PREAMBLE
So, both sides can bat, but can either side knock over the other side twice? Around here the loss of both McGrath and Warne has been discussed at length. Both had a confidence inspiring knack of picking up wickets at crucial times, but just as importantly, they could put the clamps on a scoring rate. Can our new-look attack cover their loss? We had a hint against the Shrees when we struggled to put them away at Bellerive - admittedly, not a minefield - and starting today we will further find out where our leather-flingers are at against a superior, if under-prepared, India.
India have their bowling issues, too. According to the Herald Sun they sent out an S.O.S to have both Ishant Sharma and Munaf Patel picked. The Hun shouldn't have been so quick to pick. India decided to stick with Kumble, Harby, Zaheer Khan and RP Singh. If Straya get away to a steady start, it's hard to see that attack rolling us toot-sweet. As always with Straya, though, you worry about their tendency to get themselves out. In Adelaide in 2003 they let right-arm-ordinary Agit Agakar run through the line-up, then Gilchrist dropped Dravid and India pinched a win out of nowhere. Very much cowboys v. Indians. Calcutta 2001 Straya were desperate to keep their winning run going, but fell victim to Wee Wee Laxman's double century, then, on a difficult last day wicket, still chased a win instead of shutting up shop. That profligacy cost us a Test match.
Did I mention chasing records? There's a coincidence. Did I mention dropped catches? Touch wood. Did I mention dodgy umpiring? Well, I didn't mention dodgy umpiring, but for the record the umpires gave us a hiding in Calcutta. Not that I'm complaining. Not at all. Just pointing out the facts.
Anyhoo, for me, it's all about the bowling.
A good start: Ponting won the toss and Straya will bat first. No one seems to know what the MCG pitch will do, but if Straya can weather any early awkwardness, batting first is probably the best bet; what's more, it reinforces the decision to pick Hogg in preference to Larry Tait.
And I'm glad we didn't play four quicks. If the four bowlers were guns, say, Marshall, Ambrose, Holding and Garner, you'd pick them. But if you think the significantly less deadly Lee, Clark, Johnston and Tait are all good enough to play in the one match on anything other than a concrete green-top, you're kidding yourself. Hogg had to play.
DAY ONE
It's a measure of how good Straya have been in recent years that a score of 337 on Day One attracts the Herald Sun headline: CRUSHER KUMBLE Indian captain spearheads Aussie demolition. Which is definitive enough until you read in the same paper: HOW ABOUT THAT Kiwis finally find form at Bangladesh expense. That's alright, I can take a joke. Still, the first headline is a fair indication of how much cricket has changed in recent years. Time was a score of 250 on day one at the MCG was considered a good day's work; 300 almost a batting miracle.
Nevertheless, 0/135 to 9/337 is 9/202 which ain't great. Especially when you considered most got starts. A point which seems to have eluded Tony Grieg, who at 5:56 said: "These Aussies always fight it out, no one's going to give their wicket away." What's he on? Hungry, Reverend Flatty, Clarke, Sidey Roy, Church (the zombie cat in Pet Sematary) and Georgie Hogg were all set until they got out to shit shots. Thankfully Flatty cashed in, but Hungry's was one of those dismissals you had a hunch might change the momentum given that Kumble, ever since his first over, looked as if he might provide some discomfort. The rest were lame: Clarke forgot to move his feet; Roy tried to crowbar the ball through mid-wicket; Gilly slung across a wide one; Hoggy slashed at his first ball with the second new ball. If that's not a paragon example of "give their wicket away" then I'm Bhagwat Chandraseker.
But what about India? Well, their bowling was good, but not stellar. Kumble, right from the time he came on, looked dangerous; Zack Khan was steady; RP fair to middling; Harby got better as the day went on. But like Nick mentioned in the comments, their fielding was dreadful. Was it Greg Chappell who taught them to escort balls to the boundary? Which makes the fact they took their catches, not that they were blinders, galling. A couple of drops and we might have been sitting pretty. In recent years we've benefited big time from other sides' charity, but now that the other side pouched most everything, it will be interesting to see if we, in turn, hold all our catches. If we start dropping chances, as we did in 2003/04, I'll have a fit.
Two connected questions. Is (now) 343 a bad score? And, how is the pitch? Bill Lawry is convinced batting yesterday was easy and that the pitch is only going to get better. ("Nine wickets in a day is almost unheard of.") That's despite batting on the MCG being an awkward prospect all season. Tony Greig thinks yesterday's score wasn't too bad and that Straya did pretty well. So it's good or it's bad, which is typical of a sports coverage covering all angles, but if it gets any gooderer, then Straya will be in trouble as I don't expect India to chuck their wickets away... well, that depends on what Yuvy Shwing gets up to. And given tail-enders Johnston and Clark got starts, too, we now get a very real chance to see if our new attack can restrict a good batting line-up in, what would appear to be, favourable conditions.
Did I mention India have no coach?
DAY TWO
I think Bruce sums it up best:
Dravid's pathetic start set the tone for the day. For all their talk of taking it up the Aussies it was only Tendulker and Ganguly who showed any aggression and Kumble could only add some defiance at the end. Even with their targetting of Hoggy he has only gone for the same rate as India did.
Even so - there will be enough time to chase down 400 - if they are good enough.
After Straya had been rolled for what Flatty called a "par effort" - I'd say "slightly below par" but I don't want to confuse anyone strolling in here from a golf blog who thinks "slightly below par" is a good thing - it was a huge relief yesterday when India came out and wasted the first session. Two for thirty odd in the best part of two hours was dreadful stuff and allowed the Aussies to dictate the tone of the day, despite Tendulk... sorry, The Little Master Maestro's attacking 62.
Not surprisingly, Spanky turned his analogies, metaphors and similies loose on Dravid:
Jittery Dravid fidgets and folds
RAHUL Dravid endured a day of torment at the MCG. At any rate it seemed like a day. Apparently his desperate effort lasted only 103 minutes but time hung heavily over the ground. Pressed into service as an opener, he poked around anxiously, seeking a humble run and the relief that it might bring. After an eternity he opened his account, but before long he was trudging back to the pavilion, wondering what had possessed him to take up batting.
Ian Chappell could be right: India need to look at selecting Verandah Slog and moving Dravid back down the order. The caveat, of course, is that Slog's been playing like a slug and his selection would be a gamble. What's more, Straya seem to have worked him out. In 2003/04 he was allowed to stand and swing and picked up a squillion runs square of the wicket. There's nothing more galling than batsmen being gifted easy runs in their hitting zones, but 2004 in India Ponting employed sweepers on both sides of the wicket which meant Slog's main source of supply was dried up and he had to start improvising to find runs elsewhere. It was one of the first obvious differences between Ponting and Steve Waugh. So it was good to see Ponting doing the same thing yesterday. By employing an in-out field, all the Indian batsmen, including TLM, had to hit out of their comfort zones to eke runs from odd places. That's when they were bothered eke-ing for runs. Have you seen a modern Test side turn threes into twos and twos into ones quite like India did yesterday?
Or was it the pitch? There have been countless column inches written on the state of the MCG wicket, but no one seems to be able to say with any conviction whether it's a good or bad deck. It reminds me of the MCG pitches from the seventies and eighties. It's not as low, slow and crumbly as then, mind, but given the number of batsmen who got out to bad shots, it could well be one of those pitches that are easy to get in on, but hard to stay in on. The ones that kept low, greater in number on day two than day one, would certainly have played on the minds of the Indian batsmen, but then Flatty and Hungry came out swinging. Still, whatever you think of the deck, Lee and Clark were special, Johnston was steady and Hoggy bowled a lot better than 2/82 looks on paper. Clark was obviously the pick and of the doubters mentioned in the press I'm sure Travis Bichel, for one, will revisit his opinion that Larry Tait should have come in for Clark.
But Bruce's last point is a disturbing one which, I assume, echoes all out thoughts: a 400 lead is not enough. If the Indian bowlers can roll us today, they, more than any side in world cricket, are capable of chasing a target on a low, slow pitch.
DAY THREE
Peter English on NGASAEB:
Setting targets is one of the great games played by a team in command. Australia have done it a lot under Ricky Ponting and he still doesn't know when a chase is too small. At home, he has not lost a Test and he has become less generous in the size of his declarations over the past couple of years.
Become less generous? I'd suggest targets of, in decending order, 648 in Brisbane against England, 557 in Perth against England, 506 against the Shrees in Hobart and now 499 against India in Melbourne is quite the reverse; numerically, anyway. What's more, if we assume that India are a better batting side than all the others; that India are more comfortable on low-slow tracks than all the others; that the weather is not going to be a factor, unless you pity Straya out there in the scorching Calcut... Melbourne sun; and that we are now down two bowling greats, then a target of 499 is significantly more generous than the others. Nor should you discount the fact that in all those Tests, batting a further hour or so would not have made any difference to the result.
ROAD WORRIERS
Greg Baum on something Wicky mentioned yesterday:
Glitch in pitch not a big hitch
A CRICKET pitch is like an umpire, politician or mother-in-law: it's always to blame. Pitches are either too slow or (rarely) too fast, bounce too low or (rarely) too high, are too flat or menacing to life and limb. None are made as for the wee baby bear, just right.
Rudely, fingers are pointing at this one, and at the whole concept of drop-in pitches. But why? Certainly, it is a piebald thing, bare at the southern end, thatched at the other.
But the three days of this match have yielded 9-337, 11-234 and 7-325 respectively, a feast of cricket.
Without doubt this has been an enthralling Test. Sadly, though, an enthralling Test that ends early is bad news for the Test hosts, who fail to meet budgeted attendance estimates, and the official broadcasters, who lose advertising revenue. For them, boring long is better than enthralling short. So don't expect the people who run the game to start calling for difficult decks.
(That's not even getting started on limited overs cricket where a significant percentage of "memorable" matches have been played on difficult tracks.)
As for yesterday's play. Well, the Strayan batsmen still got out to dumb shots, but at least they had their heads down and scored runs before the dumbness. A lot of the runs were scored with the assistance of the dreadful - "languid" according to Kerry O'K - Indian ground fielding which kept giving us quick singles, turned ones into twos and twos into threes. What's more, Ponting should have let our batsmen score more. But at least they didn't get rolled for an ugly low total, leaving an eminently gettable target.
Not that the experts agree with us here at AGB mansions. The pundits have ritually informed us, and with palpable certainty, that Straya are going to win comfortably because the pitch is getting more difficult - as opposed to "harder" which is easier - to bat on, so who am I to argue... fingers crossed.
DAY FOUR
The choke's on them:
HAVING found a new way to win - by suffocation - Australia's increasingly dominant cricketers will march to Sydney intent on squeezing more life out of India's champion batsmen and on equalling their own world-record streak after demolishing Anil Kumble's team inside four days at the MCG.
One of the more infuriating things for cricket fans, apart from "wickets" off no balls, dropped catches, missed stumpings, wasted wickets, overthrows, sloppy fielding, Nathan Bracken's hair/head-band and John Bracewell, is leaking easy runs.
It used to shit me to tears when Steve Waugh set full-on attacking fields, confident he had runs to spare. Yeah, so he won plenty, but I still didn't like it when he gave up easy runs. Personally, I just didn't see the need.
One of the things I liked about the Windies in the 1980s was that as soon as a batsmen had scored in a certain area - mainly fine leg or third man, since they rarely pitched it up - Lloyd or Richards would immediately block off the shot. It didn't seem to stop their juggernaut. Having a gun side helped.
The sub-text of the Windies' tactics was that the bowlers bowled to their fields: short of a length with a field to suit.
Waugh would have wanted disciplined bowling, too, but if it went tits up like, say, Calcutta in 2001, he was stuck for answers; worse than that, the bowlers would go looking for wickets in the wrong places.
Take UnZud in 2001. The Kiwis planned to leave most everything outside off, which lured the Aussie bowlers into bowling "to them" only to be picked off through the leg side.
Ponting isn't like that.
It's not that Waugh was a dummy and Ponting a clever-clogs, it's just that while Waugh might over-attack, and then occasionally lose his way, Ponting has fine tuned Waugh's attack with some cleverly targeted defence, Windies style.
I mentioned Verandah Slog up above. In 2004 [Correction!] Ponting Gilly & Ponting blocked off his scoring zones, which meant he had to go looking for runs with riskier shots. Here in Melbourne Ponting employed an in-out field with a variety of short covers, short mid ons, short mid offs, and judiciously placed sweepers. He blocked, for example, Wee Wee Luckshmun's flick through mid wicket. This meant, especially on a sluggish MCG, the Indian batsmen had their scoring zones covered and their runs dried up.
Naturally, the bowlers had set roles. It would have been madness for Punter, and not a little galling for us punters, had he set an offside field, 6/3 for instance, and then the bowlers put it on the batsmen's pads.
With that in mind, Straya picked three quicks Clark, Johnston and Lee and told them to just ping, ping, ping in the same spot, then backed them with appropriate fields.
Johnston wasn't plonking the ball outside off because, coincidentally, that's the way it was coming out of his hand; he was doing it because Ponting had told him to do so and then covered the offside in the right places. If the Indians wanted to score big off him, they had to go over the top, or risk a tug through the onside. The bonus was Johnston had the ball wiggling around, luring the batsmen into slashy prospecting. All he needs now is to develop one that ducks back a-la the Zack Zaheer no-ball that "got" Sideshow Roy.
Clark, of course, was Clark. Say no more.
And Lee has curbed his youthful zest - revisit, if you have the stomach, his rubbish to Pietersen at the Oval in 2005 - and turned into a much more disciplined L-Flinger.
Naturally, none of them lived by line-and-length alone. There were just enough bouncers to mix things up and force the batsmen onto the back foot, but not too many.
And Hogga is not the best leggy of all time, or the tightest, but while batsmen continue to misread his variations, he will be a valuable member of the team; he can bat, too, which is more than you can say for Stewie Whatsisname.
Which leads me to, in an extraordinarily smooth segue, today's Age.
Criticism far from constructive
SHANE Warne called him a goose and Ian Chappell said his own daughter could have coached the Australian side with more success. Both were terribly insulting comments from two icons of Australian cricket directed at former national coach John Buchanan. Both men are entitled to their opinions "they have earned that right" but seriously, men, what was the point? The comments were juvenile and out of order; neither offered any constructive analysis but were just harmful character assassinations.
Ian Chappell the commentator, as opposed to Ian Chappell the blowhard - there is a distinction - would hardly expect to commentate without a director. Someone needs to steer the good ship Nine.
It's not like it was in the old days: Ian McGillivray knocking a pencil on the desk and calling the game from a wire service. Nine has all sorts of technical and cosmetic details that need attending to: commentators, statisticians, cameras, microphones, dials and... errr, knobs.
Chappelli can take a stab at them all if he wants, especially the role of head knob, but I'm sure you'll agree the coverage would be a complete f**k up. (Stop right there. While there is plenty to take pot-shots at, Nine do a professional job.)
So if he's prepared to accept Nine's professional advances since 1979, then surely - surely! - he has to accept cricket's professional progress. To do otherwise would be both pigheaded and, as Chuck Berry writes, juvenile.
It's here the role of Simpson, Marsh, Buchanan and now Tim Nielsen has guided Strayan cricket's professional progress.
Let's face it, all Strayan Test cricketers can bat, bowl, field and combinations thereof. If you've ever played cricket you know how good grade cricketers are, how good state cricketers are, and in turn, how much better Test cricketers are. Understatement alert: Test cricketers can play a bit.
But it's what the coaching and research have been able to add to that raw talent that has made Straya what they are today.
There is no way Ponting alone could cover the myriad demands imposed on a coach, captain, fitness guru, bowling coach, batting coach, spin coach, fielding coach, coaching coach, etc.
But feed him all the necessary information and you get what you got yesterday: a versatile plan carried out by a variety of bowlers bowling to a variety of specific fields based on a variety of research done by a variety of specialist coaches all marshalled by what the Yanks would call a Head Coach.
What's more, if Chappelli has access to the developments afforded modern cricketers, including a Head Coach, he would have had ten times the success he had back when Les Favell was telling him what to do.
Did I mention India had no Head Coach? They have an Almost Head Coach, but for some strange reason Gary Kirsten in only along for the ride.
Of course, it could all go to shit in Sydney. The toss of a coin, a dud decision, a dropped chance, another "wicket" off a no ball. TLM has a day out. The SCG is smaller, too, so containment is less achievable than it is on a bigger MCG.
Still, the scene is set for Straya to equal their run of sixteen victories that ended in Calcutta in 2001; only this time when you put eleven talented India cricketers with their lack of attention to detail and "languid" fielding up against talented Straya Inc with all its advances in the last six years... well, you've got to concede that we have a head start.
As Tony Grieg put it yesterday: "This fifteenth win is hot foot on their previous record."
Colourful commentary? Or "get a grip, Jenny"?
3.5 - Singh to Hayden, no run, zigzagging zing starting to move away, pitching, and moving way, away - Dhoni side stepping like a Space Invader to pouch.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 11:22 AM
Chappelli on Channel Nein suggested that Hungry's bat was too heavy after he played a bit late on a cut shot. Slater was dumbfounded, "Are you serious? A man playing for his country using a bat that's too heavy?"
I think Jenny's been swept up by the occasion.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 12:04 PM
Shane-O, Chappelli must have been beaten around the head with a heavy bat. Maybe it was Clive Lloyd. Whoever sconned him, he's been talking rubbish for years.
And somehow Slater and dumbfounded go together like Grieg and stuck-with-him.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 12:34 PM
Dangerous signs early. Pitch is already flatter than yesterday's champagne (one must pull out the stops for Xmas) and India's lack of luck has them meandering already.
Those last 8 overs were as close to going through the motions as I have ever seen and it is only the first session of the series.
Posted by: Bruce | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 12:42 PM
Dead as the proverbial door handle.
It looks like the only hope for a result is if we can knock up a big score and then hope the pitch falls apart about day five.
What? The? Hell? Were India doing without a mid-wicket?!?
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 12:52 PM
The issue with playing Hogg as a spinner instead of Tait is whether Hogg is a test class spinner. I suspect not. We seem to have an overwhelming desire to play spinners regardless of whether they are up to standard or not. Having said this, surely Hogg will go out and take a bagful of wickets (and score 50 to boot).
Posted by: Ian | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 12:53 PM
That's a fair point, Ian, but on any one day Hogg is probably as good as our fourth best performed quicky, and provides some necessary variation. Yes, you could bowl Clark or Sideshow Roy, but Hogg provides a greater threat than either. He's also a better bat than Tait; although, I'm not putting much of an premium on either's batting ability.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 12:57 PM
Tone, maybe I should have added "more than usual".
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 01:00 PM
Heard the interview with Tony Were on the SENs this morning. He essentially said they are instructed to prepare roads.
ROADS ARE KILLING TEST CRICKET!
Posted by: Bruce | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 01:00 PM
Couldn't agree more, Bruce. What's wrong with giving bowlers some assistance from the pitch?
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 01:10 PM
The bland nature of most modern pitches is a tragedy. Sensible me says it's because the authorities want matches to last five days. Cynical me says it's because the authorities want matches to last five days.
Every now and again they should serve up a deck like that Test at Mumbai in 2004 when Clarke got 6/rock-all, and then water them. In fact, they should do that for ALL T/20 frolics.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 01:16 PM
That goofy Cricket Show program at lunch:
Highlights of Gilly at press conference: I dunno what's going on with former players having a go at team mates AND THE SUPPORT STAFF SURROUNDING THE TEAM.
Chappelli self righteously replies: I was never criticising the players, so nyar nyar to you, Gilly.
Way to not address Gilly's claims, ya fucken moron.
O'Donnell: The rest of the cricketing world might disagree with you re: importance of coaches.
Chappelli: I'm nevar evarr going to change my opinion on this.
What a fucken belligerent fat head, eh?
Other highlights.
Tubby: Haven't been back for a decade. I really miss India.
O'Donnell: I'm sure India doesn't miss you, nyuk nyuk.
The fah?
Posted by: Big Ramifications | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 01:27 PM
I moved your comment over here, Biggy. Not 100% sure why, but it just seemed like a good idea at the time. Anyway...
Saw The O'Donnell Show. Chappelli's bald assertion that Test cricket sides don't need a coach is just daft. He must feel he's dug himself in so far, there's no point trying to dig himself out.
His claim that the quote about his daughter was by way of comparison is fair enough, but how he can state coaches are only useful in junior development ranks and NO use in Test cricket is stupid. Surely - surely - there's some cross-over territory there.
Did I mention that Shane Warne has just been appointed a junior development coach?
Tubby & Simon's comedy stylings about Andrew Symonds body and Tubby's head were gruesome. As was Simon's sign-off "Yuk, yuk, we're having fun here."
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 01:35 PM
Hungry stumped - again. That ball was way too straightforward to take a wicket. Not saying it was the worst shot of all time, or the best ball... it's just that it wasn't the sort of delivery a set batsman should get stumped off.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 01:41 PM
Maybe his bat was too heavy.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 01:46 PM
Told you so.
Posted by: Ian Chappell | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 01:48 PM
I must apologise for my language. I'm feeling better now.
Belligerent has-been fat heads get me kranky.
Posted by: Big Ramifications | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 01:49 PM
I was busy during the lunch break stocking up on beer and cigarettes. Man cannot watch cricket with bread alone.
Hungry's just got himself out. Seems to me that Kumble is a mile ahead of the other Indians in ability- if we take it easy against him and just milk the others we should get 600 more often then not against this mob.
(None of this declaring in the 500's please. Still not happy about Adelaide 2003/04)
I want a green demon of a pitch for Perth so that we can play four quicks with a clean conscience. And also to avenge that diabolical pitch at Mumbai last time. Just to make the point that we can meddle with pitches too if we feel like it.
Just by the by, the media hype about making a great rivalry between India and Australia is just not working for me. Rivalry isn't just about two teams going at each other, but its about things you share in common. Like location or common background. That's why football rivalries work, or Australia vs England or Australia vs New Zealand. I just don't feel anything at all in common with Indians to get worked into a rivalry with.
Posted by: Scott Wickstein | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 01:50 PM
His claim that the quote about his daughter was by way of comparison is fair enough, but how he can state coaches are only useful in junior development ranks and NO use in Test cricket is stupid. Surely - surely - there's some cross-over territory there.
No. There is a distinct line in the sand and only Ian knows where that line is Ian is the Guardian of the Line Shane will be a valuable coach do not question Ian.
I've also heard Chappelli's same argument being used over the importance of CAPTAINS. I distinctly remember Channel 9 commentators regularly questioning Supercat's captaincy "skills" in the mid 80s.
What say Ian about that, I wonder?
Posted by: Big Ramifaications | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 01:57 PM
What the?!? A Ponting failure. We're in trouble.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 01:59 PM
Punter? No! Good delivery, but still...fuck. I hope I haven't mozzed anyone.
Posted by: Scott Wickstein | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 02:00 PM
Maybe his bat was too heavy.
Jesus Christ, wasn't that hilarious?! Great that Slats called him on it. Laffed at him, no less.
And what did the belligerent has-been fat head do? Why, he belligerently maintained that he was correct.
[Must. Get. My. Own. Fucking. Blog.]
Posted by: Big Ramifiactions | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 02:02 PM
Hussey! Plumb! Fuck!
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 02:04 PM
It's not time to hit the panic button just yet. But it might well be time to bring the panic button into the living room and put it next to the remote...just in case.
Posted by: Scott Wickstein | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 02:06 PM
Yep. Kumble looks a bona fide threat. And Zaheer K. is going alright, too.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 02:08 PM
Warnie in today's Herald Sun:
Shane Warne settles the record with Gilcrhist issue
WELL, I am recently retired, I have an opinion on cricket, am passionate about the game and would like to think that in my almost 20 years involved at first-class level, my opinion is, well, exactly that, a well-informed opinion.
Ian Chappell
ON THIS one I think Gilly should be sent to the headmaster for six of the best.
Every player owes the honour of playing for Australia to Ian.
He stood up for what he believed in and took a risk. He helped save the game of cricket worldwide. He stood up for every cricket player and fought for better conditions for the players with regard to schedules, the players' association, pay and so on, and as far as captaincy and learning the game goes, there is no one better than Ian Chappell to talk to.
As far as influences go, Ian has taught me more than anyone who has been involved in the game. He would be one of the biggest influences on my career, along with my father and my spin coach Terry Jenner. We all owe Chaps.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 02:15 PM
Another ton to 'Dos - MCG run machine.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 02:22 PM
He does love the Boxing Day Test.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 02:24 PM
Great knock, that. Needs to go on and make it a big one though.
Warne should just hush and stick to doing dodgy beer commercials.
Posted by: Scott Wickstein | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 02:25 PM
Fascinating admission from Tubby that he wanted to drop Haydos early in his career. The implication being that Tubby thought he was a dud. Admittedly 'Dos WAS a hack back then, but still... you don't often get that kind of candid commentary from Nine.
Maybe Fujitsu air-cons ARE great.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 02:29 PM
So Warne learned from Chappelli? Obviously not any form of coaching was it? Seeing as how Ian doesn't think Test players need coaching.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 02:33 PM
Sounds like Chappelli would have made a great coach. Well, a better coach than Chappellg, anyway.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 02:38 PM
It annoys me that Channel Nine have the score updated before runs are completed.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 02:43 PM
India need a fielding coach. And we need a hayden 200*.
Posted by: Nick | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 02:45 PM
For the sake of balance, Gilly's implied statement that "a baggy green cap = respect, therefore you must not disrespect the team" was pretty bloody ludicrous, too.
Fat heads, the lotta them!
Posted by: Big Ramifications | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 02:51 PM
So 3/212 at tea: very good, good, bad, dreadful or Sydney-to-Hobart?
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 03:12 PM
That's pretty good. Hayden's batting well although there was a couple of soft outs.
It could have been worse, the way the ball was moving around early.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 03:17 PM
Tells ya what! Those Classic Catches are generally pants, but Hopes' and Lee's were fantastic examples of how to get your hands under the ball and then smoothly roll over without jolting your elbows.
I hereby deem the Classic Catches slightly less rubbishy than before!
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 03:19 PM
Who-ly shit! Shane Warne's segment was just led in with Baba O'Riley.
What happened to their rubbish white-trash tattoo rock? Blink 18shit, Shit Day, Dead Shit Chili Peppers, etc.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 03:23 PM
Shane, getting through the first sesh with 0/100+ was a huge start. Now it's important, given it looks like an Indian style track, we build big.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 03:25 PM
That was a pretty good interview with Warney. For all his boofhead behaviour, he speaks well about cricket.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 03:29 PM
With any luck he will become the Troy Cooley of spin coaches.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 03:37 PM
Speaking of Nine - does anyone else think that massive WWOS watermark is intrusive?
It's bugging the hell out of me.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 03:42 PM
Good interview was it? I nipped out to get a Hungry Jaques Ultimate Double Whopper. Pretty fattening, but I'll work it off in the new year.
I still think we need at least 500 in this innings. So we've still a lot of work to go. I'm rather more worried now then I was at lunchtime, I must say.
Posted by: Scott Wickstein | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 03:44 PM
Clarke caught at second slip. Bugger. A dicey situation.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 03:48 PM
Clarke out for 20. I hate it worse when someone gets out for 20 then when they get out for 2- they've done the hard work, got themselves in, and then failed to cash in.
4 for 225- it's just not good enough.
Posted by: Scott Wickstein | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 03:48 PM
That's Clarke gone. Good catch by Wery Wery in the slips, shit shot by Clarke.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 03:49 PM
Clarke moved his feet about as far as Trescothick and Verandah Slog.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 03:51 PM
Oh god, Sideshoy Roy's not long for this world either with shots like this.
Posted by: Scott Wickstein | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 03:51 PM
Or shots like that.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 03:54 PM
It's funny how when Bill says "caught it clean a a whistle" he whistles.
Wonder if he's eating fruit when he says "that's fruit for the sightscreen".
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 03:57 PM
If this pitch is not already "Officially Dead" it's heading for death row if you go by the number of balls that have landed in front of MSDhoni and that one in front of Wee Wee.
We're going to need a shit-load of runs if we're going to defend against the Indian batsmen on this low deck.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 04:02 PM
Ah, crap! Nice mozz, ya pommy bastard!
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 04:05 PM
Well, Haydos is out, so we're not going to have a shit load. We're not going to have 320 at this rate.
Any rain forecast?
Posted by: Scott Wickstein | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 04:05 PM
Reverend Haydos out. Our situation: Officially Shitful.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 04:05 PM
Zaheer Khan - hamstring?
Both he and RP have been swinging the ball nicely.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 04:21 PM
Fucken Heals! "The bowlers haven't put the batsmen under any recent pressure." What a shocking mozz!
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 04:48 PM
There goes Sideshow Roy.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 04:49 PM
Geez, they're good at the mozz at Nein.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 04:52 PM
Three questions:
1) Bill keeps saying the conditions are good for batting. Are they?
2) Bill keeps saying the pitch will get faster. Will it? How does he know?
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 04:56 PM
And I quote:
"As always with Straya, though, you worry about their tendency to get themselves out."
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 05:02 PM
Wick, that prediction looks spot on at the moment.
Tone, that prediction looks spot on at the moment.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 05:06 PM
Jeez! Mark Benson has his finger up almost before the appeal.
Lee plumb, though.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 05:16 PM
Jesus, 8/294.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 05:16 PM
Wicky's 320 looks generous.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 05:20 PM
Why aren't they hitting out? If they get quick runs, then great, if not, we can get a couple of overs up them before stumps.
Posted by: Nick | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 05:20 PM
He did say we're not going to have 320.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 05:25 PM
Correction: Wicky's "not going to have 320" looks generous.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 05:27 PM
Lucky break then for Johnson. He got a bit of bat on that one.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 05:31 PM
Cue 100 'good for the game' columns tomorrow.
Posted by: Nick | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 05:32 PM
Johnston very lucky. And Nick's spot on; although possibly under-quoting.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 05:34 PM
Except Roebuck will use about 20 six syllable words to say 'good for the game'.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 05:36 PM
320 is looking good.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 05:38 PM
It's about now, with the Aussies doing it tough, that Tony Grieg goes from fundamentally irritating to effing unbearable.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 05:39 PM
Agreed. He gets so bloody smug when Oz struggles. As I write, Hogg gets out.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 05:43 PM
That was a great mozz by me.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 05:44 PM
ANOTHER stupid out?!?
They're kidding, right.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 05:44 PM
Talk about blasting through the 320 Ceiling.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 05:50 PM
I'll reserve my judgement on the game until India bats.
Yeah, I love stepping out on a limb.
Posted by: Vindicate | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 05:59 PM
Clark should be further up the order.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 06:00 PM
Loverly limb-work, too, Vindy.
And, you'll be chuffed to know, echoing Tony Grieg.
Posted by: Tony T | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 06:01 PM
I guess we'll see tomorrow whether the pitch is hard to play or the Aussies today were just shit. I think the latter. Some very soft outs.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 06:08 PM
Thanks for putting up with my ramblings, Tone.
I've been a long-time reader but until today not a regular commenter.
Posted by: Shane O | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 06:10 PM
Pretty pathetic effort by our guys today. I'm glad to have been proven wrong about the whole 320 thing, but 337/9 is nothing to write home about.
I'll go out on a limb and predict that the Indians will rack up 625 on this pitch. But they'll take their time about it so we'll have a chance to bat for a draw. But we'll have to bat better in the second dig.
Posted by: Scott Wickstein | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 06:12 PM
Some soft outs combined with some good bowling. Kahn and Kumble put in some decent spells today.
Some nice tail work by Johnston (do we have an established nickname for him yet?) and Sarf to put some respectability on the board.
I remain unconvinced of the current quality of the Indian bats. Sure, they've got 50000 runs between them - but Dravid is a makeshift opener and their tail is a lot longer. We shall see tomorrow.
Posted by: Bruce | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 06:19 PM
I was thinking that we can't lose to a team that fields this badly, but then i remembered 2005. This will be the match that Dravid finds form.
Posted by: Nick | Wednesday, December 26, 2007 at 08:19 PM
Bowling figures actually represented how well the respective bowlers bowled
Kumble 5
Khan 3
RP Signh 1
Harbajhan 0
By the way, why didn't Pathan get selected? Anyone know?
Posted by: Yobbo | Thursday, December 27, 2007 at 12:45 AM
Very Nice posst!!!!!
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Posted by: Mitra | Thursday, December 27, 2007 at 01:50 AM
Pathan out of form with the ball, and thought to be too much to have 3 left armers in the attack. With the shuffling of the batting order to accommodate Yuvraj, and having Dhoni, they didn't feel the need for an allrounder.
India may be calling for specialist fielders by the end of this series. If Kumble had caught Hayden at gully we would have been stuffed.
Posted by: nick | Thursday, December 27, 2007 at 09:46 AM
From what I've seen of Pathan he's a better bowler than RP Singh, but if he's out of form he's out of form I guess.
Posted by: Yobbo | Thursday, December 27, 2007 at 10:45 AM
Punter and Mr Cricket were due. Pup's failure puts paid to Chapelli and Warne promoting him up the captaincy ranks.
Note on whether the pitch is a track or a minefield from the Nein perspective - if the score is 0/111 it's a track, 8/312 - a minefield.
343 is a good score for the circumstances but 100 short of what we should have got. We now get to see how good our bowling is. India all out for under 380 - good, anything over 430 and the grey days are here again.
Posted by: pat | Thursday, December 27, 2007 at 11:13 AM
Well, there you go - when it's tough, we start dropping them. Hungry certainly ain't hungry for catches. Fuck! And double fuck!
Posted by: Tony T | Thursday, December 27, 2007 at 11:23 AM
Hungry is the weakest link in the field. He needs the patented Bobby Simpson coaching treatment.
Posted by: Bruce | Thursday, December 27, 2007 at 11:26 AM
Pat, your comments pretty much echo my Day One summary up at the top.
And Shane:
"Thanks for putting up with my ramblings, Tone."
No worries. We love ramblings 'round here. In fact, ramblings are what we do best. Well, ramblings AND stunningly insightful, unbiased and invective-free commentary.
Posted by: Tony T | Thursday, December 27, 2007 at 11:28 AM
Me first!! Bing got Jaffer with a Jaffer.
Posted by: Tony T | Thursday, December 27, 2007 at 11:29 AM
A tentative start. Perhaps batting needs a bit of work?
And there is the first one. The early one comes for the Aussies as India look like they are digging a trench first.
Posted by: Bruce | Thursday, December 27, 2007 at 11:31 AM
Spot on. A very defensive start is allowing Straya to have a catching field. Be interesting to see if we give India as many gaps for singles as India gave us. Interesting in a "bloody unlikely" way, that is.
Posted by: Tony T | Thursday, December 27, 2007 at 11:36 AM
Aaaaaggghhhhhhh!!!!!!!
"Wickets" of no balls.
We. Are. Doomed.
That's Dravid slashing TWICE outside off and TWICE being let off.
What was that Nick said about this being the match Dravid gets back into form?
Posted by: Tony T | Thursday, December 27, 2007 at 11:47 AM
So far all the action is being interrupted by Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Hopefully I'll get the TV back soon.
Posted by: pat | Thursday, December 27, 2007 at 11:50 AM
Bring on Donatello from the Southern Stand end.
Posted by: Tony T | Thursday, December 27, 2007 at 11:55 AM