Posts Tagged ‘west indies’

Test Cricket Era’s

November 13th, 2008

Ponting lying down on the job

Ponting lying down on the job

There seems to be a lot of commentary that the ‘era of Aussie Dominance’ is over, and ‘India is now the Force in World Cricket’. I suspect a lot of this is fed by people wanting Australia to fail, mostly due to the whippings administered by us over the last 15 years and the arrogance exhibited by our team and their supporters. I can’t help but feel partly responsible!

The beginning and end of era’s are notoriously hard to define without the benefit of hindsight, as a changing of the guard can happen over many seasons. For a new era to emerge, one team will have to step up to consistently beat all others, both home and away.

To put the claims that India have achieved this into perspective, here’s a quote from pommy blogger King Cricket.

After winning successive Test series against West Indies, South Africa, South Africa again, Bangladesh, England, Sri Lanka, India and West Indies, Australia finally lost away to India and are now ABSOLUTELY SHOCKING at cricket.

India’s recent run of losing a series against Australia, drawing one against South Africa, losing one against Sri Lanka before winning this one, hints that they are now perhaps the new supreme power in world cricket.

As for Australia’s “decline” it’s worth noting that they’ve never been overly impressive in India ; even in the “era of Baggy Green dominance” they only won a single series! The overall series ledger shows Australia with 3 wins (1956, 1969 and 2004) to India’s 5 (1979, 1996 [1 test series], 1998, 2001, and 2008), with 3 Drawn (1959/60, 1964 and 1986 [1 Test Tied]).

I guess my point is that while the Aussie team has obviously weakened through the retirement of some legends, it’s too early to say if there is another team ready to claim a decade as their own. Australia losing in India is nothing new, and losing there again isn’t all that remarkeable.

India played well and full credit too them, but to be the world power that their population demands they’ll have to cope with some big name retirements, and improve their away record vastly. In Dhoni they have the best captain in world cricket, and Ishant Sharma is a real talent who I hope stays fit and hairy.

India, Australia, South Africa, England and Sri Lanka all have strong Test sides at the moment, and are all capable of beating each other on their day. It’s going to be an interesting period in Test Cricket and I can’t wait.

Reference: Australia in India.

Gayle reads backwards wicket perfectly

June 15th, 2008

It seems that Shivnarine Chanderpaul is having a pretty ordinary series now that he’s been laden with the prestigeous Lord Megachief of Gold title, averaging a mere 209 against the World’s top ranked Test team.

A real blip then that his side is 1-0 down going into the final day of a fairly low scoring series, though they’ve got the chance to even it up tonight.

He’s returned scores of 118, 11, 107*, 77*, 79* and 27* thus far. Now Shiv’s not out and playing for an improbable victory, hoping to steer to Windies to a further 240 on day 5 to take the honours.

Gayle has again proven to be cool mother-f’ucking cat in reading this pitch – he didn’t put Australia in cause he wanted to bowl first, oh no that’d be far too easy for Gayle. He put Australia in so that the Windies could bat last.

Yep, he knew all along that this wicket would reverse over the course of the match, yielding scores of 251, 216, 439 and 475.

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