Showing posts with label Alistair Cook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alistair Cook. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Moore of the same for England or a new start?

After all the speculation and hearsay in the cricket world, the announcement that Peter Moores was the new England coach ended up being a little flat. The Lancashire native threw his name into the hat and a short while later was chosen ahead of Ashley Giles, seemingly the only other man who genuinely wanted the job.

The 51-year-old appears to be relishing taking charge of England for a second time, with 'unfinished business' the phrase on many pundits' lips. Moores' previous spell as England coach lasted less than two years, a fall out with Kevin Pietersen ending his reign in dramatic fashion. With Pietersen's name finally starting to collect dust in the Lord's history books after his enforced international exiling, Moores has been given a second chance.

It is obvious England need some new ideas and to have the slate wiped clean after one of the worst winters in English cricketing history. No one, even the bookmakers, predicted the dramatic fall from grace Alastair Cook and co were forced to endure but it has cleared the way for a new beginning in the national set-up.

There was a time under Andy Flower when the England team used to pick itself. Those days are gone and with the exception of Cook, nobody's place in the squad is guaranteed anymore. It might be some time until England settle on a first choice XI and the experimentation has already begun with the selection of Nottinghamshire paceman Harry Gurney for the ODI clash with Scotland.

Moores has plenty of decisions to make regarding his team selection, with spots open in the batting and bowling department. Sam Robson could be a name we hear a lot of this summer if he is given the chance to impress in the Test arena, the 24-year-old Australian-born batsman having shone on the Performance Programme in the winter.

Fans will have to be patient as Moores is likely to make a few mistakes along the way with his selections but as the overall goal is to find a winning combination he might be forgiven the odd error in judgement if progress is shown.

Moores will also be tasked with changing England's style of play, Cook having been criticised for taking an overly cautious approach to the Ashes series this winter. Cook is still building up his captaincy skills and Moores will need to give him a bit more confidence to set attacking fields and be more aggressive when batting.

The five Test series with India this summer should be fascinating as a result of what Moores has to work with. India are also a team in transition and it will be a good test for Moores' new-look side. Come through that with their heads held high and people might start to believe in English cricket again.

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Monday, September 9, 2013

Younis Khan - A Legendary Match Winner

When Younis Khan helped Pakistan out of a precarious situation in Pakistan's second innings of the first test against Zimbabwe, you would have known that you were in for a Younis Khan special.

When it comes to test cricket, Younis Khan is arguably the best batsman Pakistan has produced. He always delivers when the team is in need, he is better than all when it comes to second innings performances, he saves tests, he wins tests, and he is a team man. 

Younis Khan's exploits and his relative standing compared to other batting greats of the game have been well documented on Well Pitched - here and here.

Now, I attempt to figure out where he stands among Pakistani batting greats, as well as the other modern batting greats, in matches away from home and as a match winner.

Performance Away from Home
Everyone can score at home on pitches they are familiar with and where they have spent batting their entire life. A true test of a batsman comes when he is placed in unfamiliar conditions and tested by an unknown environment that requires him to adapt appropriately.

Majority of the batsmen in this world have a better home record than an away record, but the great batsmen have as good an away record as their home record. That is what distinguishes the greats from the good.

Younis Khan's century in the first test against Zimbabwe was his 22nd. He is still behind Inzamam (25), Yousuf (24), and Miandad (23), but more importantly, it was his 15th century outside of Pakistan, overtaking Inzamam Ul Haq's record of 14 centuries away from home.

During his unbeaten double century against Zimbabwe, Younis Khan also became only the second Pakistani batsman to score 5,000 runs in test matches away from home. He is now only 66 runs away from Inzamam's record of 5,120 runs scored in tests played away from Pakistan.

Younis Khan also has the best away average among all Pakistani batsmen who have played at least 10 innings away from Pakistan.

I think this makes Younis the best batsman from Pakistan, at least when it comes to test matches in foreign conditions.

Younis' stacks up well among all test batsmen also when it comes to performing away from home. His away average of 49.54 is among the top 10 averages for batsmen who have scored at least 5,000 runs in tests away from home.


Performance in Wins
Another benchmark for great batsmen is how they perform in matches won by their team, or rather how many matches are won on the basis of the particular batsman's performance.

Sachin Tendulkar is notorious for scoring irrelevant centuries, i.e. those that do not help India win. It is a flawed statement but perceptions are hard to change. In contrast, Inzamam Ul Haq is popularly known as the biggest match winner produced by Pakistan as majority of his test centuries have resulted in Pakistan wins.

Inzamam is leaps and bounds ahead of any Pakistani batsmen when it comes to match winning performances, but Younis Khan also sits proudly at number 2 for Pakistan. Younis Khan is the second biggest match winning batsman produced by Pakistan.

Younis' match winning unbeaten 200 against Zimbabwe was his 10th test century in a win, equaling Javed Miandad's 10 test centuries in wins. While its far behind Inzamam's 17 centuries in test wins, Younis averages in the 70s like Inzamam does.

During the course of his double hundred, Younis Khan crossed 3,000 runs in test matches won by Pakistan. Among all batsmen who have scored at least 3,000 runs in matches won by their team, Younis has the 5th best average.

Younis Khan is a true match winner!

Performance in Wins Away from Home (excluding Zimbabwe and Bangladesh)
Many batsmen are often criticized for scoring easy runs on flat wickets at home or against weaker opposition. Considering this, I believe that the ultimate benchmark for a match winning batsman is the performance he has given in wins in tests played away from home against strong opposition.

Taking out Zimbabwe and Bangladesh from the analysis, Younis Khan comes out to be the best performer in tests won by Pakistan away from home, with a Bradmanesque average.
(Qualification: min 10 innings)

When compared to other batsmen around the world, Younis Khan has the 4th best average in tests wins away from home excluding matches against Zimbabwe and Bangladesh.

Among contemporary batsmen, only Alastair Cook has a better average than Younis Khan.
(Qualification: min 1,000 runs)

I believe that one can safely say that Younis Khan is not only one of the biggest match winners produced by Pakistan, but he is also one of the best match winning batsman in the world.

Note the kind of names missing from the above list - no Sachin, no Lara, no Ponting.

It really is a shame that Younis Khan has played only 25 test matches since the start of 2009. During the same period Alastair Cook has played 61 tests, Kevin Pietersen and Michael Clarke have played 54 each, and Sachin Tendulkar has played 42!

Can you even imagine where Younis Khan would be today if Pakistan played as many tests as Australia, England, or India?

He would have not only been Pakistan's leading scorer in tests, he would have been among the top 5 in the world!

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Sunday, June 23, 2013

Australia stand no chance in this year's Ashes

England and Australia could not have chosen a worse year to play back to back Ashes series.

We are talking about 10 test matches between the world number 2, who were recently the world number 1, and a team that is struggling in every format of the game after losing key players.

It is going to be one tough ride for Australia.

Can you imagine bowling to and trying to get the wicket of Alistair Cook, Jonathan Trott, and Kevin Pietersen day after day over the course of 10 test matches?

Or for that matter what will the batsmen be thinking when the thought of James Andersen, Steven Finn, and Graeme Swann crosses their minds?

I can just see Australia being tormented and destroyed in England and later in Australia.

There is no Ponting, there is no Hussey. Michael Clarke is injured, and David Warner's future looks quite bleak.

Australia's batting is pretty much non existent.

They have some pacers of quality but no where the quality required to overcome England's powerful top 6.

It is going to be one tough 6 months for Australia. Many a career might be destroyed.

For England, however, it could be a glorious 6 months, as a team, as well as for certain individual players.


For example, Alistair Cook could easily over take Colin Cowdrey, Mike Atherton, Geoff Boycott, David Gower, Alec Stewart, and Graham Gooch and become England's leading run scorer in test cricket by the end of these 10 Ashes tests.

He may not go past Gooch unless he has a really terrific series, but he will surely go past Alec Stewart.

Actually, Cook might not be the only one to manage this. Kevin Pietersen is not far behind Cook either - only 25 test runs separate the two. So by the end of the series, we could see two new leading run scorers for England in test cricket.

James Andersen, with 307 test wickets, is the 3rd highest wicket taker for England in test cricket. He will not surpass Ian Botham's 383 in these 10 test matches, but he will surely come close to that number.


I really don't think Australia stand a chance in these two Ashes series this year.

Would have been so much better if Australia were a far stronger side.

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Sunday, February 19, 2012

The Last Time Kevin Pietersen Scored an ODI Century...

He was the captain of England.

Well Pitched was 1 year old.

The Dubai International Cricket Stadium was under construction.

George Bush was the president of the USA.

Graeme Swann had not played a test match for England.

No one had heard of Umar Akmal.

Jonathan Trott had not played an ODI nor a Test for England.

Eoin Morgan was playing for Ireland.

Shoaib Malik was the captain of Pakistan.

Anfrew Flintoff and Steve Harmison were key members of the England team.

Shivnarine Chanderpaul was the number 1 ranked test batsman.

Nathan Bracken was the number 1 ranked ODI bowler.

International Cricket was being played in Pakistan.

The first ever IPL had just been staged and the ICL was still around.

Wasim Akram used to mention Mohammad Aamer as an upcoming fast bowler in Pakistan.

Virat Kohli was the captain of India's Under-19 team and had played 5 ODIs for India.

This is what Cricinfo used to look like


And this is what the England cricketers used to look like


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Monday, May 11, 2009

How Much Do Onions Cost in England?

Journalists had started thinking about their pun-filled headlines as soon as Graham Onions was announced in the England squad to face the West Indies.

Then they had a field day when Onions managed a 5 wicket haul in his debut innings and a match haul of 7 - the journos were going gaga with their headlines as soon as the match was over. Even before it I think.

I don't care much for Onions. Never liked them, tasted them very few times, and always try to avoid them.

The new Onions, I haven't seen, so whether he is any good besides headline potential, I am not too sure.

But I do wonder that in a team with a Cook, a Bell, a Broad, and a Swan; why is it that it was Onions that resulted in the headline frenzy?

Hell they even have a Sidebottom!

Not to mention the Flower!

What would they do with Onions?

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