Quote from: Ads on December 18, 2017, 02:17:15 PMWe should be packing players off to play down under in the winter before the Ashes to give them a feel for Sheffield Shield cricket and flat pitches where you toil unless you can make one zip throughThis.
We should be packing players off to play down under in the winter before the Ashes to give them a feel for Sheffield Shield cricket and flat pitches where you toil unless you can make one zip through
What changes (if any) would the H&V selection committee make for Melbourne ?I assume that Overton won't play due to injury. Broad and Moeen both should be dropped. Broad is struggling with the ball due to injury and lack of form. He has also completely lost confidence as a batter since he was hit.In light of being in Lyon's pocket as a batter, Moeen needs to be spinning it a mile to be worth a place in the team. Again, injury and lack of form is preventing this.I've no clue what can be done about the batting. It's not like Root or Cook are going to be left out and, in any case, there's no real alternatives.
You can coach players through to bowl at 90mph. Speed is a skill, its nothing innate, we're just not making efforts to produce players to do this. This is the series we all want to win, so why aren't the ECB putting in place the coaches and the programmes to support the counties in producing this. Financial incentives to produce leg spinners, produce fast bowlers beyond the medium pace dobber who can swing and reverse it a little in overcast English green top pitches. Get them to Australia, get them to South Africa- experience flat and bouncy pitches and something different than the Duke ball.
I dont think its about pace bowling.. Glen McGrath was never express pace and he took 500+ wickets, in the later years of his career, Ryan Harris wasnt express pace and he caused England all sorts of problems. The Waugh brothers were handy bowlers and neither had express pace... all took plenty of wickets in Australian conditions with the Kookaburra ball. If you are bowling around the 85mph mark then line and length are key, thats where the English bowling unit failed, not because of a lack of pace, but because they consistently bowled the wrong length and didnt bowl with enough control.
That's why I'm suggesting an incentive from the ECB. Heck, pay the Indian states to take players on.
Quote from: ColinMac on December 19, 2017, 01:53:12 PMI dont think its about pace bowling.. Glen McGrath was never express pace and he took 500+ wickets, in the later years of his career, Ryan Harris wasnt express pace and he caused England all sorts of problems. The Waugh brothers were handy bowlers and neither had express pace... all took plenty of wickets in Australian conditions with the Kookaburra ball. If you are bowling around the 85mph mark then line and length are key, thats where the English bowling unit failed, not because of a lack of pace, but because they consistently bowled the wrong length and didnt bowl with enough control.If you're a medium pace bowler used to that ball and those pitches then you naturally bowl fuller than a traditional 'good' length so your natural action and style is effective because you're bowling at the top of 3rd/4th stump and forcing batsman to play almost every delivery. If you're a medium pacer in English conditions you can't bowl that length consistently or you'll get driven out of the attack so you have to bowl shorter and slightly wider and concentrate on taking edges rather than hitting the stumps. That's why getting the bowlers a lot more time in those conditions would be good for us.Quicks have more room for error if they don't get the length quite right which is why they have less problems translating performances onto those pitches.
Quote from: Ads on December 19, 2017, 12:34:19 PMYou can coach players through to bowl at 90mph. Speed is a skill, its nothing innate, we're just not making efforts to produce players to do this. This is the series we all want to win, so why aren't the ECB putting in place the coaches and the programmes to support the counties in producing this. Financial incentives to produce leg spinners, produce fast bowlers beyond the medium pace dobber who can swing and reverse it a little in overcast English green top pitches. Get them to Australia, get them to South Africa- experience flat and bouncy pitches and something different than the Duke ball. The bold bit is key, those players are no more effective in English conditions that medium pace swingers and hard to dominate offies but they require specialist coaching and, in the case of the leggies, huge amounts of game time to build up the experience needed. Given the already perilous finances for many of the counties they're just not going to take that on unless they get incentives.