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Dafydd Jones remembers the 2005 Ashes

January 20th, 2009

dafyyddafyyd Jones was born in Dyffryn, Glamorgon, on the 1st August, 1989. All his life dafyyd has been very proud Welshman and a huge cricket fan. He passionately supports his national team, England, and used to try and fit in by flying the Union Jack at home games. He did however struggle to locate the Welsh dragon on this representative flag and could only find the cross of St George, the man who slay his mythical dragon, so now he flies the Welsh flag and his favourite players are Simon and Geriant Jones.

The biggest sporting event on dafyyd’s calendar is of course the Ashes between Australia and Wales. and England. dafyyd is stoked that the Ashes are to be played in Cardiff this time, meaning he can go to a home game without having to visit another country for the first time in his life. dafyyd got tickets to all 5 days through his local cricket club, and can’t wait for the series to kick off. He hopes the test will last into the 5th day as he would love for nothing more than to celebrate his 20th birthday with a victory.

It pains dafyyd to reflect on his life as a Welsh cricket supporter, as he realises all to quickly his team have only held the most coveted of trophies for merely 462 days of his lifetime. Upon reaching his 20th birthday, that will be just 6.33% of his entire lifetime, which dafyyd realises all too well that in a two horse race that alternates home ground advantage, is a pretty písspoor effort.

He tries not to over analyse this, however sometimes he gives in to temptation and tries to aggregate it out over his lifetime. He thinks, what if we could have held the Ashes on the first Sunday and Monday of every month for my whole life, apart from December. That would have been sweet.

The happiest moment in dafyyd’s life was of course back in 2005, when England and Wales regained the Ashes for the first time in his life. He promptly joined the facebook fangroup for Aleem Dar, to show his appreciation for the Martyn, Katich and Kasprowicz dismissals at Trent Bridge, and booked himself a train ticket to London to watch the triumphant open topped bus through the city. Oh the happy memories.

Today’s news that The Wisden Cricketer are looking to interview fans just like dafyyd has made him very excited, as like many fans in that part of the world he has ignored the 2006 series and would like to relive past glory when, for 462 very very happy days, they held the trophy. Bravo dafyyd.

NSW Blues – World Club Champions?

January 19th, 2009

Ranga and Proud

Ranga and Proud

The domestic “Big Bash” Twenty 20 tournament has gone far from the script, with a depleted but still mighty New South Wales outfit topping the regular season and booking their trip to the promised land of rupees and curry.

Western Australia are awfully píssed off and seeking compensation after the original club championship was postponed due to men with guns. It’s a lot of cash they’re missing out on, and I feel a nice gesture would be for NSW Cricket to buy them a meaningful gift to ease the pain, perhaps a bronze statue of Simon Katich to stick up in the WACA headquarters..

You can bet the team we send to compete in India includes some names that have until this point played no part in the tournament such as Michael Clarke, Phil Jaques, Brett Lee, Stuart Clark and Brad Haddin. Not that there’s anything wrong with that, as any NSW cricketer will know it’s the privilege and also the curse of representing the state that breeds the big names.

I’ve put together a short synopsis of the 5 matches that have earnt us entry into the World Club Championship, and awarded 3-2-1–1 ratings as I feel they’re warranted.

Game 1 vs Queensland in Brisbane

Scorecard
A good bowling effort led by Doug Bollinger’s 3/22 and well assisted by Moises Henriques 2/26 restricted Queensland early on, however Beau Casson 0/37 and Mark Cameron 0/34 got spanked allowing the Bulls to amass to 161. Thanks to opening batsman Phillip Hughes scoring 80(20) the total was chased down with 2 balls to spare.

Moses’ Player 3-2-1–1 Ratings
3 Doug Bollinger
2 Phillip Hughes
1 Moises Henriques
-1 Beau Casson

Game 2 vs Western Australia in Homebush, Sydney

Scorecard
Tight bowling by Aaron Heal and Marcus North restricted NSW to 6/148 off 20 overs. 18 year old newcomer Stephen Smith was my pick of the batsmen with 34*(21), Dave Warner 28(22) scored freely early on, while Phillip Hughes 35(34) and Dominic Thornley 23(24) got starts but failed to up the tempo sufficiently against WA’s slower bowlers Marcus North 1/27(4) and Aaron Heal 0/22(4).
Nathan Bracken 2/24 was the pick of the bowlers, Dominic Thornley, Stephen Smith and Moises Henriques generally restricted WA to the required rate of 6-7 rpo, while Beau Casson was again spanked leaking 0/26 off his two overs which gave WA the win and led to his being dropped for the remainder of the comp.

Moses’ Player 3-2-1–1 Ratings
3 Stephen Smith
2 Nathan Bracken
1 Dave Warner
-1 Beau Casson

Game 3 vs South Australia in Adelaide

Scorecard
A solid batting performance by South Australia saw all of their batsmen scoring at 6.5 to 8.7 rpo, however they lacked one batsman to deliver the killer punch in their accumulation of 160 runs.
Mark Cameron was tidy with 1/22, Thornley 1/27(3) applied the brakes nicely and Aaron Bird 3/35 contributed vital top order wickets while leaking runs. Nathan Bracken 3/38 gets the bogey rating despite 3 late wickets saving his figures from absolute embarrassment.
Dave Warner 35(35) got the Blues response off to an absolute flyer, nicely assisted by pedestrian Phillip Hughes 30(29) and Dominic Thornley 28(18)

Moses’ Player 3-2-1–1 Ratings
3 Dave Warner
2 Dominic Thornley
1 Mark Cameron
-1 Nathan Bracken

Game 4 vs Tasmania in Homebush, Sydney

Scorecard
A destructive top 3 saw the Tassie Tigers belt 194 thanks to Lockyear 51(29), Dighton 43(29) and Birt 44(17). Dominic Thornley 0/22 was pick of the NSW bowlers with his 4 overs going for less than Stephen Smith’s 1 over 0/23. Doug Bollinger while moderately expensive took the essential wickets of Dighton and Birt, thus keeping the Tigers total below 200.
The destructive form of Dave Warner had him off to play South Africa, allowing the return of Simon Katich 18(12) and despite a solid opening stand with Moises Henriques 42(25) the fireworks were absent down the order and 166 was all we could muster.

Moses’ Player 3-2-1–1 Ratings
3 Dominic Thornley
2 Moises Henriques
1 Doug Bollinger
-1 Stephen Smith

Game 5 vs Victoria at Homebush, Sydney

Scorecard
The penultimate match, NSW entered this 4th on the table with nothing to lose. A brutal bowling spell by dirty Dirk Nannes 4/11(4) hit the Blues hard early on, with Henriques 1(3), Smith 4(6) and Rohrer 7(8) his early victims. O’Keefe 6(6) fell to a run out and only opener Simon Katich 35(26) was able to resist the dark side of Dirk Nannes. Dominic Thornley 36*(36) came out in the 4th over with the score at 4/39 and steadied the ship, batting with the tail and taking the Blues to a depressingly low 128.
Douggy Bollinger 0/12 applied the pressure with some superb tight swing bowling, and Mark Cameron 1/17 kept the other almost as tight. Falling behind the run rate the Victorians shat themselves, giving up 5 run-outs, one each to Cameron, O’Keefe, Rohrer, Bollinger and Smith. I’ll give Simon Katich some credit for these as captain he would have been setting the fields. Victorian captain and serial whinger Brad Hodge summed it up nicely with “It’s a script on how to stuff up a cricket game”. Bravo.
A wonderful team effort from the Blues who now book their tickets to India, there is no villain from this match.

Moses’ Player 3-2-1–1 Ratings
3 Simon Katich
2 Doug Bollinger
1 Dominic Thornley
-1 None

Leaderboard

At the end of the regular season, the Moses’ MVP stands as follows:

6 Dominic Thornley
6 Doug Bollinger
4 Dave Warner
3 Moises Henriques
3 Simon Katich
2 Phillip Hughes
2 Stephen Smith
1 Mark Cameron
1 Nathan Bracken
-2 Beau Casson

David Warner makes Twenty20 squad

January 8th, 2009

Shot Dave

Shot Dave

Congratulations to NSW opening batsman David Warner for making his way into the national T20 team at the expense of Matthew Hayden. It’s so refreshing to see another member of this way under-represented state earn promotion and hopefully he’ll get to play in Sunday’s match against the saffas.

Not to say Dave hasn’t earnt this selection, his form in the shorter versions of he game is undeniable.

In late November he broke the NSW One Day record in 34.1 overs by hitting 165* (112) That innings included 19 fours and 9 sixes against the (then) table topping Tasmanian attack. One can only speculate how many he would have scored had we batted first!

This week he took apart a South Australian attack that included a devastating Shaun Tait and Pakistani import Sohail Tanvir with 65(35). He did have some luck, playing on to be bowled by Tait off a no-ball then smashing the free hit over mid-on for one of his 7 fours. Of the 4 sixes Dave hit the highlight was a Tait delivery which he dispatched onto the roof of the Adelaide Oval!

He started the match with that stupid double sided T20 specialist bat, then changed it after a few overs for a real lump of willow.

He’s also a handy slow bowling option, capable of ripping leggies and tight offies depending on his mood. So congrats on the selection Dave, and it’s good to see we are still breeding the big names.

WAGgy Green Deathmatch – the Quarter Finals

January 6th, 2009

Australia’s top 8 Cricket WAGs are through to the quarter finals and await your vote as they seek inclusion in the last 4.

NoteClick on the thumbnails to see the full pictures of these WAGs

Round 2 Pool A - Cricket WAGS Deathmatch

View Results

Annika McNamara with Damien Martyn Georgie Willis with Simon Katich

Round 2 Pool B - Cricket WAGS Deathmatch

View Results

Haley Bracken and husband Nathan Bracken Jessica Bratich Karate Champion and dating Mitchell Johnson

Round 2 Pool C - Cricket WAGS Deathmatch

View Results

Lara Bingle from where the bloody hell are you and fiance of cricketer Michael Clarke Lee Furlong is boyfriend of Shane Watson and a Fox News presenter

Round 2 Pool D - Cricket WAGS Deathmatch

View Results

Katie Johnson who is dating fisherman and part-time cricketer Andrew Symonds Amber van Schiajik is dating cricketer Shaun Tait

Krezja’s Case – a Peach and Pie analysis

December 23rd, 2008
Peach or Pie?

Peach or Pie?

I’ve always loved Ashley Giles as an English bowler, he was so brilliantly useless and provided much glorious banter at various Ashes Tests over the years. “Hey Ashley, bowl the one that goes straight the other way” “Show us your googly” and “Nice Doosra” were all heard whenever the wheelie bin threw the arm over as Shane Warne spun our way to yet another Baggy Green victory.

Following upon Perth it was our view that we really did need to be maintaining more pressure through the spin bowling at one end, so we could use the fast bowlers in shorter spells

This quote from chairman of selectors Andrew Hilditch makes very little sense to me. If we truly wanted a spinner to maintain the pressure, surely Ponting could have given Andrew Symonds a single over during the 414 run chase where his off-spinners may well have fulfilled that role. He’s still an all rounder right?

Krejza has a genuine wicket taking ability. It was just two tests ago that Krejza took 12 of the finest spin bowling players around. One should also note that he took as many wickets as both Lee and Siddle at the pace friendly WACA.

I’ve done a Peach/Pie analysis (c) of his bowling from the cricinfo commentary, whereby I identify each delivery as either a Peach, a Pie, or a “Pressure Ball”.

1st Innings Analysis

25 Overs, 151 Balls, 1 Wicket, 102 runs
12 Peaches, 16 Pies, 124 Meh
Peach to Pie ratio: 11/16
Peaches per over: 12/25 = 0.48
Pies per over: 16/25 = 0.64
Pie-Runs: 54
Average Pie Punishment: 54/16 = 3.375

1st-innings

Looking at the distribution of his balls it can been seen that Jason’s 1st Innings performance started very strongly and fell away after his 10th over (37th of the Innings). This period of bowling co-incides with the start of a 124 run partnership between Kalls and DeVilliers. Many factors could explain the drop in performance, among them Krejza’s fitness and Pontings fields/instructions.

2nd Innings Analysis

24 Overs, 144 Balls, 0 Wickets, 102 runs
15 Peaches, 7 Pies, 122 “Pressure” Balls
Peach to Pie ratio: 15/7
Peaches per over: 15/24 = 0.625
Pies per over: 7/24 = 0.29
Pie-Runs: 20
Average Pie Punishment: 20/7 = 2.88

2nd-innings

From my analysis he bowled markedly better in the second innings, this being the innings where South Africa scored 414 and Krejza took the fall for releasing pressure. In fairness to Kreyza I feel that one pie every third over is quite acceptable for an attacking spinner, especially with recent history telling a story of Macgilla who was a renounded pie chucker but so long as he took wickets no-one seemed to care too much.

Cutting back on the pies is something he’ll need to work on, but sending him back to shield with the message to trade in some peaches for accuracy and Gilesness is not the message we want to be sending.

The Pies and Peaches

Peaches

10.3 Krejza to Smith, no run, Krejza forces the false shot from Smith, he tried to close the face of the bat too early to play on the leg side but was beaten by the flight and got a leading edge towards the off side
10.4 Krejza to Smith, no run, loud shout for lbw as Smith strides forward to defend and gets hit on the pad, not out says Aleem Dar, that was pretty close but Smith was a long way forward
10.6 Krejza to Amla, no run, good ball! Amla goes back to defend but gets an inside edge on to the pad, Krejza’s first Test over in Australia is a good one
25.1 Krejza to Smith, no run, turn and bounce! Smith moves back and plays an unconvincing shot, he could have easily edged that to slip
29.6 Krejza to Smith, no run, Smith drives away from his body at one that spins away from him and gets an outside edge behind point
31.1 Krejza to Amla, OUT, bowled him! Lovely ball! Krejza loops the ball up outside off stump, drawing Amla forward with the flight, he beats the batsman in the air, pitches the ball outside off stump and spins it through the bat pad gap as Amla tries to whip it on the leg side, that turned a long way to hit the stumps
31.6 Krejza to Kallis, 1 run, that’s mighty close! Krejza gives the ball air outside off stump, Kallis sees the width and tries to play the big cover drive, the ball dips on him and spins into him, it hits the inside edge and whizzes past his stumps
33.3 Krejza to Kallis, no run, Kallis moves back and across to work the ball on the leg side but misses and gets hit on the pad, the impact was outside off stump
33.4 Krejza to Kallis, no run, huge appeal for the catch at slip, Kallis got down on one knee to sweep but the ball lobbed off the forearm towards Hayden at first slip, the Australians thought it was off the glove
35.6 Krejza to de Villiers, no run, Krejza thinks he has a case for lbw after de Villiers pads up to one outside off stump, Asoka de Silva disagrees
37.3 Krejza to Kallis, no run, Kallis moves back and across outside the line of off stump and tries to play the ball on the leg side, he misses and gets hit on the pad

Pies

25.5 Krejza to Smith, FOUR, Smith gets down on one knee and sweeps Krejza against the turn towards the square leg boundary, he hit that with a lot of power
27.2 Krejza to Smith, FOUR, too short outside off stump, Smith waits and waits before cutting the ball hard through point, Hussey sprints after it but even his desperate dive can’t stop the four
27.5 Krejza to Smith, FOUR, that’s another long hop from Krejza, Smith moves back and pulls the ball from outside off stump between midwicket and mid-on for four more
35.1 Krejza to Kallis, 2 runs, Kallis leans forward to drive a low full toss through point, Kallis runs the second to get back on strike
37.5 Krejza to Kallis, FOUR, that’s a freebie, a nice and friendly full toss and Kallis capitalises by lofting down the ground for four, Krejza’s visibly annoyed with himself
39.3 Krejza to Kallis, FOUR, that’s too short outside off stump, Kallis is quick to move on to the back foot and cut the ball through cover point for four
41.1 Krejza to de Villiers, 2 runs, too short from Krejza and de Villiers moves across his stumps and pulls to deep square leg
41.4 Krejza to de Villiers, SIX, that’s an awesome shot! de Villiers steps out of his crease, gets to the pitch of the ball, swings his bat like a golf club, and smashes the ball with the turn over the deep midwicket boundary
43.6 Krejza to Kallis, FOUR, that’s a terrible long hop outside leg stump, Kallis gets inside the line and pulls towards the long leg boundary
53.4 Krejza to de Villiers, FOUR, that’s too short again from Krejza and de Villiers moves back and across and pulls the ball firmly to the deep
55.4 Krejza to de Villiers, FOUR, another long-hop, and de Villiers dismisses it towards the deep midwicket boundary with a pull off the back foot, Krejza bowls a long-hop every once in a while
57.2 Krejza to de Villiers, 1 run, that’s a full toss on middle stump and de Villiers swats it towards wide long-on
57.3 Krejza to Kallis, no run, Kallis moves back in his crease and defends a flighted delivery towards leg slip
57.4 Krejza to Kallis, 1 run, that’s too short again and Kallis has the time to move back and work the ball past the man at leg slip
59.6 Krejza to Kallis, SIX, that’s one of the longest long hops of the day, Kallis waited an age for the ball to get to him, he got under it and heaved it over the deep midwicket boundary, that ball deserved nothing less, even Chris Martin might have fancied his chances against that
69.1 Krejza to Kallis, FOUR, South Africa haven’t hit a boundary in a while so Krejza gives Kallis a full toss outside off stump, Kallis responds with a powerful cover drive for four

2nd Innings

Peaches

20.1 Krejza to Smith, no run, flighted on leg stump, flicked away towards a close in catcher on the on side
20.6 Krejza to Smith, no run, turn and bounce for Krejza! He drifts the ball into the left-hander from round the wicket and spins it away from the outside edge of Smith’s forward push
24.1 Krejza to Smith, FOUR, Smith moves back towards leg to make room and cuts the offbreak fine past the fielder at slip, that’s a risky shot but he gets four for it
28.4 Krejza to Smith, 2 runs, Dangerous shot, Smith gets down on one knee and sweeps a ball from off and middle towards long leg, he brings up 50 with that shot, well played! South Africa need much more from him though
38.3 Krejza to Smith, no run, Smith moves deep in his crease and plays the ball, he misses and is hit on the pad, Krejza appeals but that also pitched outside leg stump
40.6 Krejza to Smith, no run, oh brilliant! Krejza draws Smith forward and drifts the ball into him, Smith tries to defend but the ball beats him in flight and spins past the outside edge
91.1 Krejza to Duminy, no run, loud appeal for lbw! Krejza tosses it up outside off stump and Duminy strides forward to defend, he was a long way forward when the ball hit pad
93.2 Krejza to Duminy, no run, Krejza tosses it up on leg and spins it across the left-hander, Duminy goes to defend but the ball hits the pad and lobs towards the off side
95.1 Krejza to de Villiers, FOUR, caught? No it’s past Lee! de Villiers charges and smashes Krejza flat towards mid-on, he hit that extremely hard and Lee didn’t time his jump, the ball flew over his head, tough chance
95.2 Krejza to de Villiers, 1 run, de Villiers comes out of his crease and defends, the ball bounces off his bat behind him and Haddin comes forward and flicks the ball back at the stumps, he concedes an overthrow but it was worth a rty
97.1 Krejza to de Villiers, no run, Krejza spins the ball into the right-hander from outside off, de Villiers was caught on the crease as he tried to defend, he played the ball towards short leg
97.6 Krejza to de Villiers, no run, that nearly rolled back on to the stumps, de Villiers moved forward to defend and didn’t do a very good job of it
99.1 Krejza to de Villiers, no run, de Villiers gets down on one knee to sweep but gets on the pad, Krejza appeals but the impact was outside off
106.1 Krejza to Duminy, no run, nice flight and dip from Krejza, Duminy moves forward and defends
106.2 Krejza to Duminy, no run, Duminy defends on the front foot, shouts of “catch!” as the ball falls towards the short leg region

Pies

26.4 Krejza to Smith, 2 runs, full toss on middle and leg, driven wide of midwicket for a couple
30.2 Krejza to Amla, 1 run, too short from Krejza and Amla moves back to play the ball behind square
36.2 Krejza to Smith, FOUR, that’s a dreadful long hop and Smith helps himself, he moves back and pulls the ball powerfully along the ground for four
62.1 Krejza to Kallis, FOUR, Kallis is on fire at the end of the day! Krejza gives him a long hop and Kallis rocks back to pull the ball towards the wide long-on boundary, South Africa now need less than 200
62.2 Krejza to Kallis, FOUR, full toss outside off stump and Kallis moves forward and drives powerfully through cover for four, what’s going on? Kallis has exploded, he’s decided to hurt Siddle and Krejza for the short-ball treatment given to him by Lee and Johnson
91.6 Krejza to Duminy, 1 run, that’s short and wide outside off stump, Duminy moves back and cuts the ball towards cover where Hussey mis-fields
104.4 Krejza to Duminy, no run, Krejza drops short outside off stump and Duminy uses the width to cut towards point where Hussey fields
106.3 Krejza to Duminy, FOUR, JP Duminy! He moves back and takes advantage of the short length by cutting the ball powerfully through point for four

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