Thursday, January 31, 2008

the England is rubbishness

Contrary to popular belief, India and Australia are not the only two test teams left on earth. Occasionally the other teams get together for a game that doesn’t involve bastard monkeys.

It is with this in mind I cast an eye over the English tour of New Zealand.

These days the New Zealand government are happy when anyone shows up there in a group, because it doubles the population for a while. But even they could do without the Barmy Army.

The English are using this as a springboard towards the Ashes, which as usual is the wrong way to go about the series. Forget about springboards England, learn to swim first.

And what better place to learn to swim than the kiddies poll that is New Zealand test Cricket.

England has arrived with their work for the Dole player Ravi Bopara, a man that makes Shane Watson look like Keith Miller, but that’s just for the one dayers. You are now allowed 2 rubbish one day players per side now under ICC guidelines.

England is trying to take the tour seriously (they left Bopara out of the test side), but it’s hard to take New Zealand seriously.

New Zealand has just beaten Bangladesh comfortably, which is like beating up a 5 year old deaf, blind, mute with a peg for a leg. Before that they were given the biggest hiding in Africa since Roebuck smacked those kids on their naughty bottoms.

Mind you England’s form is ordinary as well, they recently lost to a team with only 2 players, who had just been crushed like bugs by Australia.

England has brought out a pretty ordinary bowling line up, but they are taking on a pretty ordinary batting line up, so it could work out well.

Hoggard and Monty (barely) are the only two of real international standard. Anderson and Broad are good looking boys, so I suggest modelling or gay porn instead of this bowling caper. Harmison looks like Tarzan and plays like Jane, Sidebottom is something, but I’m not sure what, and some guy called Swann who has obviously been brought out to mix the drinks and such.

New Zealand’s strength (exaggeration) is their batting. Taylor, the dude who got hit in the head, Fleming, Oram, Fulton, Richardson and perhaps Vincent can all hold bats. It’s the making runs bit that is their trouble. Taylor will need to make 2 big hundreds, and Oram will need to make one quick hundred and a couple of fifties other wise this is a charity tour for England. The rest will provide gutsy 50 to 70 odds.

A brief look at England’s batting looks impressive. Vaughn is sort of almost back, Cook is still growing pubes, Bell is an excellent foreplay batsmen, Collingwood is England’s best probot and KP is South African, so there is a solid enough foundation there. But not many of these guys are in career best form.

For the Kiwis there really isn’t much to be scared about in Shane Bonds absence. There is Chris Martin who is just a bowler, there is a street thug named Gillespie who will run in hard all day, but is probably more scary if you meet him in the bar afterwards, Tom Moody’s Kiwi twin Oram, who places the ball down with a softness unknown to most big men and Vettori who is benign.

New Zealand have on of the best wicket keepers in world cricket, England have about 8 of the most rubbishness ones. No its not a real word, but they are generally not wicket keepers, so they don’t deserve real words.

The Poms have the ability to win two tests, the Kiwis one.

But the Poms looked fragile in Sri Lanka, I mean Vaas ripped through them, and his best years have long since departed, so I’ll stick my neck out and say New Zealand and their “street fighting we know we’re not good but we’ll stab you for a win” mentality will make this a one all draw.

That is the ending for my New Zealand commitments, now here is the one for my English commitments, the old bulldog will fight and claw against the lesser New Zealand players and 2 zip will be the outcome.

For the rest of the world I will give this prediction, most of you really couldn’t give a flying fu©k.

You probably didn’t realise New Zealand were still a test playing nation.www.cricketwithballs.com "the only cricket blog that offers $ex with evil dragons"

Gilly

This is my 6th attempt at writing about Gilly’s retirement.

There were some good ones and some sh1t ones in there, but none of them felt right.

But in the spirit of Gilly, I though fu©k it, just swing away.

Gilly batted like all of us wished we could. With power and without fear.

On the ground he was like a Spartan, dispatching mere mortals and inspiring fables the world over.

The balls it takes to bat like Gilly even once in a test match is pretty big, but to do it for a whole career and be successful is obscene.

The man had a set of balls that could sink a battleship and he batted in a way that would have given Lucifer an erection.

Do you know how hard it is to be thought of as cool, when you have a 10 year olds hair cut, ears 4 sizes too big and a nice guy demeanour, but not much about Gilly made sense.

While others were tentative, he threw his bat at the ball like it was a cheating wife in the suburbs, ok bad example, but you get my point.

It was almost as if the ball was the enemy, and the bowler was just another faceless drone delivering it to him.

When the best were good, they could trouble him, Akram and Freddy especially, but when he stood up to them, they looked meek in comparison.

He made cricket a game where batsmen were the aggressors and bowlers were abused.

With gloves on he became mortal again, but with the bat in hand he was Muhammad Ali, he was Lee Marvin and he was as brutal as many man before him, and probably any man to follow.

Calling him a great of the game is almost understating it, he not only played the game, he changed the game, and not too many people end up with that on their headstone.

Thanks Gilly, for the cricket and everything else.

Cricket is a better looking sort than how you met her.www.cricketwithballs.com "the only cricket blog that offers $ex with evil dragons"

Cultural Differences Part II

<p class="MsoNormal">I commented a while back about the cultural differences between our countries (Cultural Differences in Cricket) , and how this could possibly lead to the problems we are sadly seeing now. At the time I was thinking mostly of on-field behaviour (i.e. sledging versus team appealing), however, I have been thinking recently about off-field cultural differences as well.

I am probably being overly simplistic in this viewpoint, but in the past few decades the three teams that most often threaten legal action are Sri Lanka, India and Pakistan. In contrast, I don't remember the West Indies making similar legal threats to try and win a point. Is this a cultural difference? Is legal action very commonplace as a threat in India etc? Legal action in sport in Australia is fairly rare - I don't know about other countries.

Is this another example of the cultural differences between our respective countries? I am not trying to start an argument about who is right or wrong, and this isn't particularly to do with the recent sagas. It is more an opportunity for us to explore whether this is another one of the issues that sees both sides misunderstanding the motives of the other.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

gilly from around the globe

Cricket Bloggers and their readers are obviously more intelligent and attractive than other people.

So who better to reflect on the career of the Great Gilly.

Sportsfreak gives us a Kiwi persepctive on the great man, which means he was all but Jesus, until he walked."Perhaps having Mother Theresa behind the stumps was the best sledge of them all."

Kingcricket gives us the English perspective on what Gilly did to the minds of the Poms."The English were already prone to elevating the Australians to the status of demigods at this time, but now they had to find a higher pedestal."

Cricketfizz tell us about one time Gilly actually lost, obviously it wasn't on the pitch. "I had to help a journalist friend of mine in conducting a poll on the favourite cricket player to kids within the age group of 8-16. 40,000 votes across various schools, playgrounds all over India and the result was Adam Gilchrist coming in a very close second, loosing by less than 0.5 percent to Sachin Tendulkar"

Over at Cow Corner they talk about the effect he wielded over wicket keeping selections. "Adam Gilchrist has ensured one lasting change in international cricket: the wicket-keeper can no longer be a just a useful batsman and an irritant for the opposition."

Eye on Cricket likes him because he beat Pakistan all but on his own. "I developed an instant liking for Gilly, as I would any cricketer that could snatch a Pakistani victory away from them"

Miss Field loves him. "I hope he doesn't think he's not retiring at the top of his game, because he's a champion, and we all love him."

My two cents puts it short but sweet. "It couldn't have happened to a nicer man."

The Cricket Watchers Journal likes the fact Gilly made wicket keepers more important. "Thanks Gilly...you made 'keepers respectable members of a cricket team."

I have written a post too, but so far all it says is thanks Gilly, but once i said this. "People spend the whole lives afraid of making mistakes, but gilly has inspired me to f*ck that sh*t, grow some test1cles, and swing away." & this "These days sports people play sport like they’re guarding there share portfolio, so watching Gilly flail the bat around like a junkie swatting away imaginary flying monkeys is f*cking outstanding."www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

three issues

I have three things I am really p!ssed at.

Victorian gets shafted

The first and by far most important is the fact that Future Pm David Hussey has not been deemed one day international worthy by the same selectors who gave Shane Watson test matches.

Apparently playing a 30 year old in a 2020 match makes more sense than picking him for a real cricket match.

When is the next election?

Text messages

Sometimes I forget the fu©kwits don’t just live in Sydney.

Some d!ckhead is trying to drum up support for a racial come back to the Indian players for the 2020 game in Melbourne. Alan Jones is unavailable for comment.

Listen morons, its over with, the ICC fu©ked up, the BCCi Fu©ked up, the players involved fu©ked up, so lets watch the cricket.

If you get the feeling to be racist go up to Bondi beach and feel each other up like you usually do.

Like I have said before there are always better ways of sledging than using racism, for Harbhajan I suggest mentioning his bowling average from the test series, perhaps you can call him Mr 60, or something hilarious like that.

ICC stuff up

When the American government make a mistake, which generally happens only on the days ending with y’s, they get away with.

That’s what happens with superpowers, they are the law, and their word is gospel.

The ICC did not make the stump mic transcripts available in the first case, and did not provide Harbhajan’s bad boy record in the appeal.

What is their punishment on the employees who made all those mistakes. Were they helping out survivors of Hurricane Katrina?

Sunil Gavaskar seems to have gotten off scott free, Zimbabwe V Pakistan seems to a series about which dictator has killed more rivals, the Indian team should have been sanctioned for booking a plane home and Jacques Kallis continues to date Cindy Nel.

And still the ICC do nothing.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

google $ex with evil dragons

I had a discussion with a very intelligent cricket fan the other day, and she, (yes she you misogynist pig), is a really good sheila, the sort of chick you could have a bevy with whilst pretending to look into her eyes.

We were talking about google, and the sort of things people type into the search engine to find my site.

You see I like talking about myself, because it’s the only thing I’m almost an expert on.

I was telling this lass about the amount of times that women, (I’m assuming), type in things like

"aiden blizzard" + girlfriend (fair enough, according to some he’s dreamy)
david hussey girlfriend cricket (interesting choice)
adam voges girlfriend (big helmets are all the rage this year)
cameron white cricket girlfriend (the vics are popular)
mitchell johnson girlfriend cricket (labret piercing are hot)

It’s quite disturbing.

I think the looking falls into two categories.

Girls looking for trophy boyfriends.

Or girls trying to work out if the dude is single since she is shagging him, or on the verge of shagging.

There isn’t a young Australian domestic cricketer who hasn’t been googled with the word girlfriend next to his name.

Is this how the gold diggers work now, they google their potential sap.

These poor boys won’t know how to stop the buxom fake blonde from knowing everything about them and manufacturing their accidental meeting.

You have to feel sorry for the lads, as we all know cricketers hate peroxide and fake boobies.

I think we should stand up for the lads and put a stop to it nowt, if you ladies want a trophy man, either shag me or move on, I aint a fu©ken dating site for the young and the vacuous.

Glad that is cleared up, but people write lots of weird sh1t to get to this site.

Here are some of my favourites.

michael slater slept with adam gilchrist's wife (oops)
shane watson nude (his new career)
"matthew hayden" christian hypocrite (suave is that you)
paper into * cleavage" (no idea)
afridi underwear lines (hmmm)
are indian balls big (are they)
couple having $ex in grand stand at the cricket (my dream)
cricketer underwear (see below)
cricketer's underwear (see below)
cricketers caught naked (see below)
cricketers on underwear (do they snort it)
don bradman pissed his pants in cricket (my personal fav)
does trevor like his balls (who knows)
fu©kwit peter roebuck (was only written once)
graeme smith cricket in love with woman (but she thinks he is an ass clown)
how to write article on cricket (wrong site for that)
if i only had a mustache (or pubes)
indian cricketers in an underwear (hinglish porn search)
mark nicholas sycophant (uhum)
michael hussey womaniser? (doubtful)
michael slater coke (not pepsi)
michael slater gilly wife sleep (wife swap)
michael slater is adam gilchrist's child's father controversy (not funny)
no ball underwear (over stepping)
perving at the cricket (also known as tony greiging)
rick ponting ©unt (sounds better with a y)
ricky ponting in underwear (nice)
sex with evil dragons (cricket with balls we have sex with evil dragons)
stuart macgill gay voice (more snooty than gay)
underwear of ricky ponting (y fronts)
cricket with balls probot (I’m famous ma)

Oh and Cindy Nel gets the 2nd most hits for a female on here.

Jacques Kallis not so much.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

google dating & search engine sex

I had a discussion with a very intelligent cricket fan the other day, and she, (yes she you misogynist pig), is a really good sheila, the sort of chick you could have a bevy with whilst pretending to look into her eyes.

We were talking about google, and the sort of things people type into the search engine to find my site.

You see I like talking about myself, because it’s the only thing I’m almost an expert on.

I was telling this lass about the amount of times that women, (I’m assuming), type in things like

"aiden blizzard" + girlfriend (fair enough, according to some he’s dreamy)
david hussey girlfriend cricket (interesting choice)
adam voges girlfriend (big helmets are all the rage this year)
cameron white cricket girlfriend (the vics are popular)
mitchell johnson girlfriend cricket (labret piercing are hot)

It’s quite disturbing.

I think the looking falls into two categories.

Girls looking for trophy boyfriends.

Or girls trying to work out if the dude is single since she is shagging him, or on the verge of shagging.

There isn’t a young Australian domestic cricketer who hasn’t been googled with the word girlfriend next to his name.

Is this how the gold diggers work now, they google their potential sap.

These poor boys won’t know how to stop the buxom fake blonde from knowing everything about them and manufacturing their accidental meeting.

You have to feel sorry for the lads, as we all know cricketers hate peroxide and fake boobies.

I think we should stand up for the lads and put a stop to it nowt, if you ladies want a trophy man, either shag me or move on, I aint a fu©ken dating site for the young and the vacuous.

Glad that is cleared up, but people write lots of weird sh1t to get to this site.

Here are some of my favourites.

michael slater slept with adam gilchrist's wife (oops)
shane watson nude (his new career)
"matthew hayden" christian hypocrite (suave is that you)
paper into * cleavage" (no idea)
afridi underwear lines (hmmm)
are indian balls big (are they)
couple having $ex in grand stand at the cricket (my dream)
cricketer underwear (see below)
cricketer's underwear (see below)
cricketers caught naked (see below)
cricketers on underwear (do they snort it)
don bradman pissed his pants in cricket (my personal fav)
does trevor like his balls (who knows)
fu©kwit peter roebuck (was only written once)
graeme smith cricket in love with woman (but she thinks he is an ass clown)
how to write article on cricket (wrong site for that)
if i only had a mustache (or pubes)
indian cricketers in an underwear (hinglish porn search)
mark nicholas sycophant (uhum)
michael hussey womaniser? (doubtful)
michael slater coke (not pepsi)
michael slater gilly wife sleep (wife swap)
michael slater is adam gilchrist's child's father controversy (not funny)
no ball underwear (over stepping)
perving at the cricket (also known as tony greiging)
rick ponting ©unt (sounds better with a y)
ricky ponting in underwear (nice)
sex with evil dragons (cricket with balls we have sex with evil dragons)
stuart macgill gay voice (more snooty than gay)
underwear of ricky ponting (y fronts)
cricket with balls probot (I’m famous ma)

Oh and Cindy Nel gets the 2nd most hits for a female on here.

Jacques Kallis not so much.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

The PM Vs. The King

The K-Rudd XI played a match against the Sri Lankans today at that place that isn’t quite Melbourne and isn’t quite Sydney, but has porn and fireworks.

Lets get the important bits out of the way first, the king kumar failed, got a very pretty nut from Hilfenhaus.

Now the game.

Cameron White was given the role of winning the toss and batting on a green top, and the cream of Australia’s one day crop folded like a foldable object.

The ended up at 152 all out.

A lot of ugly shots.

Noffke top scored with 30, so for him it was just like another game for Queensland.

Future PM David Hussey, SOS Marsh and the kiwi Ronchi all made dashing 20 odd’s, but the rest of their team mates couldn’t even provide that.

Malinga got 3 important wickets, those of the two Victorians and Animatrix Noffke.

The Lankans got to the score 6 wickets down, proving the pitch wasn’t a belter.

Dilshan and Sanath made the majority of the runs. If it wasn’t for Dilshan’s not out the Lankans may have lost, with everyone else going out without much of whimper.

Hilfenhaus and Noffke both impressed in their bowl off for Taits spot, and Cameron White did something we all assumed he had taken a solemn vow never to do again, he took wickets.

Perhaps Manuka oval is the only ground left in Australia that favours bowlers, no wonder it never gets minnow tests there.

Sime was heard to remark after the game, that under John Howard the PM's XI were much stoic, dignified and conservitive.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

Channel 9’s A team

...
Channel 9 suck, all Australian's know this, Moses just mentioned it, Tony mentions it often, but in Australia we are stuck with them for a while longer.

So I thought we should rate their on air talent.

Bill Lawry â€" Rumours have be circulating around the traps for a while that Bill is on his way out. It’s not that he is losing form, its that he is in the exact same form he was when he signed his first Channel 9 contract. Would be unfair to lose his position when there are others around who are ordinary. Still gets excited, still speaks his mind, it’s just that we know what is going to come out.

B-

Tony Greig â€" Is still a pervert, but is not a pervert protected by Kerry Packer or his scientologist son. Continues to get cricketers names wrong. Continues to talk about broad shoulders and well built young men, and still the only commentator willing to say dirty things when pretty young ladies are shown. Invented crash helmets, the doosra and the Tony Greig shot (a lingering camera shot on a hot chick in revealing costume). Is not in particularly good form, but hard to remember a time when he was. Still hates Australia while making all his cash here. You have to respect that.

C

Richie Benaud â€" I am not worthy to rate the great man.

A+

Ian Chappell â€" You know before the year what you will get from him. He will say the SCG is his favourite ground. He will talk about Les Favell twelve times a test. He will say the opposition batting line up is wrong. He will complain about every captaining decision. He will try like fu©k not too swear. And he will name drop every important cricket name he can think of at all times. But he does actually have opinions and he does talk about cricket, so it’s hard to hate him.

B-

Ian Healy â€" The man was a champion cricketer. Which is lucky cause he is a horrible commentator. He can’t interview, he sits on the fence, he makes excuses for all cricketers mistakes and he has the on air personality of a fish that has been killed, scaled and regurgitated. Gets technical about a sport that is pretty damn simple. When on the cricket show giving a master class he is very good, but why not let him specialise in that. He is not up to commentating.

F

Mark Taylor â€" Can’t speak really that good. For a man that seemed so damn clever on the field, you would have to think he left all that intelligence out on the pitch. His only redeeming moments come in bagging Michael Slater, but that’s an easy target. He is lucky that Ian Healy is around, so he doesn’t look like a complete fool. He has ruined so many great cricket moments like McGrath’s hattrick, that he should be tried for heresy.

F

Mark Nicholas â€" The man who thinks everything is delightful, wonderful and exquisite. Only George Bush sucks up to Australians better than Mark. Everytime he spoke to Shane Warne Channel 9 had to replace Shane’s shoes for excessive semen damage. His latest escapade where he went over the top on Gilly for 3 days straight proves he is a sycophant and should be sent back to whatever pay tv network he came from.

D

Michael Slater â€" I always hated Slater, maybe it was all the failures in the 90’s, or his tattoo, his car or those Mrs Gilly rumours, but either way he got on my nerves as a player. As a commentator I don’t hate him. Compared with the other new breed, he is actually quite good. He bags himself well, doesn’t pretend to know anything about cricket and gets excited about buttering his toast. Sure he says 74 words when none will do, but he has a dumb guy honesty that seems to suit commentating. But that said, he is not in the 10 best commentators in Australia and should be shafted.

C

Simon O’Donnell and the Cricket Show â€" So’d is smug, and a tosser, but as long as he is shafted to the cricket show he is fairly harmless. After watching him on the races for long periods of times I know why he is only given a few moments at a time.

His show is out dated, stale and ©rap. They show filmed episodes that are boring and useless. Dan Cullen and Cullen Bailey get specials even though both of them are too sh1te to get regular selections for their state (the worst in the country) and yet Bryce McGain, Doug Bollinger and others who are an actual chance of playing for their country are hardly mentioned.

Either make it a cricket show like Inside Cricket on Foxtel, or make it a relevant clips show, and show specials on young cricketers who are performing at state level or just in the national side. Don’t give us the worst bits of both those ideas.

When the cricket show does try and tackle the big issues, they usually get round table discussions with Ian Healy, Mark Taylor and So’d. Does anyone really need that?

D-www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

leaving town

...
I’m here to announce a temporary halt to my blogging/writing career.

This is a very difficult situation for me to be in at this time, this is not an overnight decision but something that I've been struggling with for sometime. A break from cricket blogging will hopefully give me a clear mind and a chance for my body to rest and recover.

My love and enjoyment of blogging is struggling due to these issues and if I continue to go on it will be unfair on my readers - and most importantly my family and close friends."

I’ve had some discussions with the Cricket Bloggers Association medical staff and it is clear that I need a break from cricket blogging at all levels. I'll be working with the association going forward to ensure that whatever assistance I require is provided to me.

Ok so I’m not talking about me, I’m talking about Shaun Tait, one of the fastest bowlers in the world, and retiree at 25.

I understand how hard the cricket world can be, the groupies, the media, the mean batsman, and all those hotel rooms.

But perhaps his best medicine is not cricket Australia holding his hand, its them getting him a real job.

I suggest he gets a job as a factory worker, a call centre robot, a pensions lawyer or working for a bank.

Then see if his passion for cricket doesn’t magically come back.

I don’t know about you, but there probably isn’t an organ I wouldn’t donate to play test cricket, and there isn’t a relative I wouldn’t sell to bowl over 150 clicks.

Test cricket is hard, it’s not marshmallow or jelly baby cricket.

But short of a family member dying or a scientologist dating his ex girlfriend, I can’t think of one good reason why he would walk away from an international cricket career.

Is there really one of us who wouldn’t swap with him for even 8 minutes?

Cricket is only a game, but last time I checked most other jobs suck @ss in comparison.

Shaun, you have the rest of your life to be a nobody.

You can live in a cave with Damien Martyn, you can work for you local footy team, you can shave your nut sack and tattoo a smiley face on it or you can raise gay albino alpacas for all we care, but just don’t leave over trivial sh1t.

Because you will regret it, and we will regret it if they replace you with another probot.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

Monday, January 28, 2008

turn around, everynow and then

...
Apparently Shane Warne has retired.

So the Australian team needs to find some spinners capable of taking wickets in Pakistan and India.

Let's look at the list of contracted and uncontracted spinners.

Contracted

Stuart “Lord Stuey” MacGill the enfant terrible of the private school leg spinning set.

Currently injured and more interested in filming odd ads about wine, but is married to a hot chick.

Has over 200 wickets, but has bad knees and is late 30’s.

May play again, but it looks doubtful, and even if he does he has worse knees than my grandma, and hers are fake.

Brad “the tongue” Hogg is the part time bowler who accidentally became a test match spinner.

Was once a postman, still bowls like one, and is a very effective weapon in one day cricket, but is just not a test cricketer.

People say he is a nice bloke, but I don’t think that is helping him take wickets in test match cricket.

His bowling average of 50 is not gonna help keep him in the big time.

Dan “sleeves” Cullen took 40 wickets one year for the redbacks.

Since then he would be lucky to have taken 40 combined.

Has played one test against Bangladesh, and has a very annoying habit of scrunching his sleeves up before every fu©king delivery.

Was relegated to 12th man for the redbacks last game.

No where near the level needed to be playing for Australia.

Cullen “the other guy” Bailey is the saviour of leg spinning.

So at the moment he is being crucified by not playing.

Right at the moment he is the highest paid club cricketer in the land.

Hasn’t been picked for first class cricket in 4 months.

Not even his father the preacher can save him now.

Uncontracted

[b]Cricket With Balls Own Nice Bryce McGain[/b] is the pin up athlete for the blue rinse brigrade.

Sure he is slightly older than the usual debutant (cough57cough), but he does this weird thing, he gets wickets.

If he wore a lighter shade of blue he'd probably be playing right now, or perhaps the selectors don't like Hugh Grant films.

He is the best spinner in Australia at the moment.

Unless my plan to reanimate the corpse of Tiger Bill O’Reilly has been successful.

[b]Aaron "Billy" Heal[/b] is the child of a bastard union between Billy Bowden and MSquiggle

Ok, he can't get a game for his state, but he did bowl very well when against Sri Lanka in a tour game.

That's not the greatest wrap for him, but he does look like a bowler, and if he played on a wicket that helped spinners we may actually know how good he could be.

In the one day and 2020 comps he has bowled really well, and Sime likes him and Sime doesn't like anyone with fewer than 250 test wickets.

[b]Jason "who" Krejza[/b] is some guy who plays cricket i suppose.

He is the leading finger spinner statiscally at the moment.

Thats like being the tallest dwarf though.

His greatest asset is the fact he can bat, probably too well, as he plays quite often as a part time spinner and full time number 8.

He has wickets though, so that is something.

[b]The Skinny[/b]

McGain has taken 24 wickets at 33.

Hogg 20 wickets at 40.

Krejza 13 wickets at 35.

Cullen 11 wickets at 50.

And Bailey, Heal, and Stuey aren’t really worth mentioning.

Australia's spinning stable hasn't been this ugly since Terry Jenner went to the big house.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

yo dude check this out

A little birdy told me to look at this.

I'm a big fan of sledging and although i would argue the order of this sledging list, it's a sledging list, so i automatically like it.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

Sehwag's return shows Australia have much to fear come October

It may have ended with a day of anticlimax, but this Australia-India series continued the rich tradition of recent encounters between the two sides. After batting meekly in Melbourne, India matched Australia over the next three encounters. Only a combination of egregious umpiring decisions and Michael Clarke's outrageous over cost them a draw - at least - at Sydney, which would have seen a repeat of the 1-1 draw down under four years ago.

Either way, it is clear this is now cricket's premier rivalry, with Ashes clashes too often one-sides, and Indian-Pakistan games too often run feasts lacking real quality. We will not have long to wait for the sequel either; Australia's October tour promises to be another epic, with Adam Gilchrist's retirement leaving a gaping whole although, in truth, Brad Haddin will probably bat and keep better than he has done since the start of the 2005 Ashes, averaging just 30 and dropping too many catches. Nonetheless, there is no denying his status as one of the greatest keeper-batsmen of all time; I named him in my Greatest Test XI.

In all likelihood, we will not witness too many changes in personnel before the next series, with a number of players on both sides - Matthew Hayden, who scored three hundreds in three matches, Rahul Dravid and Sourav Ganguly, who were both a touch disappointing - perhaps considering making it their last series. Sachin Tendulkar, with a pair of resplendent 150s, should certainly not be amongst them. Happily, Adelaide marked the resurgence of Virender Sehwag after two years of mediocrity. His flashing blade will prevent India repeating the mistake of this series, when Dravid and Wasim Jaffer began the series scoring excruciatingly slowly, handing the initiative to Australia immediately.

That was gratefully seized by Brett Lee, who has now recorded consecutive Man of the Series awards, and is, belatedly, mastering consistency and becoming the consummate fast bowler. However, Mitchell Johnson was erratic at times, Stuart Clark's effectiveness lessened as the series progressed while Brad Hogg's Test career could now be over after receiving brutal treatment from the Indians. For once, Australia's batsmen did not have it all their own way either; India will have delightful memories of how they capitalised on Hayden's absence at Perth. In Ishant Sharma, they have unearthed a prodigious pace-bowling talent, while Irfan Pathan, like Sehwag, seems rejuvenated. Throughout, Anil Kumble led by proud example, bowling with tremendous guile and willpower, and batting with courage and real skill.

As India were twice skittled for sub-200 scores in the opening Test, it was hard to envisage them seriously challenging Australia thereafter. But, testament to the mental fortitude that exists within the side, that is what they did. Australia remain number one, of course, but their golden age is yellowing round the edges. Role on October, when India's band of ageing greats have a genuine chance of adding to their sensational 2001 triumph.

transcripts n such

The transcripts of the stump mic from the Sydney test have accidentally been left outside my hotel room door here they are.

Harbhajan “Hey did you hear about the Martin Crowe rumours?”

Roy “That he sleep with gilly’s wife”

Harbhajan “No he can’t bowl and can’t throw”

Roy “Unlike Murali who can’t bowl because he throws”

Harbhajan “I used to know a bookie who used to say that”

Roy “A friend of Hansies?”

Harbhajan “No, he didn’t have any friends”

Roy “Like ganguly?”

Harbhajan “You cheeky Monkey”

Roy “What did you say you Bastard?”

Incredible stuff, who knew either player was this articulate.

I must say that if Procter didn’t have access to the stump Mic’s and Harbhajan is not guilty, then the ICC better lick the sweat out of his and Bhaji’s toes.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

Nostradamus I aint, but 3/10 aint bad

As the fourth test peters out to a noosnfnsltgrffffffffffffffffffffyrgjnxzvvdacvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvffffff.

Sorry about that, my head fell onto my keyboard as I have fallen asleep watching the last two sessions of this boring, mundane, insipid, worthless, pointless, devoid of life test match. I spose as an Australian supporter we will have to get used to this, cos the days of us bowling sides out twice game after game are a thing of the past.

Anway, given its all over I thought it be best to touch on my pre-summer predictions. It was a pretty ordinary result - 3/10. This is a poor reflection of my otherwise excellent premonitions (get the bucket for Uncle J, Sime) but here goes.

Michael Hussey to be replaced in the side by his brother by the New Years test in Sydney - WRONG
Mitchell Johnson to be dropped for Ashley Noffke - WRONG
Stuart Clark to go wicketless over the six tests - WRONG
Andrew Symonds to top the batting averages - CORRECT HA HA, the only prediction that I actually got properly correct. Who would have guessed in their wildest dreams that Symonds would beat Ponting, Hayden, Hussey et al. He remarkebly averaged 92.5 over the six tests.
Brett Lee to tear his harmsting off the bone trying to eclipse his 2004 figures against India and the SCG - WRONG
Stuart MacGill to be suspended for bringing the game into disrepute after he complained about the red wine that was served at the end of the Hobart test - CORRECT (well sort of) injured, suspended... at least we didn't have to put up with the pyscho, even if his replacement was as useless as tit$ on a bull
Michael Clarke to realise just how lucky he is to be $hagging Lara - I don't care if he doesn't realise it, but he is a lucky mutha-fu(ka. And for those who don't know who Lara is ...


Phil Jacques to realise his dream by defecting to represent France in the World Cup qualifiers - yet to be totally decided, cos his cricketing talents won't carry him too far me thinks - especially once Hayden retires
Shane Watson to not play a game this summer. I know this is hard to believe, the selectors will have to be replaced for such an oversight though!!!!!!! - CORRECT, but who cares a fu(k anyway!!!
Ricky Ponting to train the winner of the Perth Cup in a "trainer swap" realtiy tv show to be shown on Channel 9. Viewers will be unsure what night it is on, cos it'll change every week. - WRONG
Well done to India for actually taking it up to us - it really should have been 1-1, but Aussie Steve must have had his hard earned on us in Sydney. Now for the even more boring one-dayers - there is nothing surer than an Indian win in that series - we only worry about the big stuff and the World Cup is 3 years away!!!
www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

Dizzy gets smacked

Jason Dizzy Gillespie was assaulted outside a night club in Traralgon.

I think there is a lesson in this for everyone, don't go to Traralgon.

Oh and he's ok.

He is still no closer to playing for Australia though and probably has a sore head.

Pretty sure he won't pull a Vermuelen at the Adelaide oval on his return.

Although it would be nice if he takes an axe to the flat deck at Adelaide when he gets home.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

Australia destroy India with Crushing Draw

...
Spectators at the Radelaide Oval said they had never seen such a brutal draw in all the tests they had visited.

India were confused at Australia playing for a draw, but they decided to go with it as they are comfortable with draws.

Ian Chappell was heard to say it was one of the best draws the great Les Burdett has cultivated in his time at the Radelaide Oval.

He said it reminded him of a first class game where the great Les Favell drew a game against Victoria.

Anil Kumble said he was happy with the spirit that Ganguly didn’t walk with.

Ponting was quite impressed with how Michael Clarke positioned himself at slip.

Gilly went out of his way not to mention Michael Slater in any press conference.

Sehwag didn’t say anything to the media in case he would get dropped for another few tests.

Matthew Hayden thanked jesus for Gilly, Mark Nicholas prostrated himself in front of Gilly like he was Jesus.

And Bill Lawry left quietly with something flapping in his suit case.


Ps, Shane Watson has been promoted to the role of wicketkeeper for Queensland for the rest of the year. Sime was heard to say, "Lets be honest, he's a surefire selection now."www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Session update day 5 - tea

Sehwag is still in, he’s a little more mundane, but perhaps the other players have drained the life from him.

Cricket vampires I suggest.

Ganguly played against the spirit of the game, good on him.

He scooped up a ball to cover and stood there with a hey I didn’t sleep with your sister grin until the cameras proved otherwise.

Laxman got a tickle to one down the legside.

And the test continues to soldier on to a draw, even as Bill and Mark continue to pretend otherwise.

My commentary test for the Next test series in Australia is Rodney Hogg, Mark Ridgway, Damien Fleming, Keith Stackpole, Kerry O’Keefe, Mark Waugh and Richie.

That is all I have.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

Session update day 5 - Lunch

Virender Sehwag plays cricket.

It’s an interesting thing to watch someone do it, especially in a match when everyone else was playing on lithium.

Luckily for India he has played cricket, because other wise they would be in more trouble than Britney with an Umbrella.

The wicket seems to be almost keeping low, but it’s the extra bounce that seems to have come from no where that is the most interesting thing.

Dravid lost a finger from Lee, Sehwag took one on the shoulder and the Indians spent a lot of time hopping around the wicket.

Then Sachin had a brain fade in his test last innings in Australia. He hit the fall almost straight back to big Mitch and then took off, Sehwag said no as he probably didn’t want to be run out and Mitch threw down the stumps.

At least his last innings was memorable.

There seems to be a lot of run outs when teams are playing for a draw on the last day.

Draw is obvious now. At least normal adealaide tests have ok endings, this is just a wasted test match.

Apparently the curator Les Burdett, a man who has never turned down an interview, said if he keeps moisture in the wicket, the batting side could be 5 wickets down by lunch.

Poor diddums, we wouldn’t want a batting side to actually bat properly now would we.

Sehwags innings should inspire all Indian cricket selectors to hand in their ID and make their way to the nearest exit.

Sehwag, the Portman is for you.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

banter

Jerome Taylor took a screamer at third man.

I said "What a catch, couldn't happen to a nicer bloke" Sime said "Who Smith""Ok so it could have happened to a bigger pr1ck, it was Gibbs, but either way a pr1ck was gonna to go out"www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

spring loaded stumps

...
I didn’t watch a lot of the one dayer between them and the Windies, cause I was working, but mostly cause it was crap.

But every time I looked up there were stumps cart wheeling everywhere.

In more respectable countries, after the wicket is disturbed, generally the stumps end up looking like Paris Hilton after a night out on the town.

In South Africa its more like Tara Reid.

And it’s not just for speed demons who bowl someone.

One ball had Marlon Samuels lashing a straight drive so hard that a stump almost gelded Mark Benson (I think, they all look the same to me, white people & umpires).

Then as they ran for 2 the ball was thrown to the keepers end as Samuels dived and Boucher took the bails off with all the sensitivity of a date rapist and yet again the stumps came flying out.

So there were stumps on the ground at both ends.

Stumps do come out of the ground in other countries, but never with the vitality and down right coolness that the do in South Africa.

I want more stumps that come out and geld umpires, it will add something to the sport.

Also I got to see the supervillian Morne Morkel in action. While he looked pretty average bowling, he did achieve a run out from his follow through with the most retarded wrong foot throw I’ve ever seen.

Oh and Johan Botha is a chucker. And ©rap.

Marlon Samuels smacked a brutal 98 before the evil empire conspired to derail his well smoted innings.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

Project Snow

<p class="MsoNormal">Apologies for the delay in updating the blog - real life and laziness gets in the way :).

<p class="MsoNormal">

<p class="MsoNormal">Many people may not be familiar with Project Snow, or how close world cricket came to a serious split. This summary of Project Snow is written based upon the information provided in Graham Halbish’s book, Run Out. As such, the information must be considered in light of any potential biases as there is no ‘other side’ to the story.
<p class="MsoNormal">In 1996, there was potentially a major schism in the world of cricket. The ICC was starting to show major cracks in its supposed united front, with the entire structure under review. The sub-continent teams had been making a significant, and to be fair, overdue, claim for the England/Australia dominated council to be more equitable. However, as with any process of change, there were egos and powerplays on both sides that were preventing a suitable compromise to be reached. The running of the World Cups and the lucrative sponsorship and television rights made for some very interesting politics.
<p class="MsoNormal">In 1996, the ICC chairman was Sir Clyde Walcott. He expressed his frustration with the role, feeling that it had become non-cricket related and focused primarily upon legal arguments from the various individual countries who were all more interested in feathering their own nest than the good of the game. Walcott’s term was up, and the voting process to replace him became a farce. It was this election, and the associated political games, that prompted Australia, West Indies, England and New Zealand to devise a plan that was eventually called ‘Project Snow’.
<p class="MsoNormal">Interestingly, Australia did not see the sub-continent as having caused the problem, but rather South Africa. India put forward Jagmohan Dalmiya their nomination for chairman, whilst Australia nominated Malcolm Gray. As expected, the sub-continent supported the nomination of Dalmiya, whilst England, West Indies and New Zealand support Gray. South Africa initially indicated they supported Australia’s nomination. However, Ali Bacher, who was the managing director of the United Cricket Board of South Africa (UCBSA), then started playing both sides off against each other. After many years in the wilderness, South Africa were starting to try and flex their political muscles. The Australian camp were not upset with the Indian nomination of Dalmiya, or the support from Pakistan and Sri Lanka. That was expected. However, South Africa’s games had thrown the whole process into turmoil. The Indians didn’t know if they could rely on South Africa, and neither did Australia. In the end, South Africa abstained and the vote was tied at 4-4. This failure to arrive at a clear decision was a disaster, with legal challenges and complaints being thrown by both sides.
<p class="MsoNormal">Australia, England, West Indies and New Zealand now realized that South Africa could easily jump into bed completely with the sub-continent. The cricketing boards of the four countries were particularly dismayed at the way South Africa were acting, and they agreed to examine their options. The job was given to Australian Cricket Board CEO Graham Halbish to draw up a plan of series involving Australia, West Indies, England and New Zealand. It was recognized that there was significant money in India, however, without the big drawcards of Australia, England and West Indies (who were not yet on the slippery slope to oblivion they are now), it was felt unlikely that the sub-continent could survive on their own for long. At that time, the biggest tours for Australia were England and West Indies, and the proposed program saw them each touring Australia once every three years.
<p class="MsoNormal">This plan, code named Project Snow, was presented to the CEOs of the England, West Indies and New Zealand boards. Incidentally, the name Project Snow came from ICC CEO David Richards, even though he knew nothing about it. Information was sought from Richards about an issue, and he advised them that he was snowed into his house, and nothing was as important as his ‘Project Snow’ of shoveling tons of the white stuff off his driveway. They then decided to use this innocent comment as the code-name for their plan. Thankfully, common sense eventually prevailed and Sir John Anderson, the New Zealand representative, was able to come up with a solution to the issue of chairmanship of the ICC that prevented the plan going any further.
<p class="MsoNormal">It is a bit scary to consider how close the cricketing world came to a disastrous split, and we hope that the ICC can start showing some leadership and less partisanship in order to ensure that all countries and people are equally represented.

session update day 4 - stumps

Wickets actually fell in the last session, reminded me of drew barrymore.

So some god/allah/lronhubbard type force pushed the imaginary snooze button and the test is like a match again.

Australia’s tail made batting look hard, whether that is because the pitch is hard to bat on, or whether they were rudely awaken by more than 2 wickets falling in the session, I’m not sure.

Australia ended up 30odd in front. Probably could have got more, but they seemed a bit over batting.

It’s like ice cream, a lot of it is nice, but with too much you feel ill and have trouble pooing.

Pathan bowled his 36 overs and then trotted out to miss a straight one off Johnson, but to be fair he probably didn’t expect a ball on the stumps from Mitchell.

The Indians either decided to play for close, or the wicket was a little trickier.

Mind you facing Lee on a driveway in this form would be hard. Especially if the drive way was paved like Simes is.

Lee had Sehwag, at least once with an edge to second slip, where Michael Clarke let it hit him on the belly.

Then he had a very close LBW shout, is was probably half and half, but being that he should have already got him out it must have done his nuts in.

Being that the part of the test where both teams were on valium is over, tomorrow may be some kind of day.

If India were 2/40 it might have been very interesting tomorrow, as it is, it would take a collapse of English proportions to lose from here.

My question is, do India have the courage of the old dart to lose this match?www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

Saturday, January 26, 2008

boring

I watched the first session today.

Then I watched the Gilly part of the second session.

Had he not been for Gilly I may not have even made it back to the telly.

This is not my sort of cricket.

Adelaide tests have never been my go.

3 to 4 days of a flat track before a day or so of real cricket.

It’s like a boring basketball game that only gets interesting in the two minutes.

Give me the Gabba with some life, the Waca with some bounce, or the Mcg rolling along the ground any day.

Ponting did what he may have to do more often in the future, he grafted a hundred to make sure Australia didn’t lose.

Clarke made runs on a flat deck, not bagging him, just pointing out he came in when Australia weren’t in trouble on a Hedwig track and made another hundred.

Ok I’m bagging him a little.

Then Gilly came in and swiped and slapped until he found Sehwag at point.

He got a standing ovation, in both directions.

But my blog about Gilly will be written after the test.

Mostly because I have no idea what I’m writing as of yet.

I used all my “a” material for Kumble.

A couple of wickets have fallen, Roy to an inswinger and then he did some acting for his next KFC ad.

Brett Lee fell to a nice reverse swinger from around the wicket.

He’s not really an all rounder is he.

Wonder if brad Hogg will get a standing ovation for his last innings in test cricket as well?www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

tidbits

I saw the end of the days play via a replay at midnight in the morning.

I like those hours a lot more,

Getting up at 10 am for a test match is torture for me.

From what I’ve seen I’m saying draw.

What, gilly retired, are you sure, wow.

But I’m still saying draw.

Can’t wait to see Gilly bat however, I’m saying duck or a 100 off 70.

He is gone, wow, not what do I do?

So maybe tomorrow they will actually start to attack in honour of the great man.

3 for 300 could mean a score of anything.

Gilly retired you’re shitting me.

Sort of glad I missed todays play, except for Haydens score, I’m not really a fan of grafting, even if it is needed to stay in the game.

Ponting seems to have conquered his one bad test against Sharma, and also all his bad tests against Harbhajan.

I read that both men were recalled to attack Ponting when he first arrived, probably the least subtle thing anil has ever done

Draw anyone?www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

the days play today (of what i've seen)

I haven’t been watching the cricket, and I’ve been drinking, so this might be my most accurate session update ever.

Australia are batting slowly, I assume its Brad Hoggs fault, but I am not basing this on any facts.

Cause I haven't watched many.

There was some rather attractive young ladies at the races, but young was the operative word.

Then when I finally found one I was convinced was of the legal age, Sime informed me of her engagededness (but he only told me that after he told me to have a crack at her) so I came home alone.

Reverse swing is happening, but it’s not at Ashes 2005 levels just yet.

No mentos available for the Indian.s

Jacques played an uglier shot than Tara Reid.

King Probot Hussey and Hayden got the classic reverse swing deliveries.

The track is still flat, but it has a few tricks up its sleeve.

I said if Hayden made a hundred, Australia should be fine in this match, so far I don’t see any reason why this shouldn’t be the case.

Oh and now I know why India took in 5 bowlers, so that RP could get some massages.

Is it just me does Ponting never smile during a test match, you’d swear someone was interfering with him at all times.

This is my last post today, as its Australia day and I’m off to eat some true blue tacos.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

Friday, January 25, 2008

Session update day 3 - lunch

I would like to talk about how exciting the first session was.

But it wasn’t.

India celebrated republic day by bowling wide outside off stump.

Australia celebrated Straya day by not losing a wicket.

That was about all that happened.

Jacques nudged, Hayden cut, Harbhajan got bounce, Pathan got reverse swing and RP has a d1cky hammy.

No wickets down, the wicket has got some curves to it now, but its now only as curvy as Keira having eaten a donut.

That’s about it, and now I’m off to the Camperdown races for their Australia day meeting.

I will be listening to the game via ABC and doing my best to not celebrate Australia day (mentioned below) too much.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

have a happy republic/australia day

This doesn't have a great deal to do with Cricket, and if your not Australian you may not know what I'm on about.


As I walk down the street this morning I’m overcome by the amount of people asking me how they should celebrate this nationalistic public holiday. Being a scholar and a gentleman, here are some of my responses for all of you to enjoy.

You’re an Australian, its Australia day, a public holiday, so do sweet fuck all. Sit on a couch, a beach chair, or a refugee and watch the cricket. Maybe chug some average brews, burn something on the bbq, and remember, a real Australian would get someone else to do the cooking, but would provide the brews.

Sledge someone, sledge anyone. Go to your local kwikemart and tell the dude behind the counter he makes slurpies like a poofter. Tell the girl at the Milk bar she only got the job cause she blows the owner. Park in a disabled spot, then when someone else does it, abuse them for doing so. Claim the winner in lotto, then when the guy at the counter asks to see the ticket, abuse him for not taking your word on it.

Go to an Australian day sale. If a company has supported our country by taking out an advertisement, and putting on a sale, the least you can do is make your way down their and buy a kettle. Remember our sunburnt land runs on capitalism and needs commerce so it can stay great, wholesome, pure and white. Buy something aussie, or be a commie hate monger hiding under some kids bed drinking vodka mixed with dogs blood while praying to allah.

Australia day celebrates the day we claimed this country from naked un Christian aborigines. Captain Cook discovered this land, after it had been discovered twice already. So in honour of that piss weak achievement, discover your backyard, and then ignore your dog, or if you’re a bastard, kick the dog, and if your dog gets angry, kill it, give it money or praise its athletic ability, unless it becomes a Muslim, then just diss it in the media.

This is the easy one, and it can also be transferred to any other country in the world for their national day. Do whatever the Americans do. I don’t mean invade your neighbour’s house and take his electricity, I mean 4th of July style. Fireworks, Hamburgers and celebrities. So invite over a big brother or neighbours star, eat maccas and blow some shit up. Uncle Sam wants you to.

Eat some lamb, according a television advert from a fat ex footballer (who never lived up to his potential, posed naked and played 4 games for Collingwood) it’s the Australian thing to do. I always listen to ex footballers, which means I pay women to help me masturbate, do drugs with young girls, buy pubs, put on weight, beat my missus, talk about depression, and complain about how football isn’t as good as it was in my day.

Now after having some beers, buying the kettle, eating some sheep, watching the cricket, discovering your back yard, and being American, you can finish your Australia day the way every 21st birthday has been finished in Australia since 1993, by standing in a circle of drunken sheep eaters and singing along with barnesy about Vietnam and Sydney. And if you don’t know what song I’m talking about then maybe you’re unaustralian and you should be deported to Russia, Nauru, New Zealand or somewhere equally depressing.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

carpet bombs aren't funny, and neither is he

Ok the joke has gone on long enough.

Apparently it’s been April fools day for 3 tests now.

You may remember my constant (here, here, here, and here, or just go here and scroll down) posts saying he just wasn’t up for it.

It’s not his fault.

He wasn’t going to say to the selectors, hey I’m not really all over this test bowling caper, perhaps you should look elsewhere.

He didn’t ask Warne to retire, Stuey to get overweight, the Cullens to be sh1t or for McGain to be Victorian, these things just happened and he was promoted to the Australian test team.

He is probably more surprised than the rest of us to be a test bowler in the number one rated side on earth.

Every time the ball is thrown to him he probably starts to shine it, before someone whispers that he is expected to bowl with it.

But please selectors, fu©k him off.

Send him back to his postal route, kick him out of the team hotel, give him some frequent flyers miles, hire a hit man to whack him, or feed him Ice and drug test him the next day.

It’s all fun and games until someone gets hurt, and we are all very fu©ken hurt right now.

Because we Australians can’t take this anymore.

In this series he has bowled 110 overs, for 7 wickets.

Symonds and Clarke have bowled 98 for 14 wickets.

He is half the bowler 2 part timers are.

How shit is that, seriously work it out, how shit, he is really shit, like seeing a wart growing on your pecker, or swalloing a fly over and over and over again type shit.

Like watching Battlefield earth sober type shit.

I mean if Ganguly wasn’t a fruit loop, he might have only 3 wickets in this series.

That’s like getting your testicle or sensitive girl bits caught in a zipper shit.

I am starting a petition for all Australians, George Bradley Hogg must go.

Bring in Tait underdone, bring in an injured Hilfenhaus, bring in Bracken and his sisters hair cut, hell even bring in Daniel Marsh.

Anyone but Hogg.

You can even go retro.

Get Tim May a suit that fits, allow Shane Warne a room full of skanks, bail out Terry Jenner, pick Gavin Robertson from club cricket, give Richie a bucked load of anti aging cream, help me reanimate Tiger Bill or even turn back to Ray Bright or Greg Matthews, if worst comes to worst.

Because Brad Hogg is not a test cricketer.

Don’t tell us he is improving, that he played to the game plan, that his batting is handy, the his pants fit nicely, that he gives good head, that the players like, that all spinners struggle against India, just put him in a box and send him somewhere.

The West Bank perhaps.

Sierra Leone is nice this time of year.

Or perhaps Kenya needs a new leggie.

Our enemies are enjoying this, “Have you any idea how much I'm enjoying Hogg's "performance" over the last couple of days?”If the Kiwis, with a team full of civil servants, are laughing at us, what would teams with actual cricketers be doing?

Do you know what England’s strategy next ashes is, ensure Hogg is picked.

I know I’ve been subtle in this post but I want to make sure the selectors under stand my message.

Get

Rid

Of

The

Tongue

Or

I

Will

Carpet

Bomb

Your

House

You

Useless

Mother

Fu©kers

PS, if somehow he takes wickets in the second innings, however unlikely that is, I was only taking the p1ss.

PPS, that line was added incase they Feds decided to charge me with any of the 43 terrorism offences I just committed.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

session update stumps day 3

The two runs added by India after the tea interval certainly helped their cause to no end.

Also their idea of rushing the Australian openers obviously worked a treat at none for 60 at stumps.

India’s best chance of winning this game, assuming that is still their intention, is to get Hayden out.

If he makes a hundred, which he currently looks like doing, India will not be able to bowl Australia out for under 400.

Sure Ponting may fail, Hussey could miss fire, Clarke may fall apart and Roy may do something similar, but the chances of all of them failing while Hayden is smashing them at the other end on a flat track is very limited.

Hayden flattens attacks on flat tracks. It's his speciality. He scores so brutally that bowlers not only forget line and length, but forget their sexuality and their favourite restaurant.

He is just that brutal.

Mind you this is a extremely flat track, even flatter than Keira Knightely, more like that dude from hedwig and the angry inch.

Hayden And Fabulous Phil guided the Aussies pretty easily to stumps.

The rock didn’t swing, so Hayden’s crease position nonsense was not important.

Ganguly fielded a ball at mid off, and went down like an imaginary hand had disrupted his testicles.

He was rolling around in great agony, I thought perhaps he was going to pass a kidney stone, and then when all the attention from his team mates had been won, he got up and waived off the physio.

The dude is just weird.

If the pitch starts to deteriorate one day 3, India are in the box seat, if the wicket falls apart on day 4, could be a ripping match, but if it waits till day 5, then we have a draw on our hands.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

Thursday, January 24, 2008

session updates lunch day two

The Indians started this session like teenage boys on red cordial.

Just when I thought Dhoni was going to play one of his innings he got caught slapping a ball to deep point.

Then Clark and Lee slowed them down and worked Tendulkar over until he was gone.

Kumble and Harbhajan strolled to Lunch in such a manner that if Australia make less than 400 in the first innings they should forget about cricket.

Harbhajan seemed a bit reserved, but his straight drive off Johnson was a ripper, reminded me of Neil Johnson at the 99 world cup, for some reason.

This is still a very Keira Knightley pitch, and the fact that Hogg isn’t even bothering the tail means that Kumble or Harbhajan shouldn’t be a big factor today or possibly even tomorrow.

So when Australia eventually get these two out, if the swing doesn’t bother them, it could be a long couple of days for India.

But if the ball swings and Hayden doesn’t make big runs, India will be in a good spot.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

i forgot

Highlight of the first session was Harbhajan nicking one off Clark and then running down the wicket looking at before colliding with Clark.

That in itself is not the highlight, its when you see that Clark saw him coming, probably could have moved and restricted the contact, abut instead left his forearm out for Harbhajan to run into.

My old man was in stitches.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

it's not our turn

Australia has 4 spinners in its contracted players list and tours of Pakistan and India to come this year.

Lets get to know them.

Stuart “Lord Stuey” MacGill the enfant terrible of the private school leg spinning set.

Currently injured and more interested in filming odd ads about wine, but is married to a hot chick.

Has over 200 wickets, but has bad knees and is late 30’s.

May play again, but it looks doubtful, and even if he does he has worse knees than my grandma, and hers are fake.

Brad “the tongue” Hogg is the part time bowler who accidentally became a test match spinner.

Was once a postman, still bowls like one, and is a very effective weapon in one day cricket, but is just not a test cricketer.

People say he is a nice bloke, but I don’t think that is helping him take wickets in test match cricket.

His bowling average of 50 is not gonna help keep him in the big time.

Dan “sleeves” Cullen took 40 wickets one year for the redbacks.

Since then he would be lucky to have taken 40 combined.

Has played one test against Bangladesh, and has a very annoying habit of scrunching his sleeves up before every fu©king delivery.

Was relegated to 12th man for the redbacks last game.

No where near the level needed to be playing for Australia.

Cullen “the other guy” Bailey is the saviour of leg spinning.

So at the moment he is being crucified by not playing.

Right at the moment he is the highest paid club cricketer in the land.

Hasn’t been picked for first class cricket in 4 months.

Not even his father the preacher can save him now.

Obviously Cricket With Balls Own Nice Bryce McGain is not contracted, because this is his break out year.

But looking at these sorry excuses for spin bowling, he must be the best spinner in Australia right now.

Unless my plan to reanimate the corpse of Tiger Bill O’Reilly has been successful.

McGain has taken 24 wickets at 33.

Hogg 20 wickets at 40.

Cullen 11 wickets at 50.

And Bailey and Stuey aren’t really worth mentioning.

This really is the worst time for spin bowling in Australia since Terry Jenner went to jail for paying off his punting debts with someone else’s cash.

I do think Aaron Heal from wa is a handy bowler, incase the selectors are interested.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

Is gilly a goner?

According to Rodney Hogg, Gilly can leave the game when ever he wants to.

I have never ever believed ©rap like that.

Champion players should get more leeway than other plays, no doubt, but the side is always more important than the player.

Right now Gilly is struggling for form with the bat.

But his career record is not great against India, but people think he bats well against them because of one knock.

Sure it was the sort of knock you’d watch instead of having $ex with Russian twins, but it was still only one knock.

India is the only side he averages less than 40 against.

He just made a match winning score in the world cup final, all be it with the aide of a little black ball, so his form is not Shane Watson bad.

It’s his form with the gloves that is most troubling.

He is dropping catches and missing stumpings.

That’s less than good. Bert Oldfield is turning over in his grave, but maintaining his soft hands.

Mind you he has never been a superstar keeper, I cringe when people refer to him as a great keeper.

As an allrounder he is a better keeper than say Jacques Kallis is a bowler, but his keeping is not of Garfield Sobers bowling level. If that makes sense.

Boucher and Gilchrist may be the premier wicket keepers in the world, but they don’t really rate against even the most recent generation of wicket keepers like Khan, Healy, Russell, and Richardson.

Gilchrist may have changed the world of cricket for ever.

Positively, by batting in a manner that has inspired all teams to score quickly and take on attacks.

Negatively, by ensuring all test teams have batsmen who wear gloves.

Right now Australia is not in a position to allow the selection of a keeper who regularly misses chances.

I’m not saying we drop him straight away, but surely the selectors must make him aware that getting 20 wickets for the new team is not as easy as it used to be. So he either starts taking the chances or he starts posing for a sculptor.

After all he is older than Bryce McGain, who is older than Jesus, so retirement is not the worst thing that can happen to him.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

the days play today

I didn’t see much of the last session, but I did hear a bit of it.

Funny thing about the radio is they didn’t go on and on every 38 seconds about Radelaide Oval.

So I enjoyed the coverage more.

Gilly dropped Laxman, cost Australia 20 odd runs in real life.

But in cricket terms it cost momentum.

Lee & Johnson continued to bowl well.

Clark continued to be ignored.

And Hogg continued to be the failure I thought he would be.

Sachin Tendulkar must be taking some sort of cricket equivalent to Viagra, because he just keeps making runs.

I saw his first 50, and it wasn’t pretty, but runs is runs.

Dare I say it, but the great Sachin is becoming a probot.

That might be a good thing for the Indians though, because without his probotic innings, they would have cactus.

Dhoni continues to bat like he is on valium, or whatever Dravid is taking.

And Australia could have had a good day, but just didn’t quite get there.

India would be happy with this day, but they need to get the best part of 500 incase the rock don’t swing.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

session update day one tea

It’s getting hard to watch the cricket, the ground is covered by a white sticky liquid, it seems to be coming from the commentary box.

But through the mess I still saw some things.

Sehwag looked lost once the runs dried up, this happened to clash with Lee bowling a great come back spell and Sehwag playing a too close to cut/back foot drive/swipe with feet off the ground to slip.

Hogg was being played like the part timer he is, the Indians easily scoring off him, so then the chairman of the save the tongue foundation donated his wicket again.

Ganguly wasn’t happy with the decision, he was a long way down the wicket, but it was a swipe across the line from a straight one.

Hawkeye said it was flicking the bails, but hawkeye says everything is flicking the bails. Even Tony Greig is bagging it now. It look likely to hit the stumps half way up, even if it had 4 more metres to travel.

Then again I am biased against Ganguly and I'm a leggie. Then again I'm also biased against Hogg. So its a (c)rapshoot.

Lee bowled a very testing spell and Johnson bowled a good couple of overs just before tea.

The ball has just started to reverse swing and in the last over he got Tendulkar nicking one bounce into the slips.

Clark bowled a very placid spell for him, but as usual wasn’t easy to score from.

Hogg isn’t getting any real spin, and when he is not being recklessly attacked doesn’t look he could find a wicket in a wicket making factory on the most wicket taking day of the year.

Sachin is just going ok, Laxman, looks a little put off by the pace of the wicket.

Could be the sticky stuff.

Beautiful count: 163.

-

And in the important game the Vics need 10 runs with 4 wickets in hand. And the new ball is just being raised.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

session update day one lunch

Here we are at the most beautiful ground in the world, its so beautiful that other grounds we have called beautiful are not beautiful in comparison. It’s a beautiful beautiful ground, I can’t think of a more beautiful ground anywhere in the world. Just beautiful. I would say this ground is Natalie Portman and all other grounds are Tara Reid. It’s just that beautiful.

Ever wondered why they ©rap on about the ground so much, its because there aint anything else in Adelaide.

To quote John Safran, “Never go to Adelaide, it’s a hole”.

There was also some cricket being played.

This guy pretending to be Mitchell Johnson bowled like Dennis Lillee once promised Mitchell Johnson would bowl like.

The Pathan experiment went ok, he only made 9, and went out the same way as Jaffer, so he probably will bowl better than Jaffer so it could work out alright.

Indian raced to 30odd in quick time, but once Australia got Pathan they tightened the screws, or Dravid came in and tightened his own screws.

34 runs off the first 7 overs. And 48 off the next 16.

That probably wouldn’t have been bad if he had made a score, but Johnson worked him over around off stump and eventually got him with a good one.

Sehwag started like an ice addict on Christmas morning, but now is batting more like a normal opener.

This means he edged about 4 balls to third man for four.

Clark bowled very well without luck and Lee bowled with a bit of swing, but bowled too many deliveries that were easy to score off.

Mitchell Johnson bowled well.

I repeat, Mitchell Johnson bowled well.

He was beautiful even.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

for fans of andre

I know some of you like Andre Nel, so check out this photo reworked by cricket action art.

Great site, i suggest you check out all his work.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

new bushrangers post & Mick Lewis tribute

Day three at the juntcion oval returned some sense of normalcy to the world order with the Vics needing 220 to win with 9 wickets in hand, read here.

Or to hear about my very moving, touching and heartfelt goodbye to Mick Lewis click here.

And if you wanna read both click here.

Hell if you want something random click here.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

The Ben Folds/Carl Hooper test

India

Think I’ve made my opinions on 5 bowlers clear enough.

The Indians are saying all the right words about Ganguly’s one day axing.

Surely it caused some angst, you can’t pretend it didn’t, timing is important in comedy and selections.

But in this modern day of professional positive speaking, Dhoni and Kumble have only said what a bunch of over priced psychologists would have wanted them to say.

“It has not affected us in any way”

It has affected you in at least one way, the answering of the question.

But his answer means one of two things, either he is lying, possibility.

Or no one in the Indian team likes Ganguly, possibility.

People may not be surprised to hear this, but I think axing Ganguly was the correct decision.

That is not based on form or the fact I don’t rate him, but more on his age and the fact all teams should be finding their line ups for the 2011 world cup.

Australia included, if Hayden, Gilly and Hogg can’t guarantee they will be available for selection in that tournament they should be axed too.

One day cricket is meaningless unless it’s a world cup.

It’s like the Olympics, no one cares who you beat the month before, just the fortnight when the advertisers spend millions.

Australia

Either Ponting is playing mind games, or he may have lost his mind.

Does he really want to play 4 quicks again?

I have no doubt Tait will bowl better this test if picked, but is that a good enough reason to pick him.

Australia’s balance looks off with 4 quicks, as I’ve said before, we aren’t South Africa, we don’t swing that way.

However, they showed some footage on the television of Tait bowling to some aussie left hander in the nets, and he got him out with a fiery delivery.

And Australia does like picking people for tests in their home state.

Ponting is also a big believer in net form, so maybe this was what swayed his mind. Plus he is so over Hogg, he is so last weeks news, and I am so glad.

Also Adelaide has a reputation, like the G, of reverse swing.

But I don’t understand why it matters if a wicket is reverse swing friendly or not, don’t you just give the bowlers mentos and it swings for you.

Oh and is it a coincidences Hayden is playing a test in the city of churches???www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

Facts, Stats & Records : LBW Question

Author: tommyboySubject: LBW QuestionPosted: 21 January 2008 at 12:00amif it is goin to hit the stumps then i think it should be out becouse you stated out as a righthander so then you should be out

International News : Selector Ashley Giles

Author: SledgerSubject: Selector Ashley GilesPosted: 21 January 2008 at 12:48pmAtherton thinks it's too early for Giles to be a selector and I see hispoint. He's very close to many of the current squad and be loathe toadvocate kicking any of them out.  Better to stay with countycricket for a good few years and coming into the selectorial processwith all new faces.     It seems Team England just gets bigger andbigger and I'm not so sure that's a good thing. Bloated committeesseldom agree on anything and make compromising decisions. I don'tbelieve in autocracy either , but a single selector , captain and coachcan pick my team and I'd back them.

International News : Inzy Retires...

Author: SledgerSubject: Inzy Retires...Posted: 22 January 2008 at 1:21pmSharp out of the blocks there zuhair , bondy only posted that in early October!

how many bowlers does it take to draw a series?

...
5 apparently.

It’s a big call for India, as 5 bowlers will completely change the complexion of their side.

Last week in Perth the balance was perfect.

To fit Harbhajan in without losing another bowler the Indians need to lose a batsman.

No prizes for guessing Wasim Jaffer will be the man given the @ss, he is still waving his bat at passing traffic, even in Adelaide.

That means that Dravid needs to open again, but didn’t he just do that and hate it?

It doesn’t stop there, it also means Ganguly or Laxman to 4, and most importantly Dhoni to 6.

Dhoni batted like someone else in Perth & Sydney, he is obviously not in very good form.

India’s batting form this series really hasn’t been great this series.

They have only scored over 350 once so far, and with Dhoni at 6 that is really opening up guys who are good honest bowlers who bat. You can’t call Pathan or Kumble test all rounders would be stretching the friendship.

I’ve always thought handling 5 proper (kallis types don’t count) bowlers is tough for a captain, because someone always gets the short straw.

If India do pick all 5 bowlers, I’d lay money on Sharma being the one to get the short straw.

The Mantis does have a lot of potential and did bowl some great spells in Perth, but so far wicket taking hasn’t been his forte, so he is the logical choice.

Also he can’t bat, so you ain’t losing much there.

You could argue he gives more variety to the attack, but two left armers, a straight leggie and offie is a pretty varied attack I’d say.

5 bowlers may guarantee a result, but perhaps not the result the Indians want.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

Monday, January 21, 2008

A chink in the immortal armour

Aussie tragics such as myself must be wondering by now. How did it happen? Was it the loss of Matthew Hayden? Some dodgy umpiring decisions? A glitch in the Matrix perhaps? Or are we just not as invincible as was once thought?

It's a strange question. 16 test wins in a row, and just three losses in their last 20 test matches, but already there is talk that the loss of Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath, plus Justin Langer and Damien Martyn, has created a downward spiral in Australian cricket that could see this once immortal team suddenly become another bunch of average Joes trying to win a few cricket matches.

Calls such as this are, for now, premature. Despite the fact that the Indian team partied with similar elation and joy that they showed after winning the Twenty20 World Cup, which for Australia seemed to compare with the AFL's NAB Cup as an unnecessary precursor to the real thing. In fact, it was almost as if Australia was down in the series, rather than their healthy 2-1 lead, one might have even suspected that India had just won it, or something bigger, rather than simply claiming victory in a single match.

That's not to take anything away from India either, they played magnificently, and despite the occasional time where Australia is down but fights back, India became the first team since 2005's Ashes winning England to keep the foot on the pedal and to actually claim victory in a test match. Led by VVS Laxman, the evergreen veteran, and new skipper Anil Kumble, who could see the same fame and praise as the last giant slayer, Michael Vaughan, if he can claim the final test.

Of course, the Australians will fight hard, as they always do, to avoid drawing a home series with India, as they did the last time the Indians toured. One of the major differences seemed to be a lack of experience, with the incumbent Matthew Hayden injured, and rookie Shaun Tait coming in for the more experienced (if only in limited overs and first class cricket) Brad Hogg. It is probable that Australia will shy away from a four pronged pace attack for quite a while now, after a slow over rate forced Ricky Ponting to bowl his part timers more than the young speedster.

But where Tait failed to impress, Indian youngster Ishant Sharma was quite the opposite, with a hostile spell against world number 1 batsman Ricky Ponting stumping the skipper and finally finding the edge of Ponting's trusty Kookaburra to claim his scalp and break up a crucial partnership. That was where the downhill stuff began, as Mike Hussey, like Ponting, went in the 40's, sloggers Andrew Symonds and Adam Gilchrist failing, and Michael Clarke finally departing after a hard earned 50. It says a lot that tailenders Mitchell Johnson and Stuart Clark showed no fear in carting the bowlers around to take the deficit to within 100 runs, but eventually failing.

Looking forward, the final test at the Adelaide Oval shapes up to be a cracker, with Australia trying to get an Indian monkey (ah the irony) off their back - to beat India in a test series - and to hold off the Indian charge. The return of Hayden will be crucial, whilst I wouldn't mind seeing in form Victorian leg spinner Bryce McGain given a go ahead of Brad Hogg, who just doesn't do it for me. I would also like the popular Andrew Symonds to be dropped, it is too risky to have him and Gilchrist in the same side when our middle order is out of form. Bring in David Hussey, the younger brother of Mike is on fire for Victoria and is a fantastic middle order batsman. If you want an all-rounder, then Ashley Noffke should be considered with his great recent results for Queensland shining in both disciplines.

Certainly Australia will need to lift their game to beat India, who once again have showed themselves as real challengers to an Australian throne and dynasty. Can the Aussies come back, or will India draw the series? The final test will certainly be a cracker.

Final note: I recently returned from a holiday, so have had no writing time, and I certainly have quite a few opinions regarding the second test in Sydney, and apologize for the recent lack of writing. I have a draft that I may publish sometime if demand is high.

Did Mo ever get a labret piercing?

If you happen to accidentally mention the name Greg Matthews around my father, you will get an ear full of how sh1t a bowler he was.

There are few people in history my father hates more, John Howard the only one who immediately comes to mind.

I have been on the end of these sprays quite a few times, and the only way I could convince him to cease and desist was to say, yeah but he wasn’t a bad batsman.

I got the same answer everytime, well he'd fu©ken wanna be, cause he couldn’t fu©ken bowl.

Mitchell Johnson currently has a better average than King Probot Hussey, in fact its as good as the original Probot Bradman.

99, not bad for a dude who came onto the scene with a labret piercing.

Only problem is that his main job in the team is as a bowler, or as a poster child for metro sexuals.

His bowling average is 34, its not quite as bad as Greg Matthews, but there is still time.

Most Aussie fans would be happy if Mitch's batting dropped off and he either started to swing the ball again, or bowled in a line within 4 foot of off stump.

Ofcourse until that happens he better keep averaging 99 just to keep his spot.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

missing a key indgredient

This test loss hasn't hit me as hard as it has other Aussies.

I have friends who have called it a debacle.

Sime is ready to fire everyone from Ponting on down.

And Big Daddy made some odd comments about a guy who is averaging 100 in last 10 tests.

But it didn’t effect me much.

Possibly cause I enjoy good cricket over Australia winning.

My favourite test series of all time are the 2001 Australian tour of India and the 2005 ashes.

But even by my standards this loss affected me less than usual.

This years world cup was similar, sure Australia won, but if they had lost (to anyone not the evil empire) I really wouldn’t have cared all that much.

This may seem odd to you.

But to me, a Victorian, I can’t really get behind a team full of NSWelsh, New Texans and West Australians.

When I was younger, there was a time that Paul Reifel, Merv Hughes and Shane Warne won the ashes on their own.

That was probably the Australian team I supported the most.

The two times I was happiest with watching my cricket side win were when I was in South Africa for Australia’s world cup win (traveling makes the heart grow fonder), and watching the Vics win the shield final a few years back.

With Warne I had an automatic player in the team for years.

While he was there we even had a few others drop by, Fleming, Harvey, Miller And Elliott all played over the last few years.

But when there are no Victorians in the team, I find it harder to really care about whether Australia win or lose.

It’s like the difference between Audioslave and Rage Against the Machine. I had nothing against Audioslave, their music was ok, but they didn’t get to me like Rage Against the Machine did, and the only difference was one dude.

So all I’m saying to the selectors is, how bout one dude, David Hussey perhaps, it’s not too much to ask for.

Hell if it makes you feel better, he is an adopted Victorian anyway.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

Kumble and Laxman challenge Australia's hegemony

How much we can all read into a solitary game of cricket. A week ago Australia were a superhuman side who, even if they had to cross the line in doing so, would simply always find a way to win. Now they are merely a brilliant side about to embark on the way down.

There are a number of areas of perceived fallibility India will look to exploit at Adelaide where, considering they won there four years ago on a pitch reasonably conducive to spin, they will rightly believe they can level the series. These include the opening pair - though this will be less vulnerable if Matt Hayden returns; Adam Gilchrist, undeniably in decline although still able to play the occasional superlative knock; and the fourth bowler, most likely to be Brad Hogg.

Whatever happens in the final Test, however, there is little doubt that India are now the second best side in the world. Following on from two impressive series victories over England and Pakistan, there have responded superbly to a thrashing at Melbourne. In Anil Kumble, they have a combative and proud skipper whose attributes have rubbed off upon his team-mates. As was the case last time in Australia, he has bowled with guile and gumption, becoming the third man to take 600 Test wickets in the process.

Their seam attack has progressed superbly of late. The rejuivinated Zaheer Khan is an admirable leader of the attack; but, indicative of the resilience of this side, his team-mates have risen to the challenge of his injury. At Perth, they exposed the Australian fallibility to top-class swing bowling. RP Singh is developing into Zhan's heir, able to curve the ball round corners, while Irfan Pathan reminded everyone why the cricketing world were so excited about his emergence four years ago. He batted with class in both innings, looking a bona fide Test number seven, and adds real batting depth when at eight. With the ball, he twice claimed both of Australia's openers; high-quality, controlled swing will always be able to test the best around. And then there was Ishant Sharma. His figures this series belies his talent: no one who witnessed the manner in which he worked out Ricky Ponting, and twice dismissed him, will doubt he is a major talent.

India meekly succumbed with the bat in the opening Test. But their batting has been transformed since, with Rahul Dravid rediscovering his obduracy, Sachin Tendulkar resplendent, and Virender Sehwag showing the merit of an aggressive opener. Yet again, however, VVS Laxman has risen to the Australian challenge, whether playing at three or six. His wristiness and ease playing off the back foot mark him out as one of the most dazzling players around; watching him in full flow is to watch batsmanship at its best. Frankly, he has underachieved in only averaging 44. But, at 33, there are signs that he has a new-found steeliness, and is no longer as prone to ending spectacular cameos with a loose shot. Over the next two years or so, Laxman has the chance to emerge as India's best batsman and cement the reputation his brilliant talents deserve.

Another majestic century at Adelaide would be as good a way as any to start. Australia are rattled and looking a little vulnerable. Under Kumble, India are imbued with a fighting spirit and resilience they have not always been associated with. Whatever happens in the final Test, India have the players to defeat Australia when they meet in India later this year. 'Too much cricket' is a common refrain, but no one will be complaining if Australia-India contests match the intensity and quality of the last two games.

middle order arson

Zimbabwean cricket is in a horrible place.

Mugabe is still doing his Stalin impression.

Sean Ervine is playing for West Australia.

Henry Olonga is giving motivational speeches.

And the average age of their playing list is foetus.

But as horrible as all that is, there is something worse, former middle order player Mark Vermeulen has burnt down Harare stadium.

Somehow I missed this, as it happened in 2006. but now its hitting the courts, therefore the news, and then me.

Poor Vermeulen has never been the same since the Indians, playing outside the spirit of the game, hit him in the head with a cricket ball, a small leather and cork combination that hurts like a motherfu(c)ker.

Irfan Pathan, the scary medium pace bowler, ruined Vermuelens life when he hit him in the head during a meaningless one dayer at the Gabba.

Since then he has had mental problems, epilepsy and arson related court dramas.

All of these problems are because of India and One day Cricket.

So it goes without saying that both India and One Day cricket should be banned immedialey.

I mean for all Australia’s sledging, they don’t cause players to burn down stadiums.

Vermeulen is pretty much my age, well according to here he is 27, http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/zimbabwe/content/current/player/55822.html 28 and here 29, but roughly my age, so his mental breakdown from cricket is tragic.

A real cricket tragic perhaps.

As if Zimbabwe didn’t have enough bad press.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"

Sunday, January 20, 2008

new blog features

...
I just updated my blog to have a players we like, and a players we don’t like section.

Surprisingly the players we don’t like section is incredibly slim.

Maybe we aren’t as negative as I thought.

Obviously Sourav Ganguly is in it.

And of even less surprise 2 South Africans are in it.

Also 2 boys from New Texas (qld) made the list.

Most surprising is the choice of a Pakistani.

But that’s all it has, only 4 countries.

No Englishman, no Sri Lankans, not even a Kiwi.

The list of players we like is far more inclusive.

The only country not listed is England, which is not listed in either category, which means Sime hasn’t gotten around to his KP is everything wrong with cricket blog and I haven’t written about how much I like Freddy.

The fact a South African has made the players we like list does bother the other two part time correspondents.

But fu©k em, cause I like andre nel, it’s my cross to bare.

Some people, Christians and positive people, will think the word hate is bad, but i believe hate is a beautiful emotion, as least as important as love.

I think Geirge Lucas got it wrong, i don't believe hate leads to the dark side.

In a cricket sense if their weren't players we hated, we'd be beige. Cricket is a sport where almost anyone can be a villian, in Australia we love Roy, overseas cricket fans seem to hate him.

Ganguly is hated in pretty much all countries, but in India he is loved.

Isn't that grand.www.cricketwithballs.com "the hooking & pulling specialists"