| | |
| |
| Welcome to the World-A-Team Cricket Forum. We promote friendly, good-natured, quality cricket discussion. |
| |||||||
| England Cricket Forum A forum for domestic cricket discussion. Tell us about your favourite club in England. Who are the key players to watch? - Featured Link: Cricbuzz.com - Fastest live text coverage & Live Audio |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
| ||||
| Quote:
Harmison - Tremlett Trescothick - Carberry Vaughan - Shah Hoggard - Anderson Jones - Plunkett |
| ||||
| We would be stuffed Ern as the likes of Anderson,Plunkett and Mahmood have already shown they aren't a patch on the players they would be replacing unless they improve dramatically. I guess we could be looking to change the balance of the side long term if Rashid develops quickly as he could perhaps become a replacement for Flintoff in that he would be the all rounder. Harmison needs replacing anyway so hopefully Tremlett or Broad can become good bowlers,they have shown as much promise so far as Harmison and Jones did in their debut summers in 2002 and yes i do know Broad is yet to play a test but he has shown enough about him one day cricket to know he won't be a wasted experiment. Vaughan being out would be a big blow but Collingwood would take over as captain and Strauss can come back to open so no real disaster there. Trescothick and Jones have been out for far too long to count but Hoggard would be a killer blow if he and Flintoff were not able to get their fitness back it would hurt us more than we could imagine. |
| |||
| In terms of England's strength in depth I cannot recall a better time in a generation: Openers: Vaughan, Strauss, Cook (with Bell capable of moving up) - possibly Tresco Middle order: Bell, Pietersen, Collingwood, Shah, Joyce Wicket-keeping: Read, Foster, Ambrose, Mustard and the obvious pretender All-rounders: Flintoff, Broad, Swann, Sidebottom Specialist bowlers: Panesar, Hoggard, Harmison, Anderson, Tremlett (possibly Jones) Fringe: Hildreth, Rashid, Bresnan, Davies Last edited by Rachael : 07-12-2007 at 12:30 PM. |
| | |||
| |||
| Ha ha! Not even the most biased Notts fan would refer to Sid as an all-rounder! He bats at ten or eleven for Notts! Broad may get there one day but he sure isn't there yet. England has no obvious replacement for Flintoff, no surprise as there aren't many of his sort around full stop. |
| | |||
| |||
| Few players in the history of the game have been good enough to get in as a batsman OR a bowler... but of the bowlers... those I mentioned know enough about batting to be regarded as lower-middle order players rather than as tail-end bunnies. Sidebottom's just played at No 8, and did just fine. Broad would be stronger, as would Swann, but none of that trio should be listed alongside the likes of Giddens, Mullally, Tufnell and Malcolm! I certainly don't think a batsman has to be as accomplished as Giles to bat at 8. |
| | |||
| |||
| There is Ashley Noffke who doesn't seem likely for a baggy green berth. Does he qualify as an Englishman? You could maybe borrow him.
__________________ |
| | ||||
| ||||
| Seamer I am reporting you to the ASIO hotline.....thats just downright subversive. |
| ||||
| To be honest the talent is there, the trick is to develop them that extra step to become test players. It's hard to quantify what that magic ingredient is to turn a talented individual into a test class performer, but it surely must exist. I remember vividly a tour of India when the front line bowlers were injured and all commentators were nervous that the bowling attack was lead by Hoggard and Flintoff with a handful of caps between them... they turned out ok despite all the respeced guru's fears. My point is that all international cricketers start out unproven talent, they need the appropriate handling to become test performers. |
| ||||
| Quote:
Quote:
__________________ Ern |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |