by whufc » Thu Jan 05, 2012 7:24 pm
by Squids » Thu Jan 05, 2012 7:30 pm
by whufc » Thu Jan 05, 2012 7:35 pm
Squids wrote:I wish people would get with the times, these days the keeper needs to be able to bat. Look at every other team and you will notice that their keepers bat.
Last series there was hate for Brendon McCullum not batting.
by whufc » Thu Jan 05, 2012 7:39 pm
by Media Park » Thu Jan 05, 2012 7:47 pm
Wedgie wrote:I wear skin tight arseless leather pants, wtf do you wear?
by Jim05 » Thu Jan 05, 2012 7:54 pm
by Jim05 » Thu Jan 05, 2012 7:55 pm
Media Park wrote:We talk about contributions from the tail, when in reality, if the top six cannot be relied upon to score 300+, then why are you expecting your lesser players to score runs?
If the guy with the gloves is such a good batsman, then why is he at seven? If he is selected as a batsman (ala Tom Cooper in the t20 the other night), then shouldn't he be batting up the order?
He is not because he is an all-rounder of sorts. Not good enough to be a specialist batsman, he relies on his abilities behind the wicket.
If Adam Gilchrist was a specialist batsman, he would have batted probably at four, at the expense of Damien Martyn's Test career, and an all-rounder would have played, either a young Andrew Symonds, Ian Harvey, Andrew McDonald, etc...
He is the exception to the rule, because, how many of the following would play Test cricket as a specialist batsman:
Ian Healy, Brad Haddin, Reece Young, Dinesh Chandimal, Mark Boucher? The answer, none.
How many sides have been improved from the following players dropping the wicket keeping role in favour of batting up the order?
Kumar Sangakkara, Brendan McCullum, Neither!
In world cricket today, the only current wicket keeper from any nation that is a Test standard specialist batsman, and the guys that hate him may shoot me down, is Matt Prior.
He is the only wicket keeper in the world today that could justifiably play Test cricket as a specialist batsman, and he is England's best wicket keeper.
If, however, Prior is promoted up the order (lets' say KP is injured), and Steve Davies takes the gloves, the side is lessened.
Firstly, a lesser batsman at seven, and second, a lesser keeper in the team.
Adam Gilchrist changed the perception of the wicket keeper, which previously was to have an average nudging 30. We are slowly learning that he was such a freak. Reece Young is a very talented wicket keeper, with a bright future. Is he going to hammer out run a ball centuries every other innings? No. And we shouldn't expect him to.
When it comes to replacing the keeper, and Australia need to do this soon, you pick the best available keeper. If he can hold an end up, and achieve a job, great. If he can turn a game in a session, even better, but you do not pick a substandard wicket keeper because of their batting ability.
by whufc » Thu Jan 05, 2012 8:04 pm
Media Park wrote:We talk about contributions from the tail, when in reality, if the top six cannot be relied upon to score 300+, then why are you expecting your lesser players to score runs?
If the guy with the gloves is such a good batsman, then why is he at seven? If he is selected as a batsman (ala Tom Cooper in the t20 the other night), then shouldn't he be batting up the order?
He is not because he is an all-rounder of sorts. Not good enough to be a specialist batsman, he relies on his abilities behind the wicket.
If Adam Gilchrist was a specialist batsman, he would have batted probably at four, at the expense of Damien Martyn's Test career, and an all-rounder would have played, either a young Andrew Symonds, Ian Harvey, Andrew McDonald, etc...
He is the exception to the rule, because, how many of the following would play Test cricket as a specialist batsman:
Ian Healy, Brad Haddin, Reece Young, Dinesh Chandimal, Mark Boucher? The answer, none.
How many sides have been improved from the following players dropping the wicket keeping role in favour of batting up the order?
Kumar Sangakkara, Brendan McCullum, Neither!
In world cricket today, the only current wicket keeper from any nation that is a Test standard specialist batsman, and the guys that hate him may shoot me down, is Matt Prior.
He is the only wicket keeper in the world today that could justifiably play Test cricket as a specialist batsman, and he is England's best wicket keeper.
If, however, Prior is promoted up the order (lets' say KP is injured), and Steve Davies takes the gloves, the side is lessened.
Firstly, a lesser batsman at seven, and second, a lesser keeper in the team.
Adam Gilchrist changed the perception of the wicket keeper, which previously was to have an average nudging 30. We are slowly learning that he was such a freak. Reece Young is a very talented wicket keeper, with a bright future. Is he going to hammer out run a ball centuries every other innings? No. And we shouldn't expect him to.
When it comes to replacing the keeper, and Australia need to do this soon, you pick the best available keeper. If he can hold an end up, and achieve a job, great. If he can turn a game in a session, even better, but you do not pick a substandard wicket keeper because of their batting ability.
by whufc » Thu Jan 05, 2012 8:16 pm
by Jim05 » Thu Jan 05, 2012 8:25 pm
whufc wrote:Interesting stats from the first test against India.
Brad Haddin let in a total of 0 byes and dropped 0 catches if i remember correctly
batting wise he hit 27 in a 72 run partnership which got AUS from a evenly poised 6-214 to a more comfortable 7-286
Now if that was a keeper who barely batted he could of done no more with the gloves than what Haddin did. Yet could he have had the ability to put on that kind of partnership remembering our first inning lead was only 50 runs. That 70 run partneship becomes pretty valauble.
ON THE FLIP SIDE!!!
The batsmen keeper in the 2nd test is not required to bat due to a great batting display and then drops the oppositon openener at the end of days play which could become very crucial.
So far this test series
1 ALL!
by whufc » Thu Jan 05, 2012 8:27 pm
Jim05 wrote:whufc wrote:Interesting stats from the first test against India.
Brad Haddin let in a total of 0 byes and dropped 0 catches if i remember correctly
batting wise he hit 27 in a 72 run partnership which got AUS from a evenly poised 6-214 to a more comfortable 7-286
Now if that was a keeper who barely batted he could of done no more with the gloves than what Haddin did. Yet could he have had the ability to put on that kind of partnership remembering our first inning lead was only 50 runs. That 70 run partneship becomes pretty valauble.
ON THE FLIP SIDE!!!
The batsmen keeper in the 2nd test is not required to bat due to a great batting display and then drops the oppositon openener at the end of days play which could become very crucial.
So far this test series
1 ALL!
Haddin dropped Sehwag when he was in his 30's for memory. Sehwag made 67.
by Dogwatcher » Thu Jan 05, 2012 8:29 pm
by heater31 » Thu Jan 05, 2012 9:03 pm
Dogwatcher wrote:Keepers set the agenda in the field. They are key to the defence of any total.
If your keeper is average and lets you down with a missed stumping, dropped catch or four byes that should've been stopped...the whole team deflates.
by Media Park » Thu Jan 05, 2012 9:26 pm
Wedgie wrote:I wear skin tight arseless leather pants, wtf do you wear?
by FlyingHigh » Thu Jan 05, 2012 9:37 pm
by Rik E Boy » Thu Jan 05, 2012 9:47 pm
by Hondo » Thu Jan 05, 2012 9:50 pm
by rod_rooster » Thu Jan 05, 2012 9:59 pm
by Media Park » Thu Jan 05, 2012 10:01 pm
Wedgie wrote:I wear skin tight arseless leather pants, wtf do you wear?
by whufc » Thu Jan 05, 2012 10:02 pm
Hondo wrote:The "best" keeper in the country may not even be playing Shield cricket. I say that because the pressure to have close to a 7th batsman in your side is as strong at state level as it is at International level. At every level the pure technical keeper is under pressure from the keeper-batsman. The keeper who can't bat is weeded out at each higher level.
I think any team is improved with a legitimate keeper-batsman over the specialist keeper. Australia went to another level when Gilly arrived. Yes, he was a freak but even if he only averaged 40 we were still a stronger team with that 7th batsman. That's not to diss Ian Healy who was a good batsman in his own right. I'd argue he was even a keeper-batsman of sorts and if he averaged under 20 with the bat he probably wouldn't have played as many games as he did. The fact was that he averaged close to the 30 bench mark which was good enough at the time but not good enough to save his spot which let's be honest he lost to Gilchrist eventually. There was a choice made by the selectors and Heals felt he could have gone on.
So, no, IMO there's no room in a test playing side for a really great keeper who can't bat. How you define "can't bat" is up for debate. I'd say he would have to average 30 or very close to it. If not, unless you think there your brilliant keeper will make up for his lack of runs with extraordinary keeping, then you take the keeper-batsman. You have to. You can't have a tail that starts at 7 just because you don't demand that your keeper and your bowlers can hold a decent bat.
I say all this independently of the Haddin debate - it is not a post for or against Haddin. It is just about the philosophy of the keeper-batsman v the keeper.
Competitions SANFL Official Site | Country Footy SA | Southern Football League | VFL Footy
Club Forums Snouts Louts | The Roost | Redlegs Forum |