grumbleguts
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Ask plugger35 he's suffered from the same condition his entire life.Can someone with passing knowledge of psychology explain the general mentality of Indian cricket fans? It’s very very odd
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Ask plugger35 he's suffered from the same condition his entire life.Can someone with passing knowledge of psychology explain the general mentality of Indian cricket fans? It’s very very odd
Azhar scored a gorgeous 90 odd in the Test here when AB spat the dummy about Marsh being dropped for Perth.Exactly. They ARE addressing the bowling issue more and more hence they’ve come here and won twice despite bringing inferior batting line ups to what they’ve had in the past, because their attacks have known how to bowl as a unit and their quicks have been effective. The batting was never that much of an issue.
Even in previous generations:
It wasn’t like Vengsarkar (averaged about 50 in England)
Armanath (averaged over 50 in both Australia and the West Indies at a time when the Windies had some breathtakingly difficult pitches for visiting batsmen)
And obviously Gavaskar - who averaged over 40 everywhere bar Sri Lanka - could not all make runs on non-Asian style pitches either.
Even an artist like Azharuddin- yeah he struggled with the pace of Australia and SA but still made a beautiful century in both….. and managed to hit 4 centuries across 15 matches in England and NZ and average over 50 combined there.
I didn't lay it completely at their batsmen & by the way what did you not understand about this sentence "Apart from a few exceptional batsmen they struggle on anything with bounce, pace, seam." you then go on to list the Tendulkars & Dravids just lol.Yes, Dravid hitting 93 which was the top score in a match that India won at the waca in 2008 was based around a drop in dead wicket
Tendulkar hitting two centuries as a teenager in the 1991-92 series co-incided with the mid-2000s.
VVS Laxman hitting 167 out of 260 against McGrath, Warne, Lee and Gillespie in 2000 also happened in the mid 2000s.
Are you even familiar with any of the names I’ve mentioned?
Mate. It’s a fact, and another post I made in response to Gough - who to his credit knows more about cricket than what Fox Sports tells him - alluded to this.
The notion that all India’s batsmen who average 40+ do it because they bat on flat lifeless wickets and they cant make runs on anything in England, NZ, SA, Australia or in days gone by, the West Indies, is a myth.
They had four really good batsmen in the 80s - Gavaskar, Vengsarkar, Armanath and Azharuddin. Gavaskar had no holes anywhere in his record. Azhar proved himself completely in NZ and England and made centuries in Aus and SA. Armanath was outstanding in Australia and WI and only averaged 30 at home.
I’ve just shown you that their previous generation were all proven performers outside of India.
It’s bizarre why you seem to want to ignore that and still place their lack of away success at the feet of their batsmen when the answer is pretty clearly their bowling.
I think you're missing the point.
I don't think Nasser's decision to bowl first was that brave but he was going against the logic of batting first in a test match at the Gabba.
It was brave in that he was going against the odds when teams have a much better chance of winning there batting first.
Cummins decision to bowl first was based more on logic as teams batting second at Ahmedabad have a much better chance of winning.
You could call that brave but it was more of a logical decision to bowl first based on the odds being in his favour.
Most people just assumed that batting first in a final was the right choice without taking the venue or the conditions into account.
Azhar scored a gorgeous 90 odd in the Test here when AB spat the dummy about Marsh being dropped for Perth.
This is so utterly pathetic that I have no choice but to presume that you are not real but rather a parody account
NZ winning the WTC was a complete Bradbury
Azhar scored a gorgeous 90 odd in the Test here when AB spat the dummy about Marsh being dropped for Perth.
I didn't lay it completely at their batsmen & by the way what did you not understand about this sentence "Apart from a few exceptional batsmen they struggle on anything with bounce, pace, seam." you then go on to list the Tendulkars & Dravids just lol.
Give me Ganguly's ave in Australia for example.
Everyone beats India in England.Even if you could argue that we did a Bradbury to make the final, we still needed to beat a tough opponent in India in the final to win it.
The same opponent Australia beat in the final to win it this year.
Except we did it first.
Everyone beats India in England.
I'm trying to come to terms with Ganguly averaged 34 and one test match hundred in Australia & it proves he was good here, jeezus we ourselves whack Warner for his record elsewhere.
What did he average in New Zealand?It doesn’t. Combined with his average of 60 in England, it dispels your assertion that he ‘can’t play pace, bounce and seam’
Explain to me again why it doesn’t.
You’ve had your argument smacked up the backside without lube and you’re dancing hard around it, address what’s actually in front of you.
All the ‘decent’ batsmen India have brought out here and to the other SENA nations across the last 30 years have been able to handle those conditions with some level of competency and have proven it. You don’t have to average 80 in every country that doesn’t sit in the subcontinent to show you can handle it mate.
5 centuries not enough for you?
What did he average in New Zealand?
By the way we are just having an interaction here I'm not interested in your juvenile internetz lubing rubbish.
He has a sub 40 average in South Africa, Australia & New Zealand if he was Australian he wouldn't get a game especially in that era.30. With a century.
And of all those players he’s probably the hardest to make a case for.
So essentially:
- he’s not just thrived, he’s dominated England.
- He’s proven he can bat in Australia
- he’s struggled in NZ but still managed a century there
- he averaged 36 in SA. if you want to break it down, he batted 4 times at Wanderers, their fastest, bounciest pitch, and averaged 70 there, passing 50 3 times. If a batsman averaged 36 in Australia and averaged 70 at the WACA you’d have a hard time arguing they couldn’t handle bounce or pace.
There’s no argument you can make that states, factually ‘Sourav Ganguly could not handle fast, bouncy or seaming conditions.’
He has a sub 40 average in South Africa, Australia & New Zealand if he was Australian he wouldn't get a game especially in that era.
Well I mentioned 3 countries South Africa, New Zealand & Australia..Well there’s two ways to look at that.
For starters, saying an Indian who was an excellent but not all time great batsman wouldn’t get a game for arguably the greatest team the game has seen, based on his AWAY record in THAT team’s country, is hardly a unique claim is it.
Everyone beats India in England.
Well I mentioned 3 countries South Africa, New Zealand & Australia..
Yea keep it going what was Azharuddin's ave in Australia? genuinely have no idea.
Azzhuriddin didn't get 90 in Perth that series, he got 11 and 24. Tendulkar got 114 of the best runs I've ever seen live.
I remember Azhar as just missing out on a hundred here that year, I was wrong. He'd been in rotten form all tour and Adelaide was his only good knock.Fair enough, I took Gough on faith with that one. He definitely made 106 the match before it.
And Tendulkar absolutely did make that beautiful century in Perth though I remember a lot more of the 140-odd in Sydney