Some pretty serious batting from 4-9...might need all the runs too chasing what that bowling line up is going concedeTeam so far:
01.
02.
03.
04. Brian Lara
05. Steve Waugh
06. Garry Sobers
07. Andrew Flintoff
08. Shakib Al Hasan
09. Chaminda Vaas
10.
11. Shoaib Akthar
Strange combination of players.
Probably the longest tail I've ever had in a draft. Getting us out aint happening.Some pretty serious batting from 4-9...might need all the runs too chasing what that bowling line up is going concede
will bat Lara 3, tbh. Always think it was his best and most natural batting position, for both forms of the game.Probably the longest tail I've ever had in a draft. Getting us out aint happening.
Never realised he actually averaged over 60 at #3 in Tests; seems odd that always seemed so keen to bat four instead later in his career.will bat Lara 3, tbh. Always think it was his best and most natural batting position, for both forms of the game.
Tendulkar-wannabe, IMO.Never realised he actually averaged over 60 at #3 in Tests; seems odd that always seemed so keen to bat four instead later in his career.
He was a great batsman and a good judge of other players and decent, strategy and tactics wise. But he was very very ordinary when it comes to judging himself as a player when he was captain. Just seemed to have the most wild theories and ideas about where he would help the team the most as a batsman. Remember him batting 3 when others were out of form, and batting 5 or 6 in ODIs because he thought it was tougher for youngsters to bat in those positions than in the top 4 in that form of the game..Never realised he actually averaged over 60 at #3 in Tests; seems odd that always seemed so keen to bat four instead later in his career.
Lara was a superb no. 3 batsman in tests, and a superb opener and no. 3 batsman in ODIs. Later he decided to 'sacrifice' himself for the team and dropped down the order - a decision with which I never agreed - I don't think it helped his team or himself in any way.Never realised he actually averaged over 60 at #3 in Tests; seems odd that always seemed so keen to bat four instead later in his career.
More than facing the new ball, the reason why he was relatively more successful as a top order batsman is that he liked to pace his innings. I always got the feeling that he relished and enjoyed 50/1 type of scenarios more than 150/3 types. It was more evident in ODIs. He was not a Michael Bevan type batsman who loved chasing 110 runs off last 100 deliveries with 6 wickets remaining.Always used to feel Lara was a number 4 batsman. He just always seemed to bat there. How was he against the new ball though?