Official Water Cooler Cricket Thread Baseball? Start your own thread...
#401
Posted 2007-March-29, 11:13
#402
Posted 2007-March-29, 16:36
Sean
#403
Posted 2007-March-30, 00:46
cardsharp, on Mar 29 2007, 08:45 AM, said:
Paul Collingwood, Mahela Jayawardene, Mohammad Yousuf, Monty Panesar, Mark Ramprakash
Ramps continues to frustrate everyone by showing the form and freedom in county cricket that he never really showed at Test level.
Spot on. For over 20 years Ramps has been a pleasure to watch at county level. Why hasn't he acheived at test level? Just like Graeme Hick
Geoff
#404
Posted 2007-March-30, 02:10
Mark Ramprakash Test average: 27.32 (52 matches, 2 100s, 12 50s) First-class: 51.40 (386)
Surprisingly similar records!
#405
Posted 2007-March-30, 10:13
I'm sorry, but we've been awful over the last year. Unless you have to have played cricket in England to qualify for that.
#406
Posted 2007-March-30, 11:29
mr1303, on Mar 30 2007, 06:13 PM, said:
Yes, and no Geraint Jones??? Appalling!
Roland
#408
Posted 2007-March-30, 13:06
#411
Posted 2007-April-04, 15:46
#412
Posted 2007-April-04, 16:31
#413
Posted 2007-April-05, 09:02
Geoff
#414
Posted 2007-April-05, 12:55
A better rule IMO is that once a batsman has grounded something behind the line he is in until he leaves the crease again because he is setting off for another run.
#415
Posted 2007-April-07, 18:43
How do you define someone setting off for another run? The most obvious definition is that some portion of their body has made contact with the ground outside the crease. Or that their is no part of their body in contact with the ground behind the crease. (This actually happens quite often about 4-5m past the crease when deceleration after this single is happening, have a look sometime) The first one has problems in that it means you could take a running leapfrom behind the crease to set off for a run but technically have not left the crease. The latter means that every time you are turning for a run you have a problem as you are outside of the crease, (apart from the grounded bat). It is a real can of worms.
Sean
#416
Posted 2007-April-07, 18:45
Go Bangladesh!
Sean
#417
Posted 2007-April-08, 00:40
jikl, on Apr 8 2007, 12:43 AM, said:
How do you define someone setting off for another run? The most obvious definition is that some portion of their body has made contact with the ground outside the crease. Or that their is no part of their body in contact with the ground behind the crease. (This actually happens quite often about 4-5m past the crease when deceleration after this single is happening, have a look sometime) The first one has problems in that it means you could take a running leapfrom behind the crease to set off for a run but technically have not left the crease. The latter means that every time you are turning for a run you have a problem as you are outside of the crease, (apart from the grounded bat). It is a real can of worms.
Sean
I would say you are setting off for another run if your body weight is moving in that direction, and you are not setting off for a run if your body weight is moving in the other direction.
This covers the guy who's sliding his bat in and suffers an unintended bobble on the surface, and the guy who is out of his crease turning and putting the bat down but getting an unintended bounce.
#418
Posted 2007-April-08, 15:01
This is what England needed. I can't tell you how much we have missed him up the top of the order.
#419
Posted 2007-April-16, 20:12
Last night's match was basically a nothing match becuase they rested all their good bowlers.
Sean
#420
Posted 2007-April-17, 11:20