| | |
| |
| Welcome to the World-A-Team Cricket Forum. We promote friendly, good-natured, quality cricket discussion. |
| |||||||
| International Test Cricket Discuss current and forthcoming matches; general cricket issues, women's Test cricket and First-class matches involving Associate and Affiliate members. |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
| | |||
| |||
| Quote:
Code: Mat I NO Runs HS1 HS2 HS3 Ave 100 50 0 filtered 6 12 2 493 72 69* 63 49.30 0 5 0 In Crawley's case... you could have argued for ditching him BEFORE his final tour of Australia... but ditching him AFTER it made no sense whatsoever: he held his head as most around him failed... and his two unbeaten innings.... though doing little for his stats.... were more impressive than many knocks that have returned far, far bigger totals. No matter what had gone before.... the series justified sticking with him: Code: Series Win Mat I NO Runs HS1 HS2 HS3 Ave 100 50 0
The Ashes (Aus/Eng) in Australia, 2002/03 [Series]
Aus 3 6 2 162 69* 35* 33 40.50 0 1 1 |
| |||
| Rachael - in 02/03 Crawley was extraordinarily tentative, with a huge fear of getting out. Although his stats seem impressive, I recall his painstaking innings at Sydney - it was fine when Stewart was in, but then he displayed a complete inability to take any initiative whatsoever, and did not change his game when the tail joined him. England's last five wickets fell for around 30.
__________________ third-umpire.com |
| |||
| Hugely tentative... or supremely professional? Crawley batted like a man committed to going on, and on, and on: Stewart came in a flailed like a man convinced he couldn't last and just rode his luck to the inevitable delivery. For all his bravado... Stewart never graduated much beyond a schoolboyish obsession with putting bat to ball. He could manage to leave balls that demanded to be left... but he was never at ease unless playing cricket as if it were a poor man's baseball. Crawley's career since that successful tour has gone from strength to strength: few batsmen have been as difficult to dislodge in recent years, or as good at turning solid starts into matchwinning knocks. Shame it hasn't been with England Last edited by Rachael : 21-12-2007 at 10:03 PM. |
| |||
| Quote:
So, how do you explain this - v Zimbabwe 2 3 0 75 56 15 4 25.00 0 1 0 or this - v Pakistan 3 5 1 31 17 12* 2 7.75 0 0 2 or this - v New Zealand 7 11 1 204 69* 31 30 20.40 0 1 2 I could go on but it's boring isn't it? It doesn't mean anything just pulling stats out and holding them up as an example to prove what is an extremely tenuous point. In answer to your question, I have no doubt that Ramprakash raised his game against Australia and showed glimpses of the potential that he clearly had, but sadly wasn't able to reproduce consistently enough against all opposition to realistically maintain a place in the Test side, but as far as you're concerned you would have selected him regardless because of his returns against Australia, did I get that right? You do not select players because they 'happen' to have good returns against specific countries, you select them produce consistent performances against all opposition - home and away and that should continue to be the criteria for selection in my opinion, and that's precisely the reason Ramprakash was not persisted with, regardless of his returns against Australia. Mark Ramprakash is a wonderfully fluid and elegant strokemaker with excellent technique, as his returns in Country Cricket demonstrate, it's a great shame he wasn't able to reproduce that kind of form on the Test stage consistently enough to hold his place. It doesn't matter that Ramps was 'elegant', at the end of the day he's judged on his returns and an average from 52 games of just above the mid twenties simply isn't good enough in International Test Cricket. I know why our perspectives and opinions on cricket are so diverse - we look at it from totally different perspectives. You appear to enjoy the technical and skill aspect to the game whereas I look at it from a results orientated perspective. That's why I like gritty street fighters like Hussain and Collingwood who may not be the most elegant players around but they grit it out and dig deep when it matters to grind out results, which is presumably why you dislike them so much - they're not always nice to look at and watch but they get results - and that's what really matters at the end of the day. |
| | |||
| |||
| I've no objection to arguments that Fletcher was right to dispense with Ramps: I disagree, but they are fair enough - I'd just like to see them made without the unsustainable argument that Ramps "couldn't make the step up to Test Cricket": one only need prove one's worth once against the strongest opponents to dispense with that argument. The argument that ditching Ramps was right can be made (more coherently) without that argument. For what it's worth.... I long defended Fletcher's right to pick bits-n-pieces nobodies and folk with more temperament than talent because (quite aside from anything else) it was quite self-evidently the only way he stood any chance of delivering. I also felt that for so long as he was coach.. he needed the opportunity to show just how far his approach could take the side. Whilst defending Fletcher's right to build a side around the temperaments of Tresco, Hussain and Collingwood.. I never lost sight of the fact that other ways existed: the fact that Fletcher didn't have the skills to get the most out of key players should certainly not, to my mind, be taken as evidence that those players were incapable of fulfilling their potential. I continue to regard getting the most out of such talents as the principle responsibility of the coach: I don't doubt for one moment that a different coach could have got much, much more from Crawley, Ramps and Caddick back then... and from Bell, Read and Harmison more recently. Now we just need to hope that Moores might be the man to do that for the next more fragile temperament... Last edited by Rachael : 21-12-2007 at 11:07 PM. |
| |||
| Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Some people may not have liked some of the methodologies and techniques he employed as a coach, but no-one can say they were not effective. But you're arguing that he could have got a lot more out of his players than he did and I simply do not agree and the results speak for themselves. |
| |||
| Quote:
Quote:
|
| ||||
| I find the most laughable thing about the Ramprakash debate is the fact that because he won a z-list celebrity dancing competition that he must be mentally tougher now and will be able to adapt to international cricket again.If anybody believes that then they are mad. Ramps,like Hick and Crawley had more than enough chances and they failed,end of discussion. |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |