Filling McCullums' Boots in ODIs
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<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="gollum" data-cid="557632" data-time="1455031803">
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<p>And the selection. I think folks have very short memories re the selectorial farce that was NZ cricket, guys dropped & picked over & over, players moved around all over the place. We probably had more openers in the few years prior to Edgar than we have had batsman in the Edgar years. Even the failures (Rutherford) were given a really good chance.</p>
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<p>I get your point that many variables have aligned, and it's a true one well made. </p>
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<p>Funnily enough over the last 12-18 months, team selection has been anything but consistent. Nearly everyone has been in and out with similar regularity as in the chaotic years.</p>
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<p>Rotation has been rife</p>
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<p>A good batch at the moment or good development by the coaching staff? </p> -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="Siam" data-cid="557633" data-time="1455033948">
<div><br><p>A good batch at the moment or good development by the coaching staff? </p>
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<p>It gets clouded on coaching too as Guppy & Taylor have been coached by Crowe - Taylor almost entirely avoiding using Hesson. Kane has had Moxon & Gillespie working with him at Yorkshire a lot more than any NZ coach - same guys working with Joe Root not surprisingly. </p>
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<p>I would guess the difference between Hesson & a control freak like Bracewell or Turner would be if a player wants to work with Crowe, or Moxon, or anyone really & it works for them Hesson would be cool with that.</p>
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<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="Siam" data-cid="557633" data-time="1455033948">
<div><br><p>Funnily enough over the last 12-18 months, team selection has been anything but consistent. Nearly everyone has been in and out with similar regularity as in the chaotic years.</p>
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<p>Difference is its mostly the same 16 or 17. So a guy has been dropped (eg Elliot) but he's still be around the squad, next cab etc. In the past we could have a guy who was starting, then seemingly 5th choice. Look at a guy like Wagner. He's been axed a lot, but he knows he is probably our 5th choice quick. And has been in that grouping for 3 years.</p>
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<p>In the last 3 years only 3 batsmen have played less than 10 tests (Guppy, Brownlie, Redmond). The 3 years before that it was 9. Rutherford (16) & Fulton (13) got a decent go at opening. Mckintosh, Ingram & Flynn didn't get 13 between them </p> -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="Immenso Rapido" data-cid="557609" data-time="1455013037">
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<p><strong>There's no way Latham keeps and opens. There's no way any sane thinking selection panel wants to muddy the role of their young test opener with ODI keeping distractions</strong>.<br><br>
He's already got a a full time job, and he needs to do a lot of work to get better at it.<br><br>
Giving him an ODI batting spot is another matter, could help polish some parts of his game.<br><br>
I would go: Watling at 5 for ODIs, Elliott shuffles on about now anyway (gets a bit messy if Eliott keeps aceing it) with hitters at 6 and 7 .<br><br>
I wouldn't want the same keeper in all 3 formats. I wouldn't want to mess with Watling's test game too much. Someone new keeps for T20s (de Boorder probably as filler for a few years). Edit. I'm talking post T20 world cup. For this tournament we are either stuck with Ronchi or draft in Watling. I wouldn't got too worked up about this one with it being in Asia plus Baz's poorly timed retirement.</p>
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<p>Quite simply, I think you'll be proven wrong there. Perhaps not immediately, but without doubt in the medium term and on. It'll only take a season of Latham bedding in before he's given the gloves.</p> -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="TeWaio" data-cid="557611" data-time="1455015563">
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<p><span style="color:rgb(0,0,0);font-family:georgia;font-size:16px;">An </span><a data-ipb='nomediaparse' href='http://stats.espncricinfo.com/ci/engine/player/37737.html?class=2;template=results;type=batting'>ODI average of 30.41</a><span style="color:rgb(0,0,0);font-family:georgia;font-size:16px;"> is clearly underwhelming in today's age: among the </span><a data-ipb='nomediaparse' href='http://stats.espncricinfo.com/ci/engine/stats/index.html?class=2;filter=advanced;orderby=batting_average;orderbyad=reverse;qualmin1=5000;qualval1=runs;spanmin1=01+jan+2000;spanval1=span;template=results;type=batting'>42 batsmen</a><span style="color:rgb(0,0,0);font-family:georgia;font-size:16px;"> who have scored at least 5000 ODI runs since 2000, only Shahid Afridi has a lower average.<br><br>
that is a damning stat</span></p>
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<p>Hogwash. BMac spent a lot of his time batting down the order where averages aren't the measure of success - in fact the guy who comes in at 7 determined to get a not out is a liability.</p>
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<p>Whether you agree with the tactic or not, BMac was used in the first 10 overs to take advantage of the fielding restrictions - hence why his strike rate was 150 in recent times. However while that will work spectacularly at times, it will also fail fairly often as well. That tactic helped to win the semi-final and helped to lose the final.</p>
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<p>I might sound grumpy but the obsession with averages in this forum irks me!</p> -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="KiwiPie" data-cid="557637" data-time="1455043509">
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<p>Hogwash. BMac spent a lot of his time batting down the order where averages aren't the measure of success - in fact the guy who comes in at 7 determined to get a not out is a liability.</p>
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<p>Whether you agree with the tactic or not, BMac was used in the first 10 overs to take advantage of the fielding restrictions - hence why his strike rate was 150 in recent times. However while that will work spectacularly at times, it will also fail fairly often as well. That tactic helped to win the semi-final and helped to lose the final.</p>
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<p>I might sound grumpy but the obsession with averages in this forum irks me!</p>
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<p>Mark me down as an average obsessive KiwiPie, they do tell a hell of a lot.....but yeah not the whole story when you dig deep in some cases. Some guys are plainly "better" than their averages, I put McCullum in this category. Some as you allude to get either with luck and/or design get a big average from a lot of not outs. Our own Dan Vettori went from someone who could hold a bat to probably our best batsman for a period but his overall career average was never gonna go far north of 30 based on his early inconsistency. Viv Richards and Brian Lara are both better than their averages suggest ( if that can be said of guys averaging 50 and 52 respectively ) and they had the amazing auras to match....and there's a few guys averaging 50 odd in todays game who in no way are "greats"</p>
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<p>That all made more sense in my head than it does actually written down. </p> -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="KiwiPie" data-cid="557637" data-time="1455043509">
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<p>Hogwash. BMac spent a lot of his time batting down the order where averages aren't the measure of success - in fact the guy who comes in at 7 determined to get a not out is a liability.</p>
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<p>Whether you agree with the tactic or not, BMac was used in the first 10 overs to take advantage of the fielding restrictions - hence why his strike rate was 150 in recent times. However while that will work spectacularly at times, it will also fail fairly often as well. That tactic helped to win the semi-final and helped to lose the final.</p>
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<p>I might sound grumpy but the obsession with averages in this forum irks me!</p>
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<p>averaged just under 33 as an opener, which is better but it is not as if his average was massively changed from his time down the order.</p>
<p>i didn't mind him going the smash with fielding restrictions on at all, it was the lack of ability to adjust if conditions didn't suit - meaning an early wicket a la WC final - or to reduce risks just a touch once the damage had been done. he seemed to always be looking for that one-off total of 500 when instead he could have got us to 360-odd heaps of times, and consequently won us more games.</p>
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<p>my opinion is that this is simply the best overall group of players we've ever had, and that that is by far the main driver of our success; having a 'follow-me' type captain who encourages everyone to have a crack and have faith in their ability has undoubtedly helped young players come in to the team and be effective immediately, but it is very difficult to say how much.</p> -
<p>The forum hardly has an obsession with averages. It is just the case that a player's average is the best way we have of measuring performance. A player like Guptill who averages 40 with a decent strike rate just has to be selected every time over a player who averages 30, whatever their strike rate. What are people who don't like stats saying? How should we measure performance? Basically, humans have all sorts of biases that come into play if you are just going on visual perception. The fact is that McCullum averaged 31 as a batsman and that is well below what you would call an average average in ODI cricket these days. Most of the time it was good enough to make the New Zealand team. When he was wicket keeper, it was good enough to be our best ever keeper-batsman.</p>
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<p>The solution to bad stats is better stats, rather than no stats.</p> -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="KiwiPie" data-cid="557637" data-time="1455043509">
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<p> That tactic helped to win the semi-final and helped to lose the final.</p>
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<p>If only the notion of a match winning 50 was around in Fleming's day - he would have been lauded just as much. His top score of 48 chasing 200 against the Aussies in the 2003 CWC now looks like an all time knock.</p>
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<p>It's a fallacy to say that McCullum was boom or bust as an opener. Things very rarely went "spectacularly" for him. How many match winning innings did he play at the top of the order against genuine opposition? I have one against Pakistan in the UAE a few years ago but that's it. Best case scenario was a 70 or 80 odd and chipping out to a garbage shot - that's why in that semi many called for him to slow the fuck down and tick the score along after hitting 50. Others point out that if it had come off he would have hit a match winning hundred - but we never saw evidence in his career he could bat long periods so recklessly like Sehwag, Warner, De Villiers and frankly Guptill.</p>
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<p>edit: this isn't a slight at McCullum he still had a valuable and important role and definitely contributed positively to that win. But like the Sri Lankan 1996 top order he was playing a Kaluwitharana role and I felt with the right application he had the ability to do much more (not to mention I don't believe captains should play that role).</p> -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="reprobate" data-cid="557642" data-time="1455047493">
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<p>averaged just under 33 as an opener, which is better but it is not as if his average was massively changed from his time down the order.</p>
<p>i didn't mind him going the smash with fielding restrictions on at all, it was the lack of ability to adjust if conditions didn't suit - meaning an early wicket a la WC final - or to reduce risks just a touch once the damage had been done. he seemed to always be looking for that one-off total of 500 when instead he could have got us to 360-odd heaps of times, and consequently won us more games.</p>
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<p>my opinion is that this is simply the best overall group of players we've ever had, and that that is by far the main driver of our success; having a 'follow-me' type captain who encourages everyone to have a crack and have faith in their ability has undoubtedly helped young players come in to the team and be effective immediately, but it is very difficult to say how much.</p>
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<p>Comparing him to Gilchrist who was in a similar mode as an opener - Gilly averaged 36.5 as an opener with a SR of 98, BMac averaged 33 with a SR of 103. And many people would have Gilly opening in their all time ODI XI. I was as frustrated as you by the fact that BMac always seemed to get out just when the bowling was on its knees but you don't get such a high strike rate without taking chances. His strike rate since he moved to opener again in 2014 is 155 at an average of 32.7. Jayasuriya averaged 34.6 as an opener at an SR of 92.5, another similar player.</p>
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<p>Where BMac fell down against the other 2 is not in the number of starts he would get - he was good at getting a start - but in converting to a bigger score which the other 2 did much more often.</p>
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<p>Gilchrist Opening - passed 50 26.6%</p>
<p>Jayasuriya - 24.5%</p>
<p>BMac - 21.5%</p>
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<p>Having typed all that I'm not even sure what my conclusion is - other than BMac wasn't as good as Gilchrist and Jayasuriya but wasn't all that far behind them.</p> -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="rotated" data-cid="557646" data-time="1455051250">
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<p>If only the notion of a match winning 50 was around in Fleming's day - he would have been lauded just as much. His top score of 48 chasing 200 against the Aussies in the 2003 CWC now looks like an all time knock.</p>
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<p>It's a fallacy to say that McCullum was boom or bust as an opener. Things very rarely went "spectacularly" for him. How many match winning innings did he play at the top of the order against genuine opposition? I have one against Pakistan in the UAE a few years ago but that's it. Best case scenario was a 70 or 80 odd and chipping out to a garbage shot - that's why in that semi many called for him to slow the fuck down and tick the score along after hitting 50. Others point out that if it had come off he would have hit a match winning hundred - but we never saw evidence in his career he could bat long periods so recklessly like Sehwag, Warner, De Villiers and frankly Guptill.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>edit: this isn't a slight at McCullum he still had a valuable and important role and definitely contributed positively to that win. But like the Sri Lankan 1996 top order he was playing a Kaluwitharana role and I felt with the right application he had the ability to do much more (not to mention I don't believe captains should play that role).</p>
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<p>Are you saying that NZ would have chased down SA in that semi-final (298 at almost 7 an over) without BMac's 59 off 26 balls? He used up just over 4 overs to knock it down by 59, that is astonishing hitting. and when he was out the asking rate was just over 6. I'm not saying his innings was the only factor but it enabled Elliott and Anderson to take their time when the pressure was on.</p> -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="hydro11" data-cid="557645" data-time="1455051103">
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<p>The forum hardly has an obsession with averages. It is just the case that a player's average is the best way we have of measuring performance. A player like Guptill who averages 40 with a decent strike rate just has to be selected every time over a player who averages 30, whatever their strike rate. What are people who don't like stats saying? How should we measure performance? Basically, humans have all sorts of biases that come into play if you are just going on visual perception. The fact is that McCullum averaged 31 as a batsman and that is well below what you would call an average average in ODI cricket these days. Most of the time it was good enough to make the New Zealand team. When he was wicket keeper, it was good enough to be our best ever keeper-batsman.</p>
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<p>The solution to bad stats is better stats, rather than no stats.</p>
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<p>Averages are fine for test cricket, become less important in ODIs and are almost irrelevant in T20s. What is important is measuring whether the player does the job well according to the situation they are faced with. Williamson has a fine ODI average now, it would be even better if he kept pushing singles when he got to the 40th over and finished 120 not out instead of hitting out and getting out for 90. Which statistic do I look at for that factor? </p> -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="KiwiPie" data-cid="557659" data-time="1455057539">
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<p>Are you saying that NZ would have chased down SA in that semi-final (298 at almost 7 an over) without BMac's 59 off 26 balls? He used up just over 4 overs to knock it down by 59, that is astonishing hitting. and when he was out the asking rate was just over 6. I'm not saying his innings was the only factor but it enabled Elliott and Anderson to take their time when the pressure was on.</p>
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<p>As I said</p>
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<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote">this isn't a slight at McCullum he still had a valuable and important role and definitely contributed positively to that win.</blockquote>
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<p>I simply saying that I struggle to find a batting captain in the history of ODI cricket who is praised so regularly for 50s and getting the job half done (not to mention the method of his dismissals). Fleming was derided for similar innings (albeit at a slower pace but more runs in a different era) and I do not remember the likes of Steve Waugh being praised for such innings either. I'm happy to be wrong but I genuinely cannot recall another batting captain who is given that much slack in the ODI game.</p>
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<p>Specifically for that game and that innings it was certainly a vital contribution, however at the time trying to hit a bowler of Steyn's quality out of the attack was a fools errand. Steyn was going to be persevered with and bowled on his own schedule such was his quality. I think Guppy's innings in the QF showed an alternate template for how McCullum could have structured his innings without getting out ahead of the run rate.</p> -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="shark" data-cid="557635" data-time="1455040957"><p>
Quite simply, I think you'll be proven wrong there. Perhaps not immediately, but without doubt in the medium term and on. It'll only take a season of Latham bedding in before he's given the gloves.</p></blockquote>
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Do you mean he becomes an ODI regular batsman now Baz retires, and after a season he is also given ODI keeping?<br><br>
Yes, that's a conceivable scenario. <br><br>
But I still don't see it as likely. The ODI keeping gap is now, not 12 months away. <br><br>
I just don't see Hesson weakening one relative strength (which has a huge gap to the next best) to tinker with a non-critical weakness in the ODI team which has other options. Plus there are about 6 or 7 better keepers than him on the provincial scene.<br><br>
Latham hasn't kept at any level since he became test opener. He's been given a clear role and message. They won't fuck with that. -
Still, Latham has kept in ODI, List A and First Class cricket. And not that long ago. He's more than capable so I can see it happening sooner rather than later. It's another BJ Watling situation. Be interesting to see when the selectors lose faith in Ronchi.
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<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="shark" data-cid="557815" data-time="1455080256">
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<p>Still, Latham has kept in ODI, List A and First Class cricket. And not that long ago. He's more than capable so I can see it happening sooner rather than later. It's another BJ Watling situation. Be interesting to see when the selectors lose faith in Ronchi.</p>
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<p>Somewhat amusingly the commentators have been saying he ( Ronchi ) is "due a big one" everytime he goes out to bat.</p>
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<p>I don't think that big one will ever happen.</p> -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="rotated" data-cid="557662" data-time="1455058198">
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<p>Specifically for that game and that innings it was certainly a vital contribution, however at the time trying to hit a bowler of Steyn's quality out of the attack was a fools errand. Steyn was going to be persevered with and bowled on his own schedule such was his quality. <strong>I think Guppy's innings in the QF showed an alternate template for how McCullum could have structured his innings without getting out ahead of the run rate.</strong></p>
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<p>Slight difference in bowling attacks there, your pushing shit up hill tbh.</p>
<p>We won the Semi with a 6 off the last ball, we wouldnt have gotten that close without the innings from McCullum. It wasnt just about the runs either, he went out there and showed we werent going to be intimated by Steyn and co or the occasion of a WC semi final.</p>
<p>Id agree with what ive heard on talk back the past days, that innings from McCullum ranks right up there with his 302.</p> -
<blockquote class="ipsBlockquote" data-author="Virgil" data-cid="557824" data-time="1455083222">
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<p>Slight difference in bowling attacks there, your pushing shit up hill tbh.</p>
<p>We won the Semi with a 6 off the last ball, we wouldnt have gotten that close without the innings from McCullum. It wasnt just about the runs either, he went out there and showed we werent going to be intimated by Steyn and co or the occasion of a WC semi final.</p>
<p>Id agree with what ive heard on talk back the past days, that innings from McCullum ranks right up there with his 302.</p>
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<p>Some guys are just better than their stats. I mean Kapil Dev was "Indian cricket" during the time that he played if you believe all the shit written about him yet averaging 29 and 30 for batting and bowling makes him inferior to our very own Cairnsy. McCullum in principle is kinda similar.....</p> -
<p>Rewind to the mess of 3 years ago when Taylor was dumped as skipper. Would anyone have dared imagine how things have played out since with McCullum leading and Hesson as coach?<br>
A WC final capping a fucking amazing month of cricket in NZ (out doing the 92 Young Guns in my opinion)<br>
A ton of amazing record innings and partnerships, almost too many to mention<br>
Most of which may never had happened if McCullum wasn't in charge.</p>