Gingerfinch wrote:Brook does average mid 50's by playing in a similar manner in all his knocks! He must be doing something right?
This is a perfect example of my post above about ignoring the method in the short term because the results appear to be fine. Sometimes luck sides with you, other times it does not. Over a whole career it will even out, and eventually technical problems or bad approach will come back to haunt you. Just look at the India series last summer, you can say he got 2 centuries and a 99 and averaged over 50 for the series, but...
In Leeds, he was caught at midwicket for 0 skying a wild pull shot into the deep after a few balls. Bumrah, having delivered two no balls already in the over, was ruled to have overstepped in what was an exact replica of the Brydon Carse one the other day, and a coin-flip decision that could have easily gone the other way. He was then dropped twice before scoring 50, and not long after passing 50 got a leading edge for a return catch that Krishna didn't pick up.
At the Oval, he skied another wild pull shot to Siraj on 15. Siraj caught he ball cleanly, but not noticing he was so close to the boundary, inexplicably then stepped out of play when he went to run off, turning the easiest of catches into 6 runs.... Brook ended up with another 110 runs.
At Edgbaston, he was hit on the pad first ball and given not out, the India review was lost on the barest of umpire call margins with the ball hitting the stumps. He then tried a wild dilscoop and was stumped, only saved by the fact that he fell over trying to play the shot and one of his buttocks hit the ground just before Pant whipped the bails off. On around 15, he charged down the wicket and missed a wild slog, but the keeper didn't collect the ball. He was then dropped by Shubman Gill at 2nd slip..... after which he made another 100 plus runs.
Two umpires decisions going the other way and Siraj not doing one of the most calamatious things I have ever seen on a cricket field, and its suddenly a best of 23 for the series, and an average of under 10 per go.... You end up saying, well if the coin flips the wrong way in Leeds, the average ends in the 30s for the series and he's been under par. If it flips against him in Edgbaston, and Siraj takes the easy catch you'd expect him to 99 times out of 100, he's had an all time bad series.
Those are the margins he is playing with at the moment.