Quote from: KevinGage on August 01, 2011, 03:55:44 PMEngland should go on to close out the series with at least a 2 game margin and thus claim the no.1 spot. But India (and Sri Lanka for that matter) in their own back yard will be a different proposition altogether. I keep hearing this (mostly from India supporters at work!), but it goes both ways, India can't call themselves the best team in the World if they can't cope with pitches that aren't as flat as a witches tit.England have now drawn in South Africa, beaten the Aussies comprehensively in their own backyard, stuffed Sri Lanka and are well on the way to a whitewash over the current No1 team, and I'd back our resilience and the fact we bat down to No11 to give it a really good go in India at the moment as well, especially as we now have the best spinner in Test Cricket.
England should go on to close out the series with at least a 2 game margin and thus claim the no.1 spot. But India (and Sri Lanka for that matter) in their own back yard will be a different proposition altogether.
They remind me of the Aussies when they were the best team, totally ruthless, never beaten until the final run or wicket. Spot a weakness, exploit it to the full, see the opposition just start to flag or relax? Hit 'em with everything.I thought we were getting there in 2005, but we took our eye off the ball and became complacent, but rather than revert to "same old England" we learned the lessons and came back stronger.I'm very proud of this England team, they are a pleasure to watch, and it's even sweeter when you are my sort of age and have endured the horror shows we had to watch in just about every year since the mid-eighties.Just watching the highlights, lovely moment when Scott Ellstone took that catch for Bresnan's five-fer after just dropping one the over before, he might never play for England properly but he'll dine out on that for a while.
Without doubt they are a great team, but significantly I think our biggest strength is the quality of our squad. Having strength in depth suggests some sort of structural change rather than a couple of once in a generation type players carrying the team.Which begs the question, what have the ECB done to improve our chances? I do not following cricket close enough, especially at county level, to know, so I was hoping sone of you guys could provide your theories. Some factors I have thought about:1 central contracts2 more overseas players (although I'm not sure that's true - hick, caddick, lamb etc)3 the rest of the world becoming obsessed with the shorter forms of cricket4 simply lucky5 sky getting the TV rights leading to more investment in the game
I did mean overseas players being selected for england rather than in the county games but it's largely not relevant. The reason for my question was to try and identify what the England cricket team was doing right (or other nations were doing wrong?) in order to identify the key thing we'd need to repeat in the future or apply to other sports.
Quote from: Dante Lavelli on August 03, 2011, 04:49:44 PMI did mean overseas players being selected for england rather than in the county games but it's largely not relevant. The reason for my question was to try and identify what the England cricket team was doing right (or other nations were doing wrong?) in order to identify the key thing we'd need to repeat in the future or apply to other sports. I think aside from having a pool of high quality players to choose from, its a lot to do with the high attention to detail. From allowing Strauss to play for another county in order to find form, to Cook being the only player allowed to shine the ball as he sweats the least.