alfie wrote:Still not sure why the bowling became so ragged so quickly. Upset by the early belligerence from Head in Perth , perhaps ; but professional bowlers should be better able to recover their act and not fall apart again even before the heat sapped their energy...yesterday's performance was appalling and a look at the pitch maps of the two sides shows the gulf between the attacks. Batsmen are fairly being castigated for their failings but to me this match was lost in the field before this second innings even started. Which is a huge worry for England looking to the future because with Broad and Anderson - and Woakes - all gone , Wood surely on his last legs , Archer revealed as a false prophet and Carse's promise apparently a bit of an early aberration I am not sure where the attack goes in the short to medium term. To say nothing of a bare spin cupboard
Major rant part 2....
England's bowling woes over these two test are only surprising if we accept at face value all of the nonsense Rob Key has spouted about buy wickets and express pace being the only way to win. If for one moment we were to look at actual objective facts and debunk this unverifiable theory, then its not surprising in the slightest. Just look for one moment at who England have picked for this series.
Jofra Archer has played about 6 FC games in 4 years. We did not have a worthwhile warm up game. How can we expect even a world class bowler with so little recent experience of bowling 20-30 overs in an innings to come into the side and do exactly that? Atkinson missed all but one game last summer, and he's also had more injuries that I care to remember, so ibid. Do you expect him to come in cold with no recent experience of bowling long, and do that? Its not in the slightest bit controversial to suggest preparing to bowl long innings requires you to bowl long innings. And yet the ECB prevent Sussex from playing Archer - they do, however, allow him to play in India at the IPL. Which of these options prepare a person to play test cricket, and which do not?
Let's throw in King Sicknote here at the same time. Mark Wood couldn't even get passed 5 overs in the warm up before he got injured. And then another 10 overs in the First test and hey presto, he's injured for 3 tests again. Who would have thought? Well everyone.... because its been this way for what, only 10 years plus. Somewhat of an indicative trend to anyone with half a brain cell.... sadly, Rob Key doesn't even have that, so England will waste a lot of hotel and bar bills money accommodating this giant waste of space to be in Australia, so he can flunk around on his crutches while others do the work again. I can't wait for the Dead Rubber God of cricket to take a series changing 5-for again once we are 4-0 down already. Well worth that 3 year contract... and well worth ignoring the fact his live series record is one of the worst during his career span for anyone who played test cricket for a major test nation.
Then we get to Brydon Carse. Is Brydon Carse even remotely close to being a standout bowler in CC? He averaged 100 a wicket the year he was given his test cap. You think of all the bowlers who he's played with at Durham who have outperformed him. I reckon over his career at CLS, he wouldn't even get into a second XI of players ranked on wicket average in the same conditions. So why is he in the side? Because he is quick, thats it. We are supposed to believe that pace will kill Australia's best players, when it does not even kill Leicestershire on a cold April afternoon. Look at someone like Ben Raine.... in their last respective CC years for the same team, on the same pitches... Raine averages nearly 5 times less than Carse per wicket, and nearly half what Potts did last year. But the other two are vastly superior? Is that what we are supposed to believe?
I guess at this point I can hear Rob Key screaming "but what about the pace, you cant take wickets in OZ without bowling like the wind".... Well, I just witnessed a mid-30s medium fast bowler rip England to shreds for 5-40 bowling with his keeper up at the stumps. Last night, I seen Scott Boland break the top order with low 80s bowling, just hitting constantly on a line and length and nibbling it off the seam. It was Boland's 4-33 last week doing exactly the same that broke open the Perth test. So I don't want to hear this nonsense, because even in the first two frigging games this utter nonsense from Key has been debunked.
As I have said countless times as well, and which has been proven in both tests so far - irrespective of how quick you CAN bowl, expecting a load of injury prone guys who hardly ever play to be always at or near their top level pace is just ridiculous, and not picking a spinner to take away overs for them makes it even worse. And low and behold, in both games England have not actually bowled that quick. Archer today, faced with only a spell of 4-5 overs, cranked it up. Faced with bowling a whole innings, he came out and bowled 10 mph lower. Carse was in the low 80s most the innings. Atkinson too. And by the time they got tired the lid came off. There was no stock bowler to take the hard yards.... it has to be shock and awe, but the shock depreciates with every ball to nothing eventually. You are left with not really accurate quick bowlers not bowling quick.
And then we get to the spinner. To put this simply, England picked a spinner for 20 test matches at the same time his county decided he wasn't good enough to even be in their squad, and was sent packing on loan elsewhere to play. The same county last year had a spinner who took 2-3rd most wickets in the season at a brilliant average. Bashir is, by some distance and on every single metric you can measure, nowhere near as good as Jack Leach.... his county also believe that. Once again, England are not going with the trend, but against it. They decided, with no objective value, that a player like Bashir who was doing nothing in the game to the point of not getting a game, was somehow worthy of playing elite cricket.
And that's what it comes down to at the end of the day - arbitrary and unjustifiable opinions used to pick bowlers, going against all measurable fact. Make a sh*t plan, get sh*t results.
Can you imagine any other side in the history of the game leaving their best averaging bowler in 7 decades at home for an important series? A player that also has (I believe) the 2nd or 3rd best average out of any player thats played near a whole series in Australia since the dark days of the 90s and Englands fortunes in Australia plummeted. Ah yes, but Rob Key will tell you Robinson can't bowl 6 or 7 overs without his pace dropping, he's not fit enough to play, and his form is horrendous... and yet, in one week last year he had played more games that Archer had in 4 years. In two weeks, he played more cricket than Atkinson did all summer. By the third week, he'd send many more overs down than Carse had in the year he got capped. By the end of the summer, he'd been fit and played in more games than Wood has been in half his career. I cant be bothered to look, but I'd love to know the last time any of the people in the test team took as many wickets as Robbo did last summer, at a lower 20s average. But that doesn't matter to Rob Key. Fast bowlers who average 22 in test cricket apparently grow on trees. We can just ignore them. What would Robbo do on a pitch like Brisbane anyhow? Medium-fast rubbish just wont cut it....
Like it didn't in 2021 when he took 4/70 in the game at the Gabba, all top 6 batter wickets, against a statistically much better batting line up and no DN conditions.... remind me who did better this time?
Ah yeah... no one.