NZ v Pakistan 2022/23
-
@Chris said in NZ v Pakistan:
@Chris-B said in NZ v Pakistan:
@Chris Not going to argue too strongly - because neither has much of a bowling record across the various formats.
But, Bracewell has had some success for Stead in T20s and ODIs so I'm not particularly surprised he's getting first go here.
If they were picking primarily on batting I think they'd pick Phillips.
Different way you bowl in tests compared to the short form, fields are different and of course it’s a white ball.
IMO you do not pick a test spinner out of short form cricket a good example Zampa doesn’t play test cricket even though he is a Short form gun.Yeah - I know.
But, there's not much in Philips' bowling record to recommend him either.
-
@Chris-B said in NZ v Pakistan:
@Chris said in NZ v Pakistan:
@Chris-B said in NZ v Pakistan:
@Chris Not going to argue too strongly - because neither has much of a bowling record across the various formats.
But, Bracewell has had some success for Stead in T20s and ODIs so I'm not particularly surprised he's getting first go here.
If they were picking primarily on batting I think they'd pick Phillips.
Different way you bowl in tests compared to the short form, fields are different and of course it’s a white ball.
IMO you do not pick a test spinner out of short form cricket a good example Zampa doesn’t play test cricket even though he is a Short form gun.Yeah - I know.
But, there's not much in Philips' bowling record to recommend him either.
I can’t disagree but what I was saying for what they had in their squad over there, I would have given Phillips a run you will not lose much in the bowling but pick up a lot in the field and with the bat.
As a long term option spinner probably not . -
@Chris-B said in NZ v Pakistan:
@Chris Nor me.
They are what they are.
Our whole bowling attack is pretty vanilla on this tour.
If we'd taken this team to Oz we'd get massacred with this bowling.
Yep I see heaps of better spinners I coach in the QLd underage rep system and see them at nationals from other states than our test spinners
And quicks everywhere the talent pool is miles and miles apart. -
-
@Damo said in NZ v Pakistan:
@Crucial said in NZ v Pakistan:
@Damo said in NZ v Pakistan:
@Crucial said in NZ v Pakistan:
@Damo said in NZ v Pakistan:
Good score in the end, but not a match defining one.
Be interesting to see how our quicks go.
It is match defining as in we are set up for a win or draw. The loss option is currently off the table.
It could come back but odds are in our favour.It doesn't take a loss out at all.
What if Pakistan score say 625 and end up 175 runs ahead? From that position we would need to bat well in the third innings to hold on.
A match defining innings is 550+ I reckon. Very hard to lose if you score 550.
As I said “currently off the table “. If it takes a huge rare score to come back into calculations then odds are we are safe.
From a quick look a team getting 449 plus in first innings has only been beaten 15 times in test history.Sure. But rare is relative.
My scenario is virtually exactly what happened in the last test between the same countries on the same ground less than a week earlier.
I guess you are right, but another 75-100 would make me feel a bit more confident in rubbing out a loss.
Sheesh bro, you don’t ask for much…
I think it was a very good score under the circumstances. Did you not see how Tommy went out? That ball hardly went above ankle height. There was variable bounce and we still got to 449, so 4-140+ in a session and a bit was good to see.
I’m hopeful but not confident with our bowlers though.
-
@Dan54 said in NZ v Pakistan:
Geez isn't test cricket so bloody good? Man gets out of bed reaching for PC to check how it ended last night.
Big ups to Hanry and Patel, there's something to behold when the tip of the tail wags like that!It was terrific to watch ( on the match tracker )
Still some way off the record for the last wicket though !
-
@MN5 Pleasing to be reminded that the stereotypical old style number 11 bunny Danny Morrison is there with an unbeaten 106 run partnership with Nathan Astle. He was not in the queue when batting talent was handed out but by god did he value his wicket dearly. Also interesting to note another tenth wicket partnership (118 runs) involving Nathan Astle once again and Chris Cairns. Presumably one of them must have been carrying an injury and reverted to being last drop?
-
@Higgins said in NZ v Pakistan:
@MN5 Pleasing to be reminded that the stereotypical old style number 11 bunny Danny Morrison is there with an unbeaten 106 run partnership with Nathan Astle. He was not in the queue when batting talent was handed out but by god did he value his wicket dearly. Also interesting to not another tenth wicket partnership (118 runs) involving Nathan Astle once again and Chris Cairns. Presumably one of them must have been carrying an injury and reverted to being last drop?
I watched that last one ball by ball on the couch having crashed with a bunch of mates after a hard night the day before. What a great day to blob, continue drinking and witness a fighting loss.
Cairns was carrying an injury so batted at 11. It was a game they couldn’t win so Astle went nuts and got his 222, Cairns couldn’t run from memory so hit a couple himself but was definitely junior partner.
Fairly sure Graeme Thorpe got the record for fastest test double ton but Astle broke it in the same match ?
-
@Chris-B said in NZ v Pakistan:
I hope someone is analyzing the reasons behind our success in the past decade and working out how to replicate it.
I wouldn't leave it to David White given his record in telecomms. Mainly, he's resulted in me not being able to watch cricket that I was quite willing to pay the market price for.
I can assure you we most definitely are not doing this.
IMO. NZ's success over the last decade has been built on 2 or 3 things.
-
A golden generation (of Williamson, Southee, Boult in particular form the 2008 U19s), but also a real glut born between 1988 and 1992. I presume this is partly just chance, not something I expect a CEO or other administrators to be in control of.
-
The work done by the administration prior to David White's in the mid 2000s about pitch WOFs for domestic cricket. Once this was in place NZ had a policy at domestic level of playing Plunket Shield on 'fantastic' batting pitches, this lasted for about a decade, or just over, in to the mid/late 2010s. This produced a generation of batsmen who knew how to score big runs (even if the batting was 'easy') and it produced a generation of bowlers who had to learn how to take tough wickets (through either pace, movement, height, bowling plans etc), No more Aaron Gales and Alex Taits dominating domestics. It also produced an environment where 50% of the PS teams are regularly playing a wrist spinner.
This is no longer happening. Since abut 4 years ago, there has been a policy to have more spicy domestic wickets. This is just plain retarded. There is no benefit to this. It doesn't matter if PS is boring to watch because it is batting dominated, it isn't a commercial enterprise. It needs to produce cricketers that selectors can identify test-potential talent, and be the type of pitches that the provinces want to select those types of players. Instead we have had Tait/Gale reborn in Will Wiliams dominating the PS wicket takers board. It has given him enough prominance to earn himself a county contract.
This is the biggest factor within the control of administrators and they are wilfully scrapping it. Unbelievable.
I should also acknowledge some other factors that have influenced the last 10 years:
-
The South African imports. I don't see any headwinds against this from the South African environment. Unfortunate for them. I'd say Foxcroft is looking likely to be a star in the white ball formats at least (looking a bit chubby, though. Hopefully that is down to being adrift of pro environments during his covid migration dramas). Also think the Indian migration is influencing the wrist spin at domestics I mentioned earlier (Nethula fairly fully formed when he arrived, Sodhi NZ raised but Kumble as his childhood idol). When trying to replicate that 10 years, this is an area where I would expect it to outperform going forward.
-
I wouldn't have said this before Bazball and England. But I think I need to give a bit more credit to McCullum's influence in the 'attitude change' some where around 2014 that saw NZ cricketers garner more self belief. Previously I gave it more to the 'golden generation'.
-
-
TL:DR
There are a few factors, but the one thing the administrators are in control of, that was wildly successful ... they are reversing.
It's amazing how long a really mediocre administration have been in charge. Riding on the coat-tails of others groundwork. They will leave, likely, just as the unravelling of the previous good work starts to bear its rotten fruit. Their CVs will have them looking like genuises.
-
@Rapido said in NZ v Pakistan:
Since abut 4 years ago, there has been a policy to have more spicy domestic wickets. This is just plain retarded. There is no benefit to this.
What was their logic for doing this? They must have thought there was a benefit?
-
@Duluth said in NZ v Pakistan:
@Rapido said in NZ v Pakistan:
Since abut 4 years ago, there has been a policy to have more spicy domestic wickets. This is just plain retarded. There is no benefit to this.
What was their logic for doing this? They must have thought there was a benefit?
Their logic was that the 'batting was too easy'.
That was it.
It was correct. But is also 'wrong'.
Something has to be 'too easy'. And people smarter than our current mob correctly idenitified that easy batting conditions produces the most prepared test cricketers in all disciplines (batting, seam/spin bowling).
This was about the time that we started producing those 'green roads' for our home tests. Probably they wanted to produce domestic wickets that more closely matched our test wickets that we were now rolling out.
But funnily enough. Our players raised on the decade of domestic roads were perfectly well adept at playing on those test match 'green roads' that spooked the (usually Asian) tourists.
-
As an anecdote of one.
Think back to 2016 when McCullum retired. There was a battle on between Henry Nicholls and Will Young to see who replaced him at number 5.
Young looked the by far more talented, but had a Fleming-esque record at domestic level of not converting his 50s to hundreds. Nicholls was the more ugly duckling - but seemed to have got to the stage in his career where he knew how to build an innings. Nicholls got the nod (and was fantastic at test level for the next 4 years or so).
If we were playing on 1990s green mambas. Will Young''s pretty 70s on a green crap shoot would have got him in the test team ahead of Nicholls IMO, who would also probably have been scoring less 100s.
It took Young a couple more years.
Now, I'm in team Young ahead of team Nicholls. But back in 2016 we had a domestic set up that correctly identified that better prepared player at that time of their careers. I'd no longer have the same confidence in the system.
-
@Duluth said in NZ v Pakistan:
Was it just trying to make 1st class matches entertaining? I doubt there will ever be significant interest in 1st class cricket in this country
Consistently more players than spectators….that’s not a new thing. The amount of times I’ve gone past the basin to see guys playing in front of two old blokes and a dog is depressing ( but then it’s not like I can be fucked watching for long periods either )
Such a far cry from county cricket in its pomp.
-
those spicy green domestic decks of days gone by also produced our generation upon generation of "all-rounders" for two reasons
fuck only being a batsman when you could get absolutely sawn off by balls moving sideways
military medium wicket to wicket is good bowling when the ball is moving all over the shop.
interesting posts @Rapido