Off Topic Cricket 2021

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Stroller

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Jun 28, 2013
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A good start to the new year for England in Sri Lanka, 320-4 at tea on the second day of the first test with a lead of 185. Root 168 not out and an excellent debut from Essex's Dan Lawrence, out for 73.
 
Nice start to the season and good to see skip back to making a big score........

Shame about no play after tea because of rain........Bat through most of the morning session tomorrow to bat SL out of the game leaving 2 days to bowl them out a 2nd time......
 
Only seen the highlights of the first two days.
Root looks in splendid form and a lovely debut from Lawrence.
Sri Lanka look a shadow of previous teams.
 
ICC rankings 7th jan

1 NZ 27 3,198 118
2 AUS 26 3,028 116
3 IND 27 3,085 114
4 ENG 41 4,326 106
5 SA 26 2,499 96
6 SL 30 2,574 86
7 PAK 23 1,890 82
8 WI 25 1,937 77
9 BAN 17 939 55
 
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Nervy total for England to chase & already 2 down, let Sri Lanka off the hook with those last few wickets taking a while
 
ICC rankings 7th jan

1 NZ 27 3,198 118
2 AUS 26 3,028 116
3 IND 27 3,085 114
4 ENG 41 4,326 106
5 SA 26 2,499 96
6 SL 30 2,574 86
7 PAK 23 1,890 82
8 WI 25 1,937 77
9 BAN 17 939 55

I think New Zealand have been social distancing from playing other teams, so they wouldn't lose their ranking!<laugh>
 
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Mark Reason: Australia's cricket loses honour in shameful short bowling assault on India
14:33, Jan 19 2021




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Australia's quicks have hurled down a barrage of short balls on the final day of the series.
OPINION: The baggy green cap lies soiled and dishonoured on the bloody soil of the ‘Gabbatoir’.

In their desperation for victory against India, the hosts have routinely assaulted and abused their visitors and pretended that it was all in the name of cricket. Even during the squalid cheating scandal of 2018, Australia never fell as low as they have during this four test series against these gritty Indians.

Ball after short ball have been bowled at India’s lower order batsmen. Bones were cracked and men like Mohammed Shami and Ravindra Jadeja were forced to retire hurt from the series, one with a shattered elbow, the other with a mangled hand. And yet still the onslaught continued.

There was nothing accidental about it. It was a planned assault. In the lead-up to the series Tim Paine, the grubby Australian captain, the man who was supposedly brought in to restore honour, said; “It is a tactic we use pretty consistently, particularly to the lower order. Playing the short ball at that pace is uncomfortable.”


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RYAN PIERSE/GETTY IMAGES
The reputation of Australia’s famed baggy green cap has taken a towelling during the series against India.
Indian after Indian suffered what Paine called discomfort. Their skin is raw from the bruises. Matthew Wade was heard on stump mic warning Ravi Ashwin during the third test in Sydney not to end up with a broken rib. And the commentators, largely a bunch of Ocker mates with the blessed exception of Isa Guha, condoned it all. When the Indian No 11 walked to the crease in the fourth test it was quite clear he was scarcely able to hold a bat.

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MARK KOLBE/GETTY IMAGES
Ravichandran Ashwin receives attention after being struck by a short ball during day five of the third test match between India and Australia in Sydney.
The first ball that Mitchell Starc bowled at the hapless tailender Thangarasu Natarajan was designed to hit him and to hurt him. He barely fended it off and the Australian commentators swarmed like flies. They called the “intimidating” balls “all part of the game” and said there was “an opportunity here to inflict a couple of wounds on to opposition bowlers.” They talked about breaking Natarajan’s hand or foot, what they call “nose and toes” bowling.

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But of course intimidatory bowling, particularly at tailenders, is not part of the game. Law 42.8 specifically prohibits it. It states; “The bowling of fast short pitched balls is unfair if, in the opinion of the Umpire at the Bowler's end, it constitutes an attempt to intimidate the Striker…

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MARK KOLBE/GETTY IMAGES
Matthew Wade, right, and Ravi Ashwin exchange words during day five of the third test.
“Umpires shall consider intimidation to be the deliberate bowling of fast short pitched balls which by their length, height and direction are intended or likely to inflict physical injury on the Striker. The relative skill of the Striker shall also be taken into consideration.”

So where the hell were the umpires when all this was going on in test after test? Captain Paine admitted what the Australian plan was, the commentators called it, the bowlers made no attempt to hide it, and yet the umpires let the Aussie hoodlums, of whom Starc is by far the worst offender, continue to assault the Indian lower order, at whom over twice as many short balls have been bowled as to the top order. Some of the short stuff is also produced by a chucking action which again is never called.


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I wonder if the bowlers would have been quite so vicious in their thirst for victory if all the officials hadn’t been Aussies. While former test batsman David Boon, reputed long-time holder of a beer drinking record on a long-haul flight, has oversight as match referee, the onus was still on Bruce Oxenford, Paul Wilson and Paul Reiffel, the standing umpires in the series, to step in and warn the Australian bowlers and then remove them from the attack.

It has happened before. In the 1970-71 series between Australia and England, the Australian umpire Lou Rowan repeatedly warned the England fast bowler John Snow about excessive short-pitched bowling. Rowan cautioned Snow about fair and unfair bowling and then issued an official warning. He would write later in his book; “For a few minutes … the whole future of cricket between England and Australia was in jeopardy.”

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RYAN PIERSE/GETTY IMAGES
Australian captain Tim Paine was roundly criticised for his sledging during the third test. Here gives ‘advice’ to India batsman Ravi Ashwin.
Certainly Snow was in jeopardy. He was showered in beer cans when he fielded near the boundary edge and one man grabbed his shirt. Captain Ray Illingworth eventually took his team from the field of play for the safety of his players, only to be warned by Rowan that he risked forfeiting the match.

It would seem that the Aussies don’t mind dishing it out, but aren’t quite so good at taking it. And it further appears, as has also been apparent in England and New Zealand during these Covid months, that home umpires are biased. There was never any chance that the Australian umpires were going to enforce the laws on their own team, as Rowan had done to the visitors, in order to protect the Indian batsmen.

As humans continue to grow taller and stronger, bowling will only become faster and faster. The brilliant young Aussie Will Pucovski has already suffered nine concussions by the age of 22. Not all were from cricket, but several were, including the latest when he was hit in the helmet when playing for Australia ‘A’.

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RICK RYCROFT/AP
Australia's Will Pucovski falls while batting during the third test between India and Australia in Sydney.
So surely someone in authority will have the sense to step in. New Zealand could play its part. Greg Barclay, the outgoing chair of New Zealand cricket, will soon become the independent chairman of the International Cricket Council. Barclay will have the power to end this plague upon our pavilions.

I have my doubts. But hopefully Barclay will prove me wrong and he will stand up to the bully boys of international cricket. Hopefully he will get the agreement to instruct the world’s pusillanimous umpires to start imposing the laws of cricket. If Barclay does nothing, then sooner or later he will have blood on his hands, because someone else will die, someone else will suffer the tragic fate of Phil Hughes.




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The Central Stags took a pair of stunning catches as they restricted the Otago Volts at Pukekura Park.
At the time of writing I do not know how the series between Australia and India ended, but like many a neutral I am rooting for India. They have been like Horatio on the bridge. The draw that the battered and reduced Indians achieved in the third test was one of the most heroic in the history of cricket.

After Cheteshwar Pujara and Rishabh Pant gave India hope, Hanuma Vihari and Ravi Ashwin resisted all manner of physical and verbal abuse for over 40 overs. Sometimes dot balls are more thrilling than sixes. That’s the beauty of test cricket, even in a series as ugly as this one.

But only one side has played with honour. The other, with their scuffing of every moral creaseline, has shamed cricket and shamed their country.












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Going well this morning. Sri Lanka were getting a bit of momentum pre-lunch after a dodgy start and Anderson has just taken a third wicket straight after the re-start. 76/3.
 
Brilliant from Anderson with amazing figures of 6 for 40 off 29 overs. A worry though that both our openers have gone to the left-arm spinner again. Our spinners bowled 64 overs between them and couldn't get a wicket.