Space Cat
ODI Debutant
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2012
- Runs
- 11,086
Got a little bit too aggressive McCullum
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Bhai was unplayable for the indians
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It looks like the afternoon session might get interrupted by rain. That could cause a major problem to NZ's victory surge.
It looks like the afternoon session might get interrupted by rain. That could cause a major problem to NZ's victory surge.
Warrior or full retard? You decide.This is McCulum strength. This is how he plays.
Live by sword, die by sword. Warrior.
Well played McCullum.
Warrior or full retard? You decide.
Warrior or full retard? You decide.
This is McCulum strength. This is how he plays.
Live by sword, die by sword. Warrior.
Well played McCullum.
This is McCulum strength. This is how he plays.
Live by sword, die by sword. Warrior.
Well played McCullum.
This is how he played against Pakistan and took game away and NZ won.
It's actually not McCullum's strength. He just thinks it is.
Dave Warner has never, ever in his life batted for 200 balls in a Test innings. Ever.
McCullum has scores of:
302 from 559 balls
225 from 308 balls
224 from 307 balls
185 from 272 balls
143 from 243 balls.
The trouble is that in the last year he has also scored:
202 from 188 balls
195 from 134 balls
.......and he is getting carried away with the rapid slogging innings.
But those five innings I listed above are much more precious in Test cricket than these short slogs.
Ball wasn't swinging around as much. Today it was Overcast plus new ball. He should have shown some discretion. He is a very capable batsman which is why this sort of recklessness is uncalled for.This is how he played against Pakistan and took game away and NZ won.
Well he wasn't no Johnny cash this time for sure.There's a fine line between genius and insanity. McCullum tends to walk the line.
It depends on the situation of the test match really. If you're looking to add quick runs to a lead before you declare such innings are valuable or when you are chasing big totals to win a Test match.
Do agree that he is getting carried away but not every aggressive bat plays like warner (his style of play isn't exactly risk free either), like one of the posters said; There's a fine line between genius and insanity. McCullum tends to walk the line.
McCullum crossed that line three innings ago, when he reached 50 in the World Cup semi-final against South Africa.
He then proceeded to give his wicket away, and repeated the process inside 3 balls in the World Cup Final.
And when he probably needed tender loving care to regain his newly-misplaced marbles, he went off to the IPL and has come back playing like Charlie Sheen in a cocaine binge.
He has completely lost it. He has lost the ability to judge the tempo required and to adapt in mid-innings, and is literally playing like a madman every time he goes out to bat.
It's not brave. It's a car-crash.
Well he wasn't no Johnny cash this time for sure.
McCullum crossed that line three innings ago, when he reached 50 in the World Cup semi-final against South Africa.
He then proceeded to give his wicket away, and repeated the process inside 3 balls in the World Cup Final.
And when he probably needed tender loving care to regain his newly-misplaced marbles, he went off to the IPL and has come back playing like Charlie Sheen in a cocaine binge.
He has completely lost it. He has lost the ability to judge the tempo required and to adapt in mid-innings, and is literally playing like a madman every time he goes out to bat.
It's not brave. It's a car-crash.
Some players play the same way irrespective of situation.
Sehwag played that way. Thats the only way they know.
McCullum produced some stunning innings in the last 2 years by playing aggressively.
When Brendon was playing according to the situation *cough* slowly, he did not have much success. Aggression seems to be working for him. Yes, he might get out anytime, but when it comes, he will destroy all bowling units.
McCullum crossed that line three innings ago, when he reached 50 in the World Cup semi-final against South Africa.
He then proceeded to give his wicket away, and repeated the process inside 3 balls in the World Cup Final.
And when he probably needed tender loving care to regain his newly-misplaced marbles, he went off to the IPL and has come back playing like Charlie Sheen in a cocaine binge.
He has completely lost it. He has lost the ability to judge the tempo required and to adapt in mid-innings, and is literally playing like a madman every time he goes out to bat.
It's not brave. It's a car-crash.
It's actually not McCullum's strength. He just thinks it is.
Dave Warner has never, ever in his life batted for 200 balls in a Test innings. Ever.
McCullum has scores of:
302 from 559 balls
225 from 308 balls
224 from 307 balls
185 from 272 balls
143 from 243 balls.
The trouble is that in the last year he has also scored:
202 from 188 balls
195 from 134 balls
.......and he is getting carried away with the rapid slogging innings.
But those five innings I listed above are much more precious in Test cricket than these short slogs.
When, as you put it, McCullum played to the situation he managed these monumental innings:
302 from 559 balls
225 from 308 balls
224 from 307 balls
185 from 272 balls
143 from 243 balls.
He used to be so much more than Sehwag as a Test batsman. And now he has shrunk to Sehwag's level.
It looks like the afternoon session might get interrupted by rain. That could cause a major problem to NZ's victory surge.
Am not calling it brave but it's just the way he has always played, there are some instances as you have pointed out where he displayed great judgement and patience but beyond it all he is a slogger by nature. I think his ability to score quick down the order during Tests is underrated; you're expecting too much from him Junaids.
When, as you put it, McCullum played to the situation he managed these monumental innings:
302 from 559 balls
225 from 308 balls
224 from 307 balls
185 from 272 balls
143 from 243 balls.
He used to be so much more than Sehwag as a Test batsman. And now he has shrunk to Sehwag's level.
When, as you put it, McCullum played to the situation he managed these monumental innings:
302 from 559 balls
225 from 308 balls
224 from 307 balls
185 from 272 balls
143 from 243 balls.
He used to be so much more than Sehwag as a Test batsman. And now he has shrunk to Sehwag's level.
Sehwag averages a full 10 runs more and is a legend. Much better than mediocre blockers.
It's people like you who keep cricket analyis in the dark ages with all these dogmatic, rubbish double-standards.
Sehwag is no legend. He averaged 29 in the Third Innings and 31 in the Fourth Innings. He was a waste of space for half of every Test match.
He was a brilliant slogger when the pitch was at its truest on Days 1 and 2, when his flawed technique could often be concealed by his terrific hand-eye coordination.
I was probably a bit harsh - McCullum and Sehwag have both put together several innings over 200 balls, although Sehwag mainly did so in Asia's easier batting conditions, which is why he has a better overall average. They are quite similar.
Sehwag is no legend. He averaged 29 in the Third Innings and 31 in the Fourth Innings. He was a waste of space for half of every Test match.
He was a brilliant slogger when the pitch was at its truest on Days 1 and 2, when his flawed technique could often be concealed by his terrific hand-eye coordination.
I was probably a bit harsh - McCullum and Sehwag have both put together several innings over 200 balls, although Sehwag mainly did so in Asia's easier batting conditions, which is why he has a better overall average. They are quite similar.
But he has done it so many times in the past!
He isn't a Dave Warner who hasn't got the discipline or concentration to last 200 balls.
This ball is only 20 overs old. If McCullum had not thrown away his wicket 2 overs before lunch he could have given himself the opportunity to thrash tired bowlers with a worn out ball in the next session.
He didn't need to score 42 from 38 balls. He'd have given his team more by scoring 30 from 45 balls at lunch and accelerating to 100 from 130 balls in the afternoon.
He is wasting his talent. He used to be better than this.
Cherry-picking statistics to make a player look weak is absurd. If he was so bad in the second half, that's actually all the more impressive beacuse it underlines how extraordinary he was in the first half (and really in Test Cricket, that's what shapes the match in the vast majority of cases.
[MENTION=132916]Junaids[/MENTION] also, Brendon has averaged 36 in FC cricket. So it's not as if he has not been able to fulfil the limit of his talent. This is the difference between good players and greats (those who exceed expectations and their own ability).
Put it this way. You had all-time test greats in Tendulkar and Dravid and a top class player in VVS Laxman during Sehwag's decade as a Test cricketer.
If you had had 4 great batsmen you'd have been the undisputed top team. But you only had a year and a bit as the top team when both Australia and South Africa were in transition.
And that's because Sehwag - in spite of his inflated average - wasn't in the same class as Tendulkar, Dravid or Laxman. He was a liability after 2 days of every 5 day Test.
Like McCullum, he could be thrilling to watch. But like the current demented McCullum he couldn't be bothered to do what his team needed half of the time - it was just "take me as I am".
McCullum definitely needs to tone down his aggression a bit. Needless dismissal.
It's actually not McCullum's strength. He just thinks it is.
Dave Warner has never, ever in his life batted for 200 balls in a Test innings. Ever.
McCullum has scores of:
302 from 559 balls
225 from 308 balls
224 from 307 balls
185 from 272 balls
143 from 243 balls.
The trouble is that in the last year he has also scored:
202 from 188 balls
195 from 134 balls
.......and he is getting carried away with the rapid slogging innings.
But those five innings I listed above are much more precious in Test cricket than these short slogs.
Laxman was not a better player than Sehwag. He just played the way self-appointed purists preferred and played a magical innings once in a while.
"If you had had 4 great batsmen you'd have been the undisputed top team"- is just a metric you made up and makes no sense, and even if true, Laxman was the one who was not in the class of the others. Sehwag played in the same team as the rest, so what exactly was his performance 'inflated' by? Or do you mean that your subjective views determines who is good, and the reality must bend itself to those?
His century against Pakistan was also needless I take it?
Come on, how can 195 (134) not be a matchwinning knock in a test? You see 143 (243) all the time and it's rarely the kind of innings that can single handedly change the course of a test match. Just shy of a double ton in a mere 22 overs however can not only turn a match on its head, it can put serious dents into the confidence of the opposition bowlers going forward into the rest of the series. 143 (243) is never going to be the kind of innings to give opposition captains nightmares.
Wow. Just wow.
Here are their relative performances across all 4 innings of Test cricket:
FIRST INNINGS: Sehwag 58.11, Laxman 39.23
SECOND INNINGS: Sehwag 65.91, Laxman 48.49
THIRD INNINGS: Sehwag 29.69, Laxman 54.00
FOURTH INNINGS: Sehwag 31.06, Laxman 40.55
On that basis I have never even respected Sehwag, let alone rated him as a high class Test batsman. How can you average 29.69 and 31.06 in the second half of a match? It's just pathetic.
But VVS was a superb batsman. A joy to watch, but also a performer to fear at the business end of a Test match.
Can you explain why the overall figures matter less to you than the figures for one half?
Especially when the game is shaped by the first half of the match?
Sehwag was truly monumental at winning games in the team's first innings when Laxman's record is that of just any other batsman. I seriously can't believe people come up with such random subjective stuff to ignore realities they don't like.
I'm not belittling those two very fast big innings. Although the second was on a dead wicket in the UAE after Phillip Hughes' death deflated both teams.
What I am saying is that such innings are as rare as hens' teeth. And the risk/reward equation is unfavourable - you are much more likely to get out prematurely than to make a big score batting like that in a Test.
McCullum has made two of those rapid big innings and has given up even trying to score the sorts of big innings that he previously complied.
OK, let me take it out of numbers and into words to spell it out to you:
FIRST INNINGS: Sehwag superb, Laxman average
SECOND INNINGS: Sehwag superb, Laxman excellent
THIRD INNINGS: Sehwag useless, Laxman superb
FOURTH INNINGS: Sehwag useless, Laxman very good
Laxman is not useless at any of the four innings. Sehwag is useless in 2 out of 4.
Yet he keeps doing so and you keep objecting.
Never mind that you will not condemn even repeated failures defensively.
Since he's started the kamikaze stuff his career and NZ's fortunes have undergone a dramatic upturn, yet the old geezers keep complaining because his methods don't conform to their pre-conceptions about what should and should not work.
Sehwag is no legend. He averaged 29 in the Third Innings and 31 in the Fourth Innings. He was a waste of space for half of every Test match.
He was a brilliant slogger when the pitch was at its truest on Days 1 and 2, when his flawed technique could often be concealed by his terrific hand-eye coordination.
I was probably a bit harsh - McCullum and Sehwag have both put together several innings over 200 balls, although Sehwag mainly did so in Asia's easier batting conditions, which is why he has a better overall average. They are quite similar.
I was at the MCG for the World Cup Final, a few days after I'd called him "Suicide McCullum" when he nearly threww away the semi-final.
First ball swung a mile. Big swing, missed it.
Second ball swung a mile. Big swing, missed it.
Third ball swung a mile. Big swing, missed it. Bowled.
That is not normal. That is not responsible. That is not acceptable.
He knew that Williamson and Taylor were out of form, but he threw away the World Cup with his selfish and mindless slogging.
But Sehwag's ability in the first two is almost unparalleled while Laxman's is ordinary.
Tell me why the second half matters so much more?
We all know a game is shaped by the first innings.
Also, I don't get how 30 is useless, but 40 is average. It's a difference of 10 runs and while that's large useless is definitely overstating it.
Why are you pathologically averse to looking at the stats on the whole?
Sehwag is no legend. He averaged 29 in the Third Innings and 31 in the Fourth Innings. He was a waste of space for half of every Test match.
He was a brilliant slogger when the pitch was at its truest on Days 1 and 2, when his flawed technique could often be concealed by his terrific hand-eye coordination.
I was probably a bit harsh - McCullum and Sehwag have both put together several innings over 200 balls, although Sehwag mainly did so in Asia's easier batting conditions, which is why he has a better overall average. They are quite similar.
You are blind if you perceived a big swing on the ball he was dismissed.
Not to mention that his performance won them the Semi-final.
Here's a novel idea for you.
Evaluate a player on what he did. If a player scores a ton of runs and then team collapses after he is out it is THEIR FAULT and not his.
There is no logic or justification to adding adjectives like "throw it away" to Mccullum's failures but refusing to address anything when Taylor scores less runs and does so at a harmfully slow pace.
There is nothing wrong in playing aggressive cricket if you have the capacity to pick and choose occasions.
The double hundred v us in Sharjah was a much needed effort because NZ were trailing the series 1-0 and we had scored 350 in the first innings, so his approach was justified.
Today, in this context, it was a nothing shot considering the lead was only 12 runs.
If he would have scored another 100 at a run a ball, we would praise him, but the point is that you cannot do that all the time so you have to approach your innings properly and take the most sensible route, which does not have to be over-aggressive all the time.
McCullum played an irresponsible innings today and I don't think there's a justification for it.
Unless you're Chris Tavare, there is no such thing as "a harmfully slow pace" in Test cricket.
Unless you're Chris Tavare, there is no such thing as "a harmfully slow pace" in Test cricket.
Let me build on that.
If Corey Anderson scores 130 from 100 balls now and New Zealand end up 570 all out with 10 overs left tonight he has set the game up well.
But if BJ Watling comes in and scores 130 from 200 balls and they are bowled out for 620 at lunch on Day 4 they are in just as good a position - arguably better because there is no risk of them needing to score runs in the final innings.
Test cricket always offers choices, different permutations and combinations.
Good captains and good players adapt. Bad ones don't.
I was referring to the World Cup, where even you recognized that Taylor was awful, but no references to him letting the side down or being irrepsonsible by chewing up balls at critical stages.
The upside was huge, but NZL already lead with 6 wickets left and four of them specialist batters. Why was there any problem with it here? I just don't see how even the worst case scenario makes attacking a bad choice. I'd take a 50/50 coinflip between a first ball duck and a run-a-ball hundred at that stage because the upside is worth more than the downside hurts.
He scored 42 (37) and his side are on top. If it worked they would have much longer to bowl England out and they are easily on top now as well, which is the justification for it.
I'm not belittling those two very fast big innings. Although the second was on a dead wicket in the UAE after Phillip Hughes' death deflated both teams.
What I am saying is that such innings are as rare as hens' teeth. And the risk/reward equation is unfavourable - you are much more likely to get out prematurely than to make a big score batting like that in a Test.
McCullum has made two of those rapid big innings and has given up even trying to score the sorts of big innings that he previously complied.
I've never seen somebody celebrate two fortunate wickets like that as much as mark wood.