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played against Matt at Arundel Castle where he helped himself to 120 against a very good attack including Richard Stemp and some minor county seamers when he was on the MCC GRoundstaff as a Young Pro.
fantastic player, bats long, old school approach. He'll be an excellent foil for Warner's fireworks.
@pj310 was an MCC Young Pro at the same time Renners was and is a good friend of Matt I believe.
*An Official Foo-Approved guitarist since Sept 2023.
And never ever pick Gareth Batty for anything ever again involving England.
The fun part of Oz-SA is going to be watching Shamsi bowl.
Modest flower I am, I also recall some old fucker called Gassage bunting a former England seamer (Mark Alleyne) for 20 off 5 balls, all through extra cover in that game, which resulted in "You can't bowl there mate." from me.
*An Official Foo-Approved guitarist since Sept 2023.
*An Official Foo-Approved guitarist since Sept 2023.
Broad and Ansari are out. Confirmed that Woakes will come in for Broad. Mohali is cracked already. If this goes beyond four days, I will be surprised. Gareth Batty, your time may not be up...
@crunchman And I agreed with you. Give him credit though, Bairstow has done a good job although I fancy keeping at Mohali is going to really test him.
Gilchrist set a standard that was fairly unique. With a bowling attack like that, he didn't have too many long days out in the sun. With the batting ahead of him, he could get the rest he needed. Only Dhoni comes close and I wouldn't dare suggest that he was anywhere near Gillie's class with the bat in Test cricket and arguably was less with the gloves as well. But in the way that the Aussies got obsessed with an all rounder post-2005 and Flintoff, so world cricket has been obsessed with wicketkeeper batsmen. Look at the Kiwis, they've got the side flooded with them.
Hell of a good toss to win. When you see Ashwin bowling with an old ball and getting it to spit at Woakes, then you fancy things will be spicy later on.
Oh, bollocks.
Keaton Jennings is probably the next best opener and is with the Lions in the UAE but I'm not sure that bringing in another left hander would be ideal.
On a ligher note, today in 1979:
Without a couple of wickets tonight and with a good night's sleep England should be able to bat through the last day. Should and will are not necessarily the same thing though.
Despite the series defeat, there is a lot to be positive about. Although I maintain it was a mistake not to take an experienced middle order batsman in the form of Ian Bell, Hameed and Jennings have done more than enough to think that they will be there against West Indies and South Africa next season. Although his figures don't show it, Jake Ball has done enough to show that he is worth developing at the top level. Anderson, Broad, and Woakes is a good attack and with Ball, Finn, Footitt, and Wood behind them, we have some depth. Giving Buttler the bat only is also something that should be developed over the summer.
The same old dilemma exists in the slow bowling department. Rashid simply doesn't have a stock ball. The strength of Warne was the consistency of his stock ball in terms of length and direction. That's why his straight on delivery in 2005 was so potent. Having a couple of different googlies as Rashid does counts for sod all if the one or two wickets you get with them are counteracted by a lot of shit pitching all over the shop. Having a shit stock ball and a load of variations works in one day cricket when batsmen are going for you but in Test cricket they know that they can sit back and wait for the rubbish to float down. There is no need to take a chance against him because he releases the pressure himself. The same is true of Imran Tahir and look at how the Aussies smacked him about the Test park in 2012...
All these subcontinental Tests have shown is that we are nowhere near finding a lead spinner. Moeen is more than a part-timer but he's not an outright bowler. Rashid isn't consistent enough to play as spinner #1 on English soil so might be spinner #2 away. The selection of Batty was shite to start with and quite possibly the worst selection since Darren Pattinson. Ansari didn't show too much, partly down to injury, and Dawson has shown some pluck but really won't be needed much in Tests in the UK. He did however make me feel bloody old as I remember him playing on the boundary lines as a kid years ago whilst I was bowling to his dad in league cricket. Grey hair and all that jazz...
I think Cook will step down before the end of the summer. I rather fancy a Root as captain-Buttler as VC combination for Australia next winter with Cook there offering some senior support. It's quite clear that the Australians have gone for something more attacking (the selections of Wade and Maddinson in the Test team are the indicators are there). In 2005 we fought fire with fire, and I don't think Cook right now has the right fire to throw back at them. I'm also mindful of how Michael Vaughan ended up as captain, thrown in at the deep end against South Africa. One other aspect: a bit was written this week about how Root felt he needed to grow up. He only needs to look at how the captaincy took Virat Kohli to the next level in terms of maturity and batting performance. Personally I would install Root as captain prior to the SA series, especially now de Villiers has stepped down as Test captain.
On and bat Root at four FFS. Note how Steve Smith is back down at 4 again.
Cook
Jennings
Hameed (at 3 or 2. Depends on whether the selectors want a right-left hand combination or two lefties up top)
Root
Bairstow
Stokes
Buttler
Woakes
Moeen
Broad (now the real leader of the bowling unit. Not sure Jimmy will make Australia).
Anderson
You don't want your keeper batting at 5 either. If Bairstow keeps then he needs to be at 6 or 7 and they need to find another batsman - or play Bairstow as a batsman like SL did with Sangakarra and bring in someone like Foakes. He's made runs for the Lions this winter. The other option is to leave Moeen at 5. He's made a century in this test, and he's made other runs in the series.
The problem is the balance of the side. If you do play Bairstow and/or Moeen up the order it's going to be very hard for a batsman who's used to batting at 3 or 4 for his county to come in and bat at 7 or 8. Having the extra allrounder isn't a bad idea as it allows you to keep your bowlers fresh. I have seen Broad and Anderson bowling at speeds in the late 80's in this series whereas they normally seem to bowl low 80's these days - probably bowling a bit within themselves.
Nil Satis Nisi Optimum
I accept the point about the wicketkeeper batting at 5. If needs be, bat Bairstow lower down the order at 7 with Buttler at 5. The worry I'd have with YJB at 7 is that he may suffer as Robin Smith did at times when he was doing fine but only had the tail, and England had one hell of a tail in those days, at the other end. YJB has kept wicket decently in India and scored runs so do you take the chance bringing Foakes in? I'm a believer that when something is working well in cricket, as it is with YJB as keeper-batsman, you shouldn't mess with it.
Moeen is an interesting one. He has made runs but both tons have come on good batting wickets and both have been separated by some fairly hairbrained dismissals.
Playing Tests in England in the first half of the season, there isn't the need to keep bowlers fresh as you have to in the subcontinent on a wicket like the one we see right now. Woakes, Moeen, and Stokes are genuine all rounders. Having them there allows Broad and Jimmy to be used as they should be, short spells. Dawson's jumped ahead of Ansari as the backup spinning allrounder, Rashid is still our next outright spinner choice. It does actually feel like there is a core of players there to choose from which is encouraging. England despite the series defeat are in a better place albeit with the continued problem in the slow bowling department.
Watching Moeen this morning batting against the quicks bowling short stuff I take back what I said about keeping him at 5. For me though that raises questions about his place in the team for home tests. If you have 4 quicks then the spinner is either going to be used to break partnerships when all else fails, or to bowl 5 overs to give the quicks a rest. To break partnerships I think Rashid might be a better option. He'd also be better at disposing of the tail than Moeen. Given that Keaton Jennings seems to be a competent bowler, you could use him and Root if you want a few tight overs to rest the quicks if Rashid leaks a few runs.
Moeen has just got out while I was writing the above. I'm at work (should be working!) so I haven't seen it but Cricinfo described it as a revolting heave. Has he got a brain?