snoozer
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From my limited knowledge of
You should start every post with this.
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From my limited knowledge of
I doubt they'd go for Dussey. They'll be looking to blood a youngster but I don't have a clue who. They might go for Bailey. Ferguson has thrown a golden chance away. And Forrest. those guys haven't stepped up. Can't see them dropping Cowan and making two major changes to the team.
Pattinson, if fit, goes straight into the test team. Should be the first bowler picked.
You know you're struggling when Lyon and Beer are your 2 best spinners......Ok, I've revised it from my earlier thoughts:
1-Cowan
2-Warner
3-Hughes
4-Watson
5-Clarke*
6-Khawaja
7-Haddin+
8-Siddle
9-Lyon
10-Beer
11-Bird
12-Bailey
13-Maxwell
14-Pattinson
15-Starc
You should start every post with this.
From my limited knowledge of South African sport, I believe Soccer has generally been more popular or at least easier to participate in for black South Africans while Rugby/Cricket has been more popular with white South Africans.
So did Roebuck :sarcasm:Kallis gives a bunch of scholarships to black South Africans. He truly is a great man
So did Roebuck :sarcasm:
SauceBeer's case bolstered by Maxwell's struggles
Daniel Brettig
January 15, 2013
Should Glenn Maxwell go to India on next month's tour it will only be as Australia's third-choice spinner, with Michael Beer heavily favoured to be named the second spinner behind Nathan Lyon, for the four-Test series.
Earlier this summer, Maxwell was chosen ahead of Beer as the lone spinner in the Australia A team that faced the South Africans at the SCG, and was later 12th man for the Test on the same ground. But his struggles for wickets against Sri Lanka's batsmen have made it clear that the Victorian allrounder is still well short of international standard as a bowler.
Known for his customary brio in interviews and the dressing room, Maxwell has admitted that so far, the Sri Lankans have had much the better of him. In this his comments recalled Stuart MacGill when he was rendered bereft by India's batsmen during the 2003-04 summer. Giving away 50.78 runs per wicket during the series, MacGill remarked that it wasn't so much that the visitors could read what he was bowling, more that they didn't care.
"Their (Sri Lanka's) feet are a lot crisper, they go forward and back a lot easier and they seem to have a lot better idea on where they can hit and where they can score," Maxwell said. "They've been excellent in the few games I've played against them. It's been tough. I played the Chairman XI's game [in Canberra] and they played me really well and hit me to wherever they wanted.
"I've been coming on when they've been consolidating their partnership or there wasn't a whole lot of pressure. The other night they were 30 runs away from winning. Any time when you come on as a spin bowler on a seaming wicket it's not a good time to come on, especially if we've only got 170 on the board and that was the batters' fault. I've got to keep hanging in there."
Six matches into his ODI career, Maxwell remains wicketless, and scores of five and eight in the first two matches against Sri Lanka did not inspire a great deal of confidence with the bat either. Beer meanwhile has been bowling solidly as ever for the Perth Scorchers in the BBL, digging the ball into the pitch and changing his pace in a manner reminiscent of the best method for taking wickets in India.
Beer's summer has not always appeared likely to end with a spot on Australia's next Test tour. At the start of the summer the national selector John Inverarity indicated that another left-armer, Jon Holland, was the man next in line behind Lyon. Holland was then invalided out of the season with a serious shoulder injury, but Maxwell was preferred for Australia A. Before that match, Inverarity spoke of Beer in measured and not altogether promising tones.
"Michael is well regarded and is a good, steady spinner," Inverarity had said. "We feel that he's a known quantity, we don't need to find out a lot more. And he'll be bowling in the Shield game [for Western Australia v Victoria]. It's an ideal opportunity for Glenn Maxwell. You're the spinner, you get on with it, and see how he responds to that."
Now that Maxwell has admitted this spin-bowling business is not easy, Beer's known quantity will be more reassuring for Inverarity and his panel.
SauceWatson won't play before India squad chosen
Daniel Brettig
January 21, 2013
Australia's selectors will have their trust in Shane Watson tested by the revelation he will not play a match in his redefined role as a non-bowling batsman before the India Test touring squad is chosen.
In the latter stages of his recovery from a calf strain that was aggravated during the Melbourne Test against Sri Lanka, ESPNcricnfo understands Watson is expected make his return to the game in a domestic limited overs fixture for New South Wales on January 30.
The national selector John Inverarity has said that the squad for India is due to be announced before the end of this month, meaning Watson's inclusion in the touring party would have to be made on faith rather than form and fitness.
Watson trained in front of Inverarity and Andy Bichel in Sydney on Sunday and batted in the nets on Monday, but he was ruled out of Australia's Twenty20 matches against Sri Lanka and a Sheffield Shield match for the Blues against Western Australia, due to begin on Thursday.
"He had a good running work-out. Andy Bichel and I were there when he did his running drills . . . but he didn't bat," Inverarity said. "When we left it yesterday it was uncertain, but he'll certainly play before the end of this month."
This means that neither Watson nor the man he has effectively nominated to displace in the Test side, Ed Cowan, will play a first-class match before the announcement.
Tasmania's next Shield fixture is due to take place against Tasmania in Hobart from February 6-9.
Inverarity said that his panel would not be swayed by Watson's public airing of his preference to open the batting. "Not really, no. We'll consider all players on their merits, in a dispassionate way," Inverarity said.
"The captain always determines the batting order. We've had many discussions with Shane. One of the basic points is he's always willing to play and bat where he's asked to bat."
Another player of interest to the selectors is Moises Henriques, who is likely to be slotted into the NSW Shield team to play against WA even if his Australian duties with the ODI team in Hobart on Wednesday means he makes a delayed entry to the match.
at least the selection policy is consistent in one regardthere goes hodges' chance to impress
bloody silly picking a squad when most players will be playing 2-3 sheild games before the tour
:lol: Honestly they have no idea, Big Bash form is more important than Shield form :crazy:So they are choosing the squad BEFORE the Shield games??..:crazy:
So they are choosing the squad BEFORE the Shield games??..:crazy: