colino
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RE: The Ashes and Cricket World Cup Discussion Thread
Cosmonuat, sometimes your comments make me smile....No, really.
Did you not consider for one minute that the Aussie management would put out this (alledged) release about Ponting's finger worsening to save a man who has served his country royally as a batting stalwart and long-term captain from the ignominy of being publicly dropped?
Would that not be the prudent thing to do?
Given that the Aussie press and most of the public are baying for his blood, would a statement about a "worsening finger" not only give the Aussie masses what it wants, but save Ponting any further embarrassment?
Or are you the sort of person that actually believed Fergie, every time he said that Ryan Giggs had pulled/strained a hammy and couldn't play for Wales, yet turned out for Utd only 3 days later?
No doubt he needed an op and now that he's not playing he'll have it, but ask any Aussie journo if he believes Ponting's finger has dramatically worsened since the last test started. I think we both know the answer to that one.
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30-12-2010 14:40 |
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bigguy01
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RE: The Ashes and Cricket World Cup Discussion Thread
(30-12-2010 10:24 )Charlemagne Wrote: Australia have enough good players to provide a quality test team, but the selectors aren't picking them. Where's Brett Lee gone?
phil hughes, johnson, beer etc
they have not produce quality players to replace lee, mcgrath, waugh brothers, hayden, gilchrist (probably the best keeperbatsman) etc
they have no cpt inwaiting like strauss. aussie cricket is in the state england was when they lost to new zealand in the late 90's early 2000's. ducan fletcher turned it around but the 2006/7 tour was a disgrace, peter moores was no good along with pieterson as skipper who was trying to call the shots thus affected his form. the ecb finally found a good coah and cpt. the coach is from the same school of thinking as the british tack cycling coachs preperation is key. the make sure that the players have the best possible preperation and then its down to them to do business. colly is on his last legs because morgan will probably play in the test series in uk.
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30-12-2010 15:54 |
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rocksaviour
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RE: The Ashes and Cricket World Cup Discussion Thread
Lee has retired from test cricket but is still around for the ODI if fit.
The coach and skipper combo is great and we will go on from here and become the number one test side I believe, the players are all young enough to have good runs in the side and there is backup in reserve, a bit like the Aussie side of the late 90s and early 00s they could of put out a decent 3rd XI so to speak and now we can at least do something like that. Let the good times role for us English cricket supporters.
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30-12-2010 17:06 |
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cosmonaut
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RE: The Ashes and Cricket World Cup Discussion Thread
(30-12-2010 14:40 )colino Wrote: Did you not consider for one minute that the Aussie management would put out this (alledged) release about Ponting's finger worsening to save a man who has served his country royally as a batting stalwart and long-term captain from the ignominy of being publicly dropped?
Would that not be the prudent thing to do?
No. It's not something that Australians worry about.
Ponting will have to be left out eventually anyway and everyone knows it, because nobody can go on forever. When he's left out there will be no cover ups or subterfuge because Australian selectors never find that kind of thing necessary and have never bothered with it. To Australians tough decisions are just part of the game.
(30-12-2010 14:40 )colino Wrote: Given that the Aussie press and most of the public are baying for his blood, would a statement about a "worsening finger" not only give the Aussie masses what it wants, but save Ponting any further embarrassment?
The Aussie press and public are not baying for Ponting's blood, but are mostly generally supportive of him. They know it's not fair to blame him for a poor team. The big debate in the Aussie press is whether the selectors blundered by allowing Ponting to play with a broken finger when that only made the injury worse. Tim Neilson has however insisted on defending that decision, saying that on the information available at that time they thought it was worth the risk.
It's easy to be wise after the event, but when any sportsman plays with pain killing injections it's always possible that it can lead to further problems, because if the injury gets worse the player can't feel that happening.
Ponting is not embarrassed and will not have any problem when he is stood down from the captaincy and/or the team. He knows his time will come, just as everyone else knows it, so there is nothing to be embarrassed about.
If you think that when Ponting is dropped he will look to cover it with some excuse you will be disappointed, as I don't think Ponting would ever allow anything like that to happen (even if the selectors thought such a ruse worth bothering with, which they won't).
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30-12-2010 19:04 |
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colino
Senior Poster
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RE: The Ashes and Cricket World Cup Discussion Thread
(30-12-2010 19:04 )cosmonaut Wrote: (30-12-2010 14:40 )colino Wrote: Did you not consider for one minute that the Aussie management would put out this (alledged) release about Ponting's finger worsening to save a man who has served his country royally as a batting stalwart and long-term captain from the ignominy of being publicly dropped?
Would that not be the prudent thing to do?
No. It's not something that Australians worry about.
Ponting will have to be left out eventually anyway and everyone knows it, because nobody can go on forever. When he's left out there will be no cover ups or subterfuge because Australian selectors never find that kind of thing necessary and have never bothered with it. To Australians tough decisions are just part of the game.
(30-12-2010 14:40 )colino Wrote: Given that the Aussie press and most of the public are baying for his blood, would a statement about a "worsening finger" not only give the Aussie masses what it wants, but save Ponting any further embarrassment?
The Aussie press and public are not baying for Ponting's blood, but are mostly generally supportive of him. They know it's not fair to blame him for a poor team. The big debate in the Aussie press is whether the selectors blundered by allowing Ponting to play with a broken finger when that only made the injury worse. Tim Neilson has however insisted on defending that decision, saying that on the information available at that time they thought it was worth the risk.
It's easy to be wise after the event, but when any sportsman plays with pain killing injections it's always possible that it can lead to further problems, because if the injury gets worse the player can't feel that happening.
Ponting is not embarrassed and will not have any problem when he is stood down from the captaincy and/or the team. He knows his time will come, just as everyone else knows it, so there is nothing to be embarrassed about.
If you think that when Ponting is dropped he will look to cover it with some excuse you will be disappointed, as I don't think Ponting would ever allow anything like that to happen (even if the selectors thought such a ruse worth bothering with, which they won't).
Fyi, the "ruse" which you refer to as not being used has in fact been used by the Australians many, many times. For one, Matthew Hayden's sudden retirement announcement a few years ago (after a poor run of form with the bat) was widely recognised by all and sundry as being made AFTER being told by the selectors that his services would be no longer required, without it being made public, so that he could leave on his own terms after a distinguished career. Mark Taylor gave up his captaincy and his place in the team in similar circumstances, to name but two.
If you think that The Australian board don't behave in a sympathetic manner towards players that have worn the baggy green with distinction for many years, then you are quite, quite wrong.
Moreover, if your theory that "the ruse just doesn't happen" is correct, could you explain how (particularly in Australian cricket) the top, aged Australian players nearly always seem to retire, without (apparently) giving the selectors a chance to discard them? (before you pick me up on this point, i'm not saying that it's the case for ALL players, clearly some retire entirely of their own volition) Or do you think that it's some kind of freaky, continually recurring coincidence? I think not. The Aussie selectors do it, because they are quite rightly mindful of the player's standing in the game and his legacy to it once he retires. Ponting comes into this catergory more than most.
He might well return to one day cricket (i never said he wouldn't, btw) but the ONLY way he'll return to the test arena as player and captain is if the Aussies can't find anybody suitable or good enough to replace him in the interim. That would be a true indictment on the current state of Australian cricket, and quite possibly on Ponting himself.
(This post was last modified: 31-12-2010 09:48 by colino.)
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31-12-2010 08:32 |
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