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So he's the CW muse? Frankly, now he's been used, I don't want him. Sloppy seconds ain't my style.Yeah fantastic repost.. Obviously Richard is never wrong, but at least he inspires some cracking retorts..
So he's the CW muse? Frankly, now he's been used, I don't want him. Sloppy seconds ain't my style.Yeah fantastic repost.. Obviously Richard is never wrong, but at least he inspires some cracking retorts..
That's not the difficult part the difficult part is inhaling the fumes.Well while they'd still fail to acknowledge his batting ability, they'd have to respect his ability to fart clouds of incense. That's pretty difficult to do.
pics??Don't mind if its a lady-friend or my mum or anything, but when its a bloke I'm just like **** off.
Clam down man Calm downpics??
ARG-esque?Haha, while I'm in full agreement that the term "good" being used to mean "good for batting" is very poor phrase-making, not all good batting pitches cause pointless Tests. ARG-esque pitches - ie, supine ones - are a different matter to a good batting pitch which is seen quite often and still plenty often enough ends-up producing if not neccessarily a result, then (provided no time is lost) five days of interesting cricket.
On that subject...
ARG-esque pitches in Test series of three games or less
I can just about tolerate the occasional one in a five-Test series (or six if applicable) but once you get a 650-plays-700 game in a two-Test series or a three-Test series that's basically reducing it to a one-off Test or a two-Test series.
Both of which I detest greatly.
Antigua Recreation Ground, I thinkARG-esque?
For my money, generally speaking, and excluding complete minefields, a pitch that favours bowlers will make for a better game of cricket than a pitch that favours batsmen.
Aye, I tend to throw around the abbreviation ARG as regularly as SCG and MCG, thinking it a tadge unfair to "colloquialise" certain grounds but not others.Antigua Recreation Ground, I thinkARG-esque?
I reckon simply threatening to throw would do fine. I'd never, ever be happy as a bowler if someone cost me runs because they wanted to "let the batsman know they were there". Strikes me as often if not more often simply a macho thing on the fielder's behalf rather than actually wanting to save the bowler runs down the line.Presumably fielders shy at the stumps when there is no chance of a run out just to let the run stealers know they are there - similar to the police regularly feeling the collars of known villians even if they have no reason to suspect them of any particular crime - I reckon that's a fair tactic and the downside of possibly giving away a few buzzers isn't an unfair price to pay
These, unfortunately, are things that there's no way around - apart from batsmen not backing-up too far. Somehow the fluked catch never seems too unfair to me, however, given the regularity with which simple catches are floored. Until the cure for the dropped catch is procured, I can't ever be too sorry to see the rarity that is the fluked catch.You could make out a similar argument in respect of the blistering straight drive for which the batsman's reward is to get his partner out when the bowler manages to deflect it onto the stumps or the crashing pull that balloons off short leg's arse into mid on's grateful hands
I agree with Richard above, saying that the umpire can decide (it's usually pretty obvious) if it was a genuine attempt to get someone out or just intimidation. Usually it's a genuine attempt, intimidation usually takes the form of throwing to the wk. What annoys me is that if they'd missed the stumps with a less good throw, the man backing up would have prevented any overthrows.Presumably fielders shy at the stumps when there is no chance of a run out just to let the run stealers know they are there - similar to the police regularly feeling the collars of known villians even if they have no reason to suspect them of any particular crime - I reckon that's a fair tactic and the downside of possibly giving away a few buzzers isn't an unfair price to pay
You could make out a similar argument in respect of the blistering straight drive for which the batsman's reward is to get his partner out when the bowler manages to deflect it onto the stumps or the crashing pull that balloons off short leg's arse into mid on's grateful hands