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What would bring Flintoff right back into the reckoning would be judging the bowlers on the basis of their middling performances: Harmison's stock would certainly plumett, as might Caddick's and Botham's. Suddenly, the new ball might be going to Fraser and Gough, with Hoggard coming on for Gough after 4-5 overs so the Yorkshireman could be fresh to take over from Fraser a few overs later. Of course... picking the seamers on the basis of their utility on sub-continental pitches might offer Flintoff most hope... but Gough and Simon Jones would lead the way on such pitches... and if you wanted 4 frontline bowlers, Tuffers and Panesar would get the other spots |
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Both contributed to their own injuries, by being overweight - both had power, one swung and seamed the ball - the other blasted batsmen out as their main weapons, Flintoff though can reverse swing the ball - and has a decent yorker.
__________________ Ern |
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| I'm not sure weight and fitness has much bearing on how well a big man can contribute: little folk who offer athleticism clearly have serious potential... but once you start looking a blokes built like prop forwards... the best you can hope for is that they are comparatively light on their feet for their size! Even at his least fit and carrying his most impressive beer-gut... Botham was still an outstanding slip catcher... and Inzi proved that you can be obese AND a world class batsman. Being rotund and bowling at 90mph might not be a good combination... but Warne is one of many to show that you can be portly and still bowl brilliantly if you have sufficient guile. |
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Botham had around 380 Test wickets at a good average, Flintoff has under 200 at not an outstanding average. I don't need to go onto five wicket hauls. Flintoff's future does seem to be in the balance. We should know by end of the winter tours.
__________________ "Checkout the big brain on Brett" Pulp Fiction |
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He may well have to give up test cricket and concentrate on one day matches as he won't be able to bowl the amount of overs needed in tests. The saddest bit of the whole scenario is that he has played on many occasions when he probably shouldn't and always been a willing workhorse and that fact is probably going to cut short his career. |
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Botham was the better bat (just), but Flintoff in 2005 batted the orathadox way - and was a better prospect than Botham ever was IMO, but reverted to giving his wicket away to cheap, in part because of lack of match practice. Botham was not a better fielder than Flintoff, IMO there is no evidence to say he was - he was not as athletic as Flintoff. As for the bowling - had Flintoff not had a rubbish start to his career, he would have been the better bowler IMO. Flintoff v Botham both at their fittest and best - Flintoff is/was the better bowler IMO. Even now with his injury - I can't see a better bowler at this time in world cricket, let alone English cricket.
__________________ Ern Last edited by Ernest : 11-09-2007 at 10:00 PM. |
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Worldwide... the Cricket Ratings have the following at the top of the heap: 1 M. Muralidaran SL 920 920 v Bangladesh, 11/07/2007 2 M. Ntini SA 856 863 v India, 26/12/2006 3 S.M. Pollock SA 730 909 v England, 25/11/1999 4 S.E. Bond NZ 722 778 v West Indies, 09/03/2006 5 S.R. Clark AUS 720 720 v England, 02/01/2007 6 Mohammad Asif PAK 710 710 v South Africa, 26/01/2007 7 A. Kumble IND 702 859 v Sri Lanka, 26/01/1994 8 M.J. Hoggard ENG 700 795 v Sri Lanka, 28/05/2006 9 Shoaib Akhtar PAK 698 855 v New Zealand, 26/12/2003 10 Zaheer Khan IND 678 678 v England, 09/08/2007 11 C.D. Collymore WI 673 700 v India, 02/07/2006 12 W.P.U.J.C. Vaas SL 671 800 v India, 02/12/2005 Flintoff fully deserves his spot just behind that crew... as he's clearly more reliable than most... but without in any way wanting to put Flintoff down or undervalue his value to his captain in even the least promising of situations... I've no problem with the ratings listing the 10 seamers in this list ahead of the Lancastrian! Last edited by Rachael : 11-09-2007 at 10:18 PM. |
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. I guess Pollock, Mcgrath, Asif, Bond are just lucky and freddie is unlucky.![]() Its easy for anyone to just claim that a player is the best. You keep doing this with Freddie without ever backing up your claim. I used to think that you actually made some good points but you continually praise Flintoff because of biasedness. Keep it up and no one will believe anything you say. You are starting to sound like Rachael now (wr to technical this and technical that). Sorry to burst your bubble Ern but besides 2005 (which you cannot refrain from mentioning in every post involving Flintoff) Freddie is just an average cricketer. Talented yes but never delivered.
__________________ 434, world record for the shortest period. Whos choking now? |
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Pollock, McGrath et al were unique - I am not denying that, Flintoff did deliver in 2004, again in 2005, he won a test as captain in India in 2006 with a good batting average I might add for that series. (before injury), he then went on to win the CB (?) series in Australia as captain. He did not deliver in Australia in 2006, and with the squad that was selected g_f, which other captain could have done any better?. As for your general comments can you deny he has been injured more than not since 2005?, before that were the not more catches than would be considered normal dropped of his bowling?, excuses maybe - but also valid excuses. Again as a bowler he without injury would have been up with the best, he has got the best players in the World out - that's a fact. Brian Lara had not a clue how to play him. His batting has deteriated to a point where he could be considered to be a specialist bowler, don't let the fact that he had a drunken episode on a pedalo blind you to what he has acheived. He was hailed as King (and not by me) in 2005, I always suggested that the victory parade was a disgrace - and that England underestimated Pakistan after their Ashes win. As for being "biased", biased for what - I just write what I see, and unlike many - I don't run with the hair, and hunt with the hounds. I believe he is a top bowler because he is hard to get away, he gets top wickets - he inspires the other bowlers. Look at what else England have to offer, and then tell me I am wrong?. Quote:
In England last tour of South Africa - he was second only to Hoggard (by a small margin in wickets), after Harmison had broke down. Not the worst record in the world - and if he is finished that's down to his ankle (by being overbowled), not by lack of ability.
__________________ Ern Last edited by Ernest : 12-09-2007 at 09:51 AM. |
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