Durhamfootman wrote:has 3 test hundreds to his name this year
meninblue wrote:The deliveries which England batsmen got out to were at the length which VVS Laxman would drive through mid-wicket even against Shane Warne's turn. And England batsmen even had advantage of Sajid turining the ball into their pad, so it should have been much easier to play drives. Too much of sweep shot irrespective of understanding of line and length and turn is very very risky. Against spinners who are bowling well aided by spin friendly wicket, every shot played needs to be appropriate for line, length and turn. It is difficult to get exectuion right on sweep when all factors are against the batsmen
Not saying that England players cannot play spin. I will never doubt Ollie Pope's capability against spin, after he scored a maginifient 196, which imo was one of the best innings played in India against Indian spinners.
alfie wrote:No doubt that Crawley and Pope have failed to get the level of consistency you want in a top three bat (though it is also fair to point out that both have had improved results over the first two years of the Stokes/McCullum reign)
The problem is : easy to say "not good enough , out you go". Not so easy to find someone better.
I haven't researched every batsman England have called up in the last ten years but suffice to say Burns Sibley Stoneman Compton Westley Vince Lees Lyth Lawrence Robson all fit that range. Assuming someone new can be plucked out of the CC or the Lions to produce better results than the incumbents is arguably a little optimistic.
sussexpob wrote:meninblue wrote:The deliveries which England batsmen got out to were at the length which VVS Laxman would drive through mid-wicket even against Shane Warne's turn. And England batsmen even had advantage of Sajid turining the ball into their pad, so it should have been much easier to play drives. Too much of sweep shot irrespective of understanding of line and length and turn is very very risky. Against spinners who are bowling well aided by spin friendly wicket, every shot played needs to be appropriate for line, length and turn. It is difficult to get exectuion right on sweep when all factors are against the batsmen
English batsman going back into the 90s would bat against spin by getting their front pad and bat as far down the pitch as possible to meet the ball at the earliest possible contact point, the idea was to combat the spin by giving it less space to turn from the pitch, and you have to think back in those days if the ball hit the pad and you had a full stride in, the umpire would hardly ever give you out, so players were encouraged to use their pads to protect their stumps. Then a new crop of big turning spinners arrived and they were lame ducks, because people like Warne could turn the ball so much they would challenge the edges of the bat even over short distances after pitching, so hanging your bat out to dry was suicidal.
The problem was, the answer that Fletcher came up with back in the late 90s was to double down on that idea of getting to the contact point as early as possible, and the way he got English batsman to do that was to get the big stride in, and then play paddle sweeps round the corner. I guess the idea was that playing forward with a straight, vertical bat gave you less extension down the pitch, but if you took a big stride and stretched out to paddle it round the corner, you are getting a bats extra length out to the pitch to negate the spin. I think it was the 2000 series in India where England lost one test with every single top 7 bat out in both innings sweeping. This legacy of trying to meet the ball early has continued, as has the idea that reaching out for sweep shots to combat the spin is a solid idea. And when the length makes it difficult to play cross bat shots or you try to play against the spin, you are in trouble.
Great players of spin go completely the opposite way, so its no surprise England crumple all the time. Rather than play from the crease and get forward, great Indian players of spin will use their feet to get out to the ball and complete smother it, never dangle their pad and bat out in hope. That, and this is where your Laxman example comes in, or playing the ball at the top of the bounce/movement by staying back and playing very late. Dravid was a genius at that too, using his wrists to compensate any time his feet or body position was wrong.
Sachin was also a perfect example of playing the sweep. If you put the ball too full, then say goodbye to it, he would get to the pitch and wouldn't be afraid to put it in the air.... but as you say, its that length thats important. The ball has to be too full, and has to be generally on a stump/towards leg stump line. English bats trying to sweep normal length balls or dragged them from offside to leg side... say goodnight, you aint lasting long.Not saying that England players cannot play spin. I will never doubt Ollie Pope's capability against spin, after he scored a maginifient 196, which imo was one of the best innings played in India against Indian spinners.
As was at the Oval in 1998 when John Crawley knocked Murali around on a sharp turning track..... I can confidently say that sometime crap batsman just have a great day. Anyone who seen Crawley bat before or after that day against any spinner wouldn't suggest he was any good
Durhamfootman wrote:England will console themselves that they won't have to tour Asia again until Bangladesh in 2027
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