alfie wrote:I do not seriously believe they are instructed to go out and swing from the first ball regardless
They might not expressly be told to whack every ball, but I don't think it matters at all in the context of the discussion. What is quite clear is, each batter has been given a licence to do what they want, and any terrible decisions or embarrassing dismissals will not result in any accountability or criticism - it is all passed off as a necessary blip in the grand strategy of taking the game to the opposition. One batter fails to a bad shot, its ok because the team approach win over the whole game. All batters fail miserably, its ok because we will win other games. Lose a series, its ok there are more series in the future to win.... What is clear is, the approach itself is never wrong. The team remind us all the time its necessary to trust the process; which breeds an environment of zero accountability.
The net effect is you dumb down the game for the players. They see everything in black and white. Shot selection is never criticised, the match situation never matters; you start to critically analyse bad decisions on their execution. You wanted to dilscoop a 94 mph yorker and got bowled? Well next time try to middle it for 6, and thats what we focus on, because the idea is all part of trusting the process. The idea is never wrong.
I mean, you mention Boland's spell at 73-1. The point at which Boland starts putting the ball on 7th stump line wide outside off, you have won the battle. Day 2 of the series, a huge lead in the context of conditions, 9 wickets left, and a guy who averages 12 in Australia is so concerned where he is going to get smashed next he is just trying to get through his next spell without conceding 52 runs....
What happens next is a result of the team ethos. Utter domination in the form of smashing 6s is the only part of the game England seem to see positives. They have been dummed down to the point of seeing nothing else. At that point, had England watched the endless stream of wide balls fly to the keeper then the match situation dictates its Australia who have to blink first, they have to make things happen. Just keep them more in that position of chasing the game, and boundaries will eventually come. Boland will have to change plan again and get further from his natural line/length that works.
I guess outsmarting your opponent and winning such battles isnt quite Caveman macho enough to satisfy England. Winning games with street smarts of winning isolated battles with anything other than brute force, they just don't see it. You don't trust that because it's not the process....
And the process is always right. The process is always right... the process is always right.... the process is ALWAYS right.
Say it with me