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The Best of Each Decade Birthday DRAFT

AldoRaine18

State Vice-Captain
Not completely settled on the batting order yet but roughly :

Barry Richards
.
Kumara Sangakkara
Everton Weekes
Frank Woolley
,
.
Michael Holding
Sydney Barnes
Courtney Walsh
Lance Gibbs

Thoughts?
 

watson

Banned
OK Chasingthedon, I'll post everyones teams at the end of this Round so we can all see how we're going (?). Obviously, I might not have the batting orders quite right.
 
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watson

Banned
I thought that this piece on Turner was interesting Ankitj;

Turner opened the bowling, delivering right-arm medium-pace with a low, square-on action off about seven yards. In 1888, at the Woolwich Arsenal, his delivery speed was measured at 55mph. He described himself as a fingerspinner, and was renowned for being able to bring the ball back sharply into a right-hand batsman. His great variety - his yorker was a feared delivery - was his strength.

He may have bowled like an English professional, but Turner batted like an Australian amateur. A dasher, he only scored two first-class centuries, but was good enough to open for Australia on occasion.

Ric Sissons on Charlie Turner | Cricinfo Magazine | ESPN Cricinfo
Also;

Quiet, gentle and dignified, Turner stood just under 5 ft 9 ins (175 cm) and was sturdily built. His appearance, demeanour and action belied his nickname; 'with a sudden swing around', wrote the English captain (name removed) 'he would come tripping up to the wicket in the most cheery and at the same time graceful manner imaginable'. He stood squarer to the batsman at the moment of delivery than most classical bowlers, relying on accuracy and change of pace. His stock ball was a medium-paced sharply turning off-break which he mixed with yorkers, leg-cutters and top-spinners; his lift and pace from the pitch were renowned. A courageous and tireless mainstay of the Australian attack at a time when the batting was weak, he was the first of the great modern medium-pacers, and one of the best bowlers of all time on helpful wickets. In 17 Test matches against England he took 101 wickets at 16, including 5 or more wickets in an innings 11 times; in all first-class matches he took 992 wickets at 14. His average of 7.68 in 1886-87 and aggregate of 106 in 1887-88 are Australian records that have seldom been approached. A free-hitting batsman, he scored a century against Surrey in 1888 that lived in the memory of Ranjitsinhji, and twice opened the innings in the 1890 Tests.

http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/turner-charles-thomas-biass-4759
Charles Turner and Sydney Barnes would have made a neat complementary pair of off-break V leg-break 'medium spinners'. With Barnes being the slightly faster of the two I think.
 
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watson

Banned
ROUND 8
99. Kyear2 - Vijay Merchant
100. Saint Kopite - Michael Clarke
101. Chasingthedon - Graeme Smith
102. AldoRaine18 - Courtney Walsh
103. Ankitj - Charlie Turner
104. Pothas - Frank Tyson
105. Camo999 - Clive Lloyd
106. ohnoitsyou - Wilfred Rhodes
107. Monk - Mitchell Johnson
108. Morgieb - Bill Woodfull
109. Fredfertang - Kevin Pietersen
110. Blakus - Gordon Greenidge
111. watson - Arthur Mailey
112. Howe_Zat
 
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Saint Kopite

First Class Debutant
My XI:-

1. Herbert Sutcliffe.
2.
3. George Headley. (C)
4. Stan McCabe.
5. Michael Clarke.
6. Andy Flower. (+)
7.
8. Fred Trueman.
9. George Lohmann.
10. Waqar Younis.
11.
 

Red

The normal awards that everyone else has
Monk's XI

- Len Hutton
- Arthur Morris
- Ricky Ponting
- Graeme Pollock
-
-
-
- Kapil Dev
- Hugh Trumble
-
- Curtly Ambrose
 

watson

Banned
Nice one aldo, SK, and Monk. Yes it would be interesting to see everyones teams lined up with the home stretch in sight.
 

kyear2

International Coach
Batting order looks good. The bowling attack is set up for Holding to go all out in short bursts and the others Rotate around him.
 

ohnoitsyou

International Regular
Wilfred Rhodes. <1880s

Archie Jackson

Rahul Dravid

Charles Macartney
Garfield Sobers
Wilfred Rhodes
Mike Proctor

Ray Lindwall
Andy Roberts
 

ankitj

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Updated:


<=1870s1880s1890s1900s1910s1920s1930s1940s1950s1960s1970s>=1980s
AldoRaine18xx


xxxx
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Ankitj
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Blakus

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Camo999xx
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Chasingthedon
xxxxx

x
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Fredfertangx
x x

xxxx
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Howe_Zat
xx
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Kyear2


xxxxxx
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Monkx


xx
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Morgiebx
xx
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ohnoitsyouxx
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Pothasx


xxx
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Saint Kopitex
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watson
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Red

The normal awards that everyone else has
Here's me jumping on the bandwagon...

Mitchell Johnson (1980s). Would I have selected him 6 months ago? Hell no. But since then, he's become the most influential player in world cricket. And the idea of him and Curtly bowling together is pretty sweet. And he has to keep his moustache.



Monk's XI

- Len Hutton
- Arthur Morris
- Ricky Ponting
- Graeme Pollock
-
-
-
- Kapil Dev
- Hugh Trumble
- Mitchell Johnson
- Curtly Ambrose
 

fredfertang

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
That's going to be tricky as the three I'm after are all still available - but which is most likely to survive another round?
 

fredfertang

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
The three are an opening bat, a spinner and a middle order bat, all of which I will need, but then I also have my eye on an all-rounder for later, who I suspect will survive intact to the end, but I won't be able to pick him if I go for the opener that I have in mind which, I suppose, is the whole point of the draft - well done Watson - its turning into a really interesting test this one
 

fredfertang

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
1. Vic Trumper
2.
3. Brian Lara
4. Ted Dexter
5. Kevin Pietersen
6.
7. Alan Knott
8. Harold Larwood
9. Joel Garner
10.
11. Ted McDonald


1980s

Now that's what I call a middle order worth watching
 

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