Re: The Ashes
Posted: Fri Aug 16, 2013 9:15 am
Agree - pity for Bresnan and although I don't always agree with his selection you can see he always gives 100%.
Brilliant.franksav63 wrote:I should be getting a ticket for Friday's play at The Oval, can't wait and a welcome distraction from the shit that Wenger is creating at our club!
Blimey, good for you g88ner at least you nearly made it.... I was a very fast bowler when I was younger (had pace to burn) but I could never get into our school cricket team as it was a closed shop.... I used to love hurting people and sending them to hospital with broken fingers when I got the ball to rear up off a good length over the park!!! I can't bowl for toffee now though...g88ner wrote:Brilliant.franksav63 wrote:I should be getting a ticket for Friday's play at The Oval, can't wait and a welcome distraction from the shit that Wenger is creating at our club!
I hit a six at Old Trafford when England and India played in 1990. Sadly for me, Sachin Tendulker stole my limelight by hitting a test century in the 2nd innings at the age of 17. I never realised at the time that I was watching a future cricketing great, and I never knew that six would be the last of my test match career*![]()
*I say "test match career", but I was in one of many junior cricket teams invited to play mini-games on the outfield during the lunch interval. I loved it, and hit a six. Although, as I'm a bowler, I was disappointed not to get any wickets, although I'm sure I trapped a guy leg before
If only you'd had DRSg88ner wrote:Brilliant.franksav63 wrote:I should be getting a ticket for Friday's play at The Oval, can't wait and a welcome distraction from the shit that Wenger is creating at our club!
I hit a six at Old Trafford when England and India played in 1990. Sadly for me, Sachin Tendulker stole my limelight by hitting a test century in the 2nd innings at the age of 17. I never realised at the time that I was watching a future cricketing great, and I never knew that six would be the last of my test match career*![]()
*I say "test match career", but I was in one of many junior cricket teams invited to play mini-games on the outfield during the lunch interval. I loved it, and hit a six. Although, as I'm a bowler, I was disappointed not to get any wickets, although I'm sure I trapped a guy leg before
arseofacrow wrote:If only you'd had DRSg88ner wrote:Brilliant.franksav63 wrote:I should be getting a ticket for Friday's play at The Oval, can't wait and a welcome distraction from the shit that Wenger is creating at our club!
I hit a six at Old Trafford when England and India played in 1990. Sadly for me, Sachin Tendulker stole my limelight by hitting a test century in the 2nd innings at the age of 17. I never realised at the time that I was watching a future cricketing great, and I never knew that six would be the last of my test match career*![]()
*I say "test match career", but I was in one of many junior cricket teams invited to play mini-games on the outfield during the lunch interval. I loved it, and hit a six. Although, as I'm a bowler, I was disappointed not to get any wickets, although I'm sure I trapped a guy leg before![]()
...then you might have amounted to something![]()
I saw somebody questioning what better time to give young players a chance than a dead rubber Ashes test? Well any in the two series we played against NZ in the past year for a start. Treating it like the Carling Cup pisses me off, it's an Ashes test FFS.Perryashburtongroves wrote:3-0 up, chance to make it 4 at The Oval and keep the boot on their throat so what better time to pick two débutantes rather than Tremlet or Finn. I don't think I've seen a more horrific debut bowling performance than this by Simon Kerrigan.
Do me a favour, does he really think Australia and just about every test playing country don't manipulate pitch conditions to favour the home side? Fantastic planning by England, they recognised Australia's strengths in seam bowling and weakness in spin and have exploited it brilliantly. England batted to the conditions while Australian bastmen got themselves out. A lot of the worry before the series was that England would underestimate Australia - they certainly haven't done judging by the professional way they've gone about winning the series. The conditions down under will be very different and England will adapt their style of play to suit it just like any serious cricket team would.Playing every match on the same sort of pitch — as if England had carted one drop-in pitch to every venue — has resulted in a Pyrrhic victory.
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The glorious uncertainty of cricket is reduced by dry, slow pitches. This is exactly why they were ordered: to eliminate the possibility of Australia winning with their seamers. It is a certainty, however, that England will not have the same pitches prepared next summer for the five-Test series against India, who have Ravi Ashwin and Ravi Jadeja, a fine offspinner and slow left-armer. Pitches next year will no doubt be as green as this summer’s have been brown.