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| The lack of experience isn't an excuse! First and foremost, because we should believe this is the best England have to offer. Secondly, none of the batsmen (maybe Strauss) are showing clear signs of improvement. Similarly, Anderson certainly isn't improving. Compare his performances v India in the Tests and ODIs to his recen Test and ODI performances...
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| How often have these current players faced the sort of pressure they have encountered in this game? The level of expectation was huge, and the way the game went left the players only too aware that the game was within the grasp of either side and likely to turn on just a couple of special performances. The pitch and conditions were just sporting enough to ensure batsmen needed to play very old-fashioned cricket (without actually offering the bowler that much when the batsmen eschewed forcing shots) and the blustery wind made finding a rhythm with a ball very, very difficult indeed. Very few tests are played in conditions that would place so much emphasis on experience... and it's no co-incidence that the most assured England batting partnership of the match was between the two most senior England batsmen (who, it should be added, batted beautifully, displaying excellent judgement matched by exquisite touch). In terms of developing the players, Moores could not have scripted a more useful experience: this could serve as a platform for building a much more resillient side. What remains to be seen is whether some momentum can be developed in the next game... but also whether the South African series will be too much, too soon: it may well turn out that way... but if England can compete well throughout the series then the side that merges at the end of the summer will, quite possibly with much the same personnel, be on the sort of roll that set up the 2005 Ashes victory. ps. In terms of improvement.... Strauss has today offered an object lesson in accumulating runs without undue risk in the toughest of circumstances (in a manner that contrasts hugely with his doomed approach to the 2007 Ashes); Cook has, throughout the two Tests, shown enormous progress in his strokeplay against the seamers; Vaughan has shown us that he's playing at a level that he has not managed since his early glory days in Australia; Pietersen has demonstrated a determination to bat to a plan as a senior player; Broad has done an enormous amount to confirm the general perception that he is a very special find indeed; Panesar has shown that he's through his ropey winter and that whilst he's not where he needs to be, he has huge potential. I'd concede that Bell, Collingwood, Ambrose, Anderson and Sidebottom have done little to enhance their reputations in these two Tests... though we've had glimpses of Bell's development as a truly exquisite batsman, and even Anderson has shown why selectors have persisted with him over the years - I'd still like to see him replaced, but after years of underperforming, Lee has finally matured into a world class bowler... and I'd certainly not rule out Anderson eventually doing the same. |
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England's not alone in this: SA and the WI are no different. Moreover, it's not just spin: captains and coaches everywhere are comfortable with setting fields for containment with back of a length, heavy ball speedsters like Flintoff... but hardly anyone, anywhere, seems confident handling attacking bowlers who should be encouraged to pitch the ball up and who should be positively encouraging aggressive batting as a means to effect a dismissal. I was impressed at the use of Jones stood up to Hoggard to unsettle batsmen in the 2007 Ashes... and have been impressed by the resent resurgence of guile in the form of well disguised slower balls and variations in pace that has emerged from ODI cricket with Fernando, Vettori and Akhtar the prime exponents... but how many countries, these days, actively seek a latter day Bedser rather than another passable speedster? |
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But they had superior skill's when it came to discussing, listening and effectively formulating a viable compromise between the individual veiwpoints of their spinners and themselves. Again we arrive back to a leadership issue. Maybe England just expects their captains to be the font of all knowledge and influence in the team, because it still lives in the shadow of the Brearley era. Which would be a shame because the world and effective leadership skill's have moved on a fair bit over 30 years. |
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| I'm not convinced with the current four man bowling attack. At present neither Jimmy Andreson nor Stuart Broad are really good enough to be part of a four man bowling attack. Jimmy just isn't consistent enough and bowls absolute rubbish far too often. Broad is still very young and doesn't look like taking enough wickets yet (as part of a five man attack this isn't so much of a problem). Get a fit Flintoff into a five man attack and we have a better proposition. Is Tremlett that quick? I don't remember him being a speed merchant. The batting still worries me. The second innings performance was a major improvement in so much that the intent to score was there. Collingwood, for me, is the man in the most danger but Bell must be worried too. These wonderful 15 and 20s he scores are of no use to anyone. |
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1. No player should be dropped unless someone better is demanding his place: right now, no one is really battering down the door (though in fairness, Hoggard should be the incumbent, with Anderson the one under pressure to challenge for his place). 2. Both are young enough to be worth investing in. Broad, in particular, has excited interest and done plenty to warrant ongoing investment. If the four bowlers are the best four and still aren't good enough then sobeit: better to put them under pressure as they were in this game and give them the opportunity to develop than to bring in an extra bowler so one or other can be carried as a passenger! |
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i) Players must be dropped for consistent poor performances, or consistent failures to achieve their potential, or consistent demonstration of an inability to follow a plan. Doing otherwise merely reinforces failure. ii) The notion that a player can 'demand' a place in the Test team whilst pounding the county circuit may be true in a few instances, but is seldom the norm and hence shouldn't be made into an all-encompassing requirement. Often enough, selectors need to do precisely that: select. Selection is not a process of picking those who top the averages or the computer ratings - it involves using one's experience and intuition in judging potential as well as temperament. For this reason, generally, the task is entrusted to ex-cricketers, and not to professional mathematicians, despite the latter's acknowledged superiority in performing statistical computations. In any case, the gulf in class that should exist between proper Test cricket and current county cricket implies that statistical analysis would have poor predictive power.
__________________ A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes Mark Twain |
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The fact is that some players suddenly find a bit of county form, and then start "knocking on the door" but seldom do they go onto long Test careers. Selectors have to judge on more than just purple patches, but on perceived class as well as performance. Bell for example is a guy that probably gets selected based on how he plays, the way he times the ball, rather than purely on runs in county cricket. He has the talent, but probably not the stats. I would like to see him live up to that, and if he does, then he will be a very good player for England. Last edited by flanflinger : 27-05-2008 at 01:37 PM. |
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England never have an "official" V/C during home tests. Quote:
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If county stats were the be all and end all why is Ramps one of the biggest failures ever at test cricket?? And why can players like Vaughan, Trescothick, Collingwood, Bell, Strauss.... all have better test averages and in Vaughan, Tres and Collys case poor FC averages.
__________________ Mark. |
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