- May 5, 2016
- 47,629
- 53,464
- AFL Club
- Geelong
Don't need to address stuff I already know.
Translation: you can’t
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Don't need to address stuff I already know.
Yeah, he’s (Kato) a fantastic bloke - I ended up in NZ during a Test in Wellington in 2005 and fluked staying at the same Hotel as the Aus Team - I got a few bats signed for my boys and when he found out I’d played at Randwick he invited me to have breakfast with him the next day and swap a few stories - probably the most telling comments came from blokes at Wests who reckoned when he finished cricket they didn’t think he’d have a friend out of the game - aside from Warne
Boon scored 7500 runs at an average of almost 44, batting as an opener and number three, against some of the greatest fast bowlers to have ever played the game. The disrespect being shown in this thread is to Boon by people being so dismissive of him and probably by some too young to see him play.
What the hell does that have to do with anything? We’re not discussing T20 cricket here.Maybe a few Tasmanians rated him that highly, he had a strike rate of 40 LOL
i agree about people under selling boon he was on par with warner but you can't compare the bowling attacks to this day an age,
walsh
ambrose
akram
compared to
anderson
board
steyn
that's what makes test cricket so great over 10 years the big teams have super bowlers.
In one series (1992-93) Boon faced an attack if I recall rightly of Ambrose - who many people in this forum rate as perhaps the best fast bowler they’ve ever seen, Courtney Walsh who had the world record for wickets, Ian Bishop was as fast as any of them and could have been anything if he didn’t break his back, and Patrick Patterson who was regarded by his own teammates and some of the toughest batsmen of the era as the fastest and scariest bowler of the entire era.
I can see an argument for that, but i'll go for Taylor and Boon simply due to the fact that they played against arguably the greatest pace attack of all time in the West Indies for over a decade in their respective careers. I place Warner 10th.I don't like him but let's be real, he should be ranked higher than Taylor and Boon as an opener.
By all reports from people in the know he is very divisive in the Australian team setup. Internationally in franchises I cannot say as I only have heard from people connected locally.Did they? Are you sure? The evidence clearly suggests he is well regarded both in the Australian team and around the world.
By all reports from people in the know he is very divisive in the Australian team setup. Internationally in franchises I cannot say as I only have heard from people connected locally.
I think the more correct statement would be he is very, very respected for his cricketing abilities. Everything else though is up for debate.
I was the first to dis Boon in this thread.
I did that because he was listed alongside Steve Waugh and Border. Boon was simply not in their class.
He was obviously a very good player though.
The comparisons with Taylor are interesting. You think Warner’s last few seasons have been poor? How do you reckon Taylor finished?
Found at the hotel.What was the story behind his missing cap, did it come out on what happened to it?
Many would say Taylor being captain is the only reason he survived so long. They basically replaced Healy as VC with Steve Waugh in case they had to drop Taylor in '97.Outside of Taylor's first year, he averaged 40 or thereabouts, so I'd rank him below Warner purely on batting.
But his captaincy of course elevates him.
Many would say Taylor being captain is the only reason he survived so long. They basically replaced Healy as VC with Steve Waugh in case they had to drop Taylor in '97.
I don't like him either. But yes he must certainly will be remembered. For the good and bad.See ya, you won't be remembered.
What i am told, at least pre sand-paper, aligns with what you think. Very well summarised.From the outside looking in based on a combination of the media narrative, his teammates’ comments, what opposition sides say about him in the past and now, I would say for the first two thirds of his career he was a bit of a dickhead, as he’s gotten older he’s matured at least a little bit, has settled down somewhat, still retains some of what made him a dickhead but by and large has managed to keep it under control and you see that a bit on the field in how he manages to actually have a joke with the opposition now and rarely finds himself locked in snarling exchanges and heated debate
Long term I think he will be known for mostly the bad.I don't like him either. But yes he must certainly will be remembered. For the good and bad.
Apart from the guy opening with him for the last few years, which technically makes Warner the worst opening batsman since Marcus Harris.
GS Chappell says “hello”Oh absolutely.
The only other batsman whom I can recall having an equivalent form slump and surviving is Mike Hussey, and that was in a weaker era.