Pollock didn't lose his peak until 2003. You can't say otherwise because there is no proof and he was equally as effective between 2001-2003 as he was prior to 2001.Hayden's score against Walsh and Bishop involved apparently about 5 dropped catches. Completely worthless. Pollock was no longer any good on flat pitches by 2001/02 as I've already mentioned, and Kallis has never had a peak, he's always been up and down. Shoaib Akhtar barely bowled in the Hayden innings in Sharjah in 2002/03 because it was too hot, Vaas has never had a peak either, same as Kallis (he's always up-and-down and was 100% down in the game in which Hayden made twin centuries), and Ntini and Nel may have bowled OK in 2005/06 but they were handicapped by diabolical fielding.
Try again.
Hayden's century at Sharjah was a tremendous knock, anyways more Thilan talk IMO, I think he should be in the ODI side.
Akhtar bowled 31 balls to Hayden in which he scored 10 runs. Not a big deal at all.When Shoaib was at his peak, he was hitting the 155kph mark and swinging it aswell. Hardly faced him? He bowled 14 overs, in short spells to Hayden.
Ah yes, I wasn't so much disagreeing with you regarding the seam bowling [that's why I didn't quote you], just making a point that in the context of the match, that innings was tremendous.
Hayden's knock in Sharjah involved virtually no combatting of seam-bowling (it was simply too hot for seamers to bowl properly - absolutely ridiculous that they were playing in that heat, not only beyond a farce but also very dangerous to health) and he was also dropped at least once.
It was admirable to defy the heat to bat for more than 5 minutes without collapsing, for sure. But the knock probed nothing about his skill against good-quality seamers.
I can actually say otherwise, because that's how it happened. Pollock between 2001/02 and 2003/04 (and thereafter) remained lethal on seaming decks and was anodyne on non-seaming ones.Pollock didn't lose his peak until 2003. You can't say otherwise because there is no proof and he was equally as effective between 2001-2003 as he was prior to 2001.
No, Shoaib did not bowl at remotely close to 155kph in Sharjah (he did in Columbo where conditions were more suitable to bowl). Shoaib bowled 31 deliveries at Hayden, including just 4 with the new ball. As Wisden stated, he "could not cope with the heat". Hardly surprising either, given it was 50 degrees Celsius +.When Shoaib was at his peak, he was hitting the 155kph mark and swinging it aswell. Hardly faced him? He bowled 14 overs, in short spells to Hayden.
No, Hayden destroyed him because he was down. See, the bowler delivers the ball, so he controls the game. It would make zero sense for the batsman to do the destroying before the ball is bowled, because, well, that's not how cricket works.Vaas, up and down, coicindently his 100% down, the time he gets destroyed Hayden. I wonder why? The irony?
"Doesn't work"? What are you on about. The SAfricans dropped countless catches in that 2005/06 series (and plenty in 2001/02 as well). That's the way it happened. If you state otherwise, you weren't watching or were ignoring the drops for some odd reason.South Africans poor fielders? Nope, that doesn't work.
I did, Nel is another of my favourite bowlers. He was let down by his fielders though, as were all the bowlers. Ntini is one of the leading wicket-takers of recent times because of his tirelessness and the fact that he's not the worst bowler you'll see. He is not an outstanding one, by any stretch of the imagination.Ntini at his peak was very difficult to contend with. How can you say that he "wasn't all that good" when his one of the leading wicket-takers of the past decade? Nel was also very threatening, if you watched that match.
Daym, seems it was a waste of time me looking this up.Akhtar bowled 31 balls to Hayden in which he scored 10 runs. Not a big deal at all.
Hayden made most of his runs against the spinners.
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In the other thread you said between 2001-2004 that South African decks were as flat as anything and he didn't play in England until midway through 2003. Where were all of this seaming decks that helped Pollock's average then?I can actually say otherwise, because that's how it happened. Pollock between 2001/02 and 2003/04 (and thereafter) remained lethal on seaming decks and was anodyne on non-seaming ones.
You see, if you'd actually watched his games you'd know that, because it was completely impossible to miss.
Ok, and what about the 89 he scored in the next Test where Waqar Younis was bowling superbly? What's the excuse for that one? Not good enough or was it too hot?Richard said:No, Shoaib did not bowl at remotely close to 155kph in Sharjah (he did in Columbo where conditions were more suitable to bowl). Shoaib bowled 31 deliveries at Hayden, including just 4 with the new ball. As Wisden stated, he "could not cope with the heat". Hardly surprising either, given it was 50 degrees Celsius +.
Yeah, he was down because he was obviously demoralised from being carted by a world-class batsman. There is no other excuse for it. When a batsman gets going, it's not the most unusual thing to see a bowlers head drop. Hayden's been one of the most intimidating batsman of the modern era - he even intimidated one of the intimidating pace bowlers in recent times: Jason Gillespie.Richard said:No, Hayden destroyed him because he was down. See, the bowler delivers the ball, so he controls the game. It would make zero sense for the batsman to do the destroying before the ball is bowled, because, well, that's not how cricket works.
You might notice, BTW, that Hayden has never scored runs against Vaas when he's been on top of his game. Nor have very many, because he's exceptionally good when on top of his game.
You make it sound like the fielders were blindly misfielding the ball on purpose and that anything that hit the bat was instant runs. What a copout. Don't quite remember any noticiably drop catches from that innings.Richard said:"Doesn't work"? What are you on about. The SAfricans dropped countless catches in that 2005/06 series (and plenty in 2001/02 as well). That's the way it happened. If you state otherwise, you weren't watching or were ignoring the drops for some odd reason.
I did, Nel is another of my favourite bowlers. He was let down by his fielders though, as were all the bowlers. Ntini is one of the leading wicket-takers of recent times because of his tirelessness and the fact that he's not the worst bowler you'll see. He is not an outstanding one, by any stretch of the imagination.
As I say - you're far too reliant on averages and don't look enough at what actually happened. There was the odd flat deck in South Africa on which Pollock got decent figures on (this one, this one and this one) despite in reality posing little threat. In Zimbabwe, England, Australia and Pakistan he encountered 7 surfaces that offered nothing to seam and did nothing much on any of them. He also encountered a couple of seamers and excelled.In the other thread you said between 2001-2004 that South African decks were as flat as anything and he didn't play in England until midway through 2003. Where were all of this seaming decks that helped Pollock's average then?
You think it cooled down in a week? The Second and Third Tests of that series were both playing in utterly ridiculous conditions. Why you mention Waqar Younis either I'm not sure - he'd been useless for a couple of years by then.Ok, and what about the 89 he scored in the next Test where Waqar Younis was bowling superbly? What's the excuse for that one? Not good enough or was it too hot?
No, he wasn't. He got going because Vaas was bowling poorly and the pitch was a rank road, not the other way around.Yeah, he was down because he was obviously demoralised from being carted by a world-class batsman. There is no other excuse for it. When a batsman gets going, it's not the most unusual thing to see a bowlers head drop.
No, they weren't misfielding on purpose. They were, however, misfielding with huge regularity and that made some good bowling from Nel and Ntini look pretty anodyne. Throughout the 6 Tests.You make it sound like the fielders were blindly misfielding the ball on purpose and that anything that hit the bat was instant runs. What a copout. Don't quite remember any noticiably drop catches from that innings.
That averages aren't everything. Ntini has many times bowled utterly terribly in that time, including a good few Tests against Australia. He has sometimes also bowled well - on both seamers and non-seamers - but he's been poor more than good. An overall average is not an accurate way of summising a bowler.You say that after 2001 that batting became easier and yet since that period Ntini has averaged under 30 but yet he is not an outstanding bowler. Where is the logic?
You don't take a 10fer against India and pose little threat. It just proves that you're a class act and furthermore proves that you are wrong about Shaun Pollock.As I say - you're far too reliant on averages and don't look enough at what actually happened. There was the odd flat deck in South Africa on which Pollock got decent figures on (this one, this one and this one) despite in reality posing little threat. In Zimbabwe, England, Australia and Pakistan he encountered 7 surfaces that offered nothing to seam and did nothing much on any of them. He also encountered a couple of seamers and excelled.
4 for 55 off 17 overs, against the best batting lineup in world cricket. Useless? I think not. Give credit where it's due.Richard said:You think it cooled down in a week? The Second and Third Tests of that series were both playing in utterly ridiculous conditions. Why you mention Waqar Younis either I'm not sure - he'd been useless for a couple of years by then.
Nope, it is the other way round. You just think that because of your ludicrous views on Matthew Hayden.Richard said:No, he wasn't. He got going because Vaas was bowling poorly and the pitch was a rank road, not the other way around.
So Ntini or Nel bowl a decent ball to Hayden, which he cracks through the covers and a fielder dives widely to his left, only to just faintly miss it and this somehow discredits Hayden? Because I don't recall Hayden smashing the ball to a flat-footed fieldsmen who didn't have to move and then see them just miss the ball.Richard said:No, they weren't misfielding on purpose. They were, however, misfielding with huge regularity and that made some good bowling from Nel and Ntini look pretty anodyne. Throughout the 6 Tests.
The fact is that Hayden faced Ntini when he was at his peak and most dangerous. Hayden made runs against him. Ntini is one of the more difficult bowlers to face for left-handers.Richard said:That averages aren't everything. Ntini has many times bowled utterly terribly in that time, including a good few Tests against Australia. He has sometimes also bowled well - on both seamers and non-seamers - but he's been poor more than good. An overall average is not an accurate way of summising a bowler.
Not entirely sure I agree. There was that phase where the discussion took on ****** undertones with all that dirty talk about knickers.Have to say the discussion in the last three posts is much more interesting than the one in the last three pages.
Score some runs at domestic level or when the field is back and then we will talk.anyways more Thilan talk IMO, I think he should be in the ODI side.
Team Matches Inns Not Out Runs HS Ave 100 50
Colombo Cricket Club 45 76 6 2163 169 30.90 4 13
Sri Lanka A 37 67 7 2314 140 38.56 2 16
No, it's actually: Dayum.Daymn*.
Actually, you might be right there; that seems slightly better, tbh.No, it's actually: Dayum.