Steyn will not crack test cricket as a top quality support bowler.
Well I hope Neil McKenzie gets a recall and does well - I've always been a fan (as with Dippenaar and every big score he gets I'm genuinely happy for him).Goughy said:You must never have seen Australia or India play then. SA batting is NOT special.
SA have 7 main batsmen, 8 if Neil McKenzie is included (he is looking like he may get a recall).
of those 8 main batsmen
1 averages over 50- Kallis
1 averages 45-50 - Smith
1 averages 40-45 - Gibbs
3 average 35-40- Prince, de Villiers, Rudolph
2 average 30-35 - Dippenaar, McKenzie
I see little to no evidence to suggest SA batting is special. In fact it is quite weak which is probably the reason for their recent decline.
You could probably apply that to them at Test level as well.Scaly piscine said:Most of that could apply to NZ at ODI level as well.
What does being more 'aggressive' or looking to keep the score moving translate to smashing loads of four's and sixes? If he looks for more singles (if possible though), they can have just as much effect IMO, especially if you have somebody like Prince at the crease.Langeveldt said:Because if he started hooking and pulling from ball one he wouldn't average 50..
I never understand everyones annoyance with Kallis.. If he was a more agressive batsman, true he might be a "team player" or whatever BS you want to call him, but he'd average 36 and would be no better than, say Ian Bell or Craig McMillan.. Why would we want that?
Especially when you realise that the averages for Prince, Rudolph & Dippenaar are significantly boosted by filling their boots against Bang or the current version of Zim.Goughy said:You must never have seen Australia or India play then. SA batting is NOT special.
SA have 7 main batsmen, 8 if Neil McKenzie is included (he is looking like he may get a recall).
of those 8 main batsmen
1 averages over 50- Kallis
1 averages 45-50 - Smith
1 averages 40-45 - Gibbs
3 average 35-40- Prince, de Villiers, Rudolph
2 average 30-35 - Dippenaar, McKenzie
I see little to no evidence to suggest SA batting is special. In fact it is quite weak which is probably the reason for their recent decline.
Im not writing him off. Its called evaluating talent and I do not think he is up to the task of being a top quality test bowler (ie sub 27 av).Autobahn said:Well he is only 22 really, and already is getting more and more accurate and had a very good Test series against NZ, you can't surely write him off this early?
For all his slowness, I think I'd rather Jacques Kallis in my team than most other players. And he did average 50 against Australia in the six Test Matches last summer.Craig said:Jacques Kallis is always somebody who mustify's me, how can somebody like him is such a good player of the short ball let somebody like Brett Lee bounce him, and then get his 100 and then start hooking and pulling him?
I also consider how much of a 'team player' he really is, batting at his own pace and not looking to keep scoring more often, i'm not suggesting he goes out there and bat's like Ponting, pr Gilchrist, or Hayden, Pieterson etc. but to look for more one's and two's and even three's and if you are doing that more often then that has a greater impact IMO then just standing there and scoring whenever it suits Jacques Henry Kallis.
.
howardj said:For all his slowness, I think I'd rather Jacques Kallis in my team than most other players. And he did average 50 against Australia in the six Test Matches last summer.
To be fair though, Jacques has also scored alright off the pitch.benchmark00 said:"Jacques Kallis: scores big, and scores all the time "
Surely that can be interchanged with Warney's name...
He also scored a role in The Lord of the Rings trilogy as the hobbit.howardj said:To be fair though, Jacques has also scored alright off the pitch.
Couple of points i would argue with:Goughy said:Im not writing him off. Its called evaluating talent and I do not think he is up to the task of being a top quality test bowler (ie sub 27 av).
To break it down.
-He is quick but not THAT quick. He is not top notch pace but is capable of pushing the batsman on the back foot.
-He is short. Unable to take advantage of tracks with uneven bounce. And this also means he cannot take wickets with surprizing bounce off a length.
-He swings the ball early, but once the shine has gone he becomes near cannon fodder.
-He does not have the control to work a pre-conceived plan against batsmen. He also releases the pressure by bowling loose deliveries at inopportune times. Most of his wickets will come from special unplayable balls that are very impressive. However, the really good guys do this AS WELL as working batsmen out.
- Im not convinced by his attitude.
Couple of points i would argue with:Goughy said:Im not writing him off. Its called evaluating talent and I do not think he is up to the task of being a top quality test bowler (ie sub 27 av).
To break it down.
-He is quick but not THAT quick. He is not top notch pace but is capable of pushing the batsman on the back foot.
-He is short. Unable to take advantage of tracks with uneven bounce. And this also means he cannot take wickets with surprizing bounce off a length.
-He swings the ball early, but once the shine has gone he becomes near cannon fodder.
-He does not have the control to work a pre-conceived plan against batsmen. He also releases the pressure by bowling loose deliveries at inopportune times. Most of his wickets will come from special unplayable balls that are very impressive. However, the really good guys do this AS WELL as working batsmen out.
- Im not convinced by his attitude.