Mar 20 2009

Ryder–Vettori, graphic

Day 1 was so bizarre, two collapses and a record-breaking partnership, that I wanted to see how the innings would look if we could view it as a whole. So I graphed it. This is what a partnership that makes up 2/3 of an innings looks like:

partnerships

And for comparison, here is the – considerably less dramatic – as yet incomplete – Indian innings:

partnerships-india


Mar 20 2009

White Ferns into WWC final

It has taken qualifying for the finals to get me to finally post on the Women’s World Cup. Shame on me.

The White Ferns beat Pakistan today by 223 runs to qualify for the final of the Women’s Cricket World Cup. They actually qualify top of the table, as England, who have led the tournament until now, were beaten by Australia.

Their path to the final was as follows:

  • Def. Aus by 13 runs D-L
  • Def. WI by 56 runs
  • Def. SA by 199 runs (dismissing SA for 51 runs)
  • Loss to Eng by 31 runs
  • Def. Ind by 5 wickets
  • Def. Pak. by 223 runs (2nd wicket partnership of 262, Suzie Bates 168 off 105)

The final on Sunday should be an awesome game of cricket. Both New Zealand and England are very strong teams, playing very well. Both teams have batters with over 200 runs in the tournament, Claire Taylor (303 runs @ 75.75) and Caroline Atkins (211 @ 52.75) for England and Suzie Bates (273 @ 54.6) and Haidee Tiffen (249 @ 49.8) for New Zealand, as well as in form bowlers, such as Laura Marsh (Eng, 14 wkts) Aimee Mason (NZ, BB 4/2).

New Zealand’s record against England is very good, but of late England has been the stronger team, having beaten us in 4 out of the last 5 completed matches. So let’s hope for a turn around. (Let’s also hope that Cricinfo cover the game properly. Today’s game was only intermittently updated.)

Goldenhorse:


Mar 18 2009

Gone by breakfast

Pity the Indian fan who, getting out of bed at a fashionable hour of say 7am Indian Standard Time, is likely find, at the current rate, that a quarter of the test has already gone.


Mar 16 2009

Rankings, now updated

In the middle of the ODI series, where Indian were flaying the Black Caps, Stuff were exclaiming that Vettori was holding onto his no. 1 ranking. Not likely. By the time that article saw print Vettori had already dropped to 2nd, as the recently updated rankings now show. Vettori has now in fact dropped to 5th, after going wicketless in Auckland.

Kyle Mills managed to hold onto this spot at 3, thanks to his 1/27 in Auckland. Jacob Oram dwindled a bit, dropping from 14 before the series to 19 afterwards. Patel and Southee also slipped, while O’Brien, Ryder, Elliott and Butler don’t even make it into the top 100 (they are, respectively, 118, 137, 131 and 127).

Somehow I expected things to be worse for our bowlers.

Amongst the batsmen, Ryder reached a career high of 47, which is quite impressive considering he was ranked 77 before the series. Guptill was similarly successful; starting the tour at 72 and reaching 44 by the end.

Our highest ranked batsmen remains Taylor, who has slipped out of the top 20 over the series to sit at 23. McCullum is also in the 20s, at 27, where he started the series.  Styris drops into the 30s, despite not getting a bat in his one game, though that will include some degradation from missing the Chappell–Hadlee. Oram’s 8 runs in 3 innings pushes him into the 40s.

Elliott dipped slightly from 57 to 60, though that could have been as bad as 65 if it wasn’t for his furious cameo in Hamilton. Neil Broom just squeezes into the top 200. Kyle Mills didn’t improve his batting ranking much, though he finishes at 19 as an all-rounder. The biggest mover of all was Peter McGlashan,whose late innings heroics in Hamilton boosted his ranking from 329 to 235.


Mar 14 2009

Wrapped up

A most consoling of consolation wins. NZ defeat India by 8 wickets with 118 balls remaining. Not just a win, but a thumping. A dramatic turn around. It is in keeping with this series that the game should firstly be rain affected and secondly be so one-way.

The first three completed matches were determined by India’s strength, a powerhouse batting line up that can put any game beyond reach. Whereas tonight’s match showcased New Zealand’s strengths, difficult bowlers who can keep the score down and competent batsmen who can chase down almost any total.

It was a frustrating series, with all the rain, but an exhilerating series, with over 2000 runs scored at about 6.5 an over. There were some amazing performances. Sehwag was a sensation of course, in his most devastating series performance to date. 299 runs, 74.75 average, 150.25 strike rate. Tendulkar was masterful too, with the highest score of the series of 163. Ryder also with his 224 runs at 56.25 by 106.63 deserves to be lauded.

The Raconteurs:


Mar 14 2009

Tipping point

Back in high school, my mate and I found a copy of Card Cricket amongst the school’s educational board games. So we wasted a few rainy lunch hours simulating tests between his World XI and my NZ XI. I was as good at cards as I was at real cricket, so things generally didn’t go well for the NZ XI. One day however, Viv Richards really let loose on me. He piled up a century and marched towards his double. I just could not get him out, no matter what I threw down. It was bloody frustrating. I suspect though that the problem was that I simply didn’t have the combinations left in my hand to get a wicket. Play my cards as I might, the game had broken to my detriment.

It has occurred to me on occasion that the game of cricket is played well within it’s ultimate limits. In ODIs, batsmen score about 6 runs an over. However, they could be scoring at 6 times that. There is a lot of scope there.

In recent years, batting has improved considerably. Averages and strike rates have risen. In previous decades there have been only 1, 2 or no players with strike rates over 100, all of them late-innings sloggers. In the 00s we have 5, including actual batsmen. Might there come a point along this curve of improvement when a batsman starts to dominate bowlers to such an extent that they become completely ineffectual? When the batsman can score off every ball and only has to worry about getting himself out. The whole game, which is based on some sort of balance between bat and ball, would break down.


Mar 13 2009

BCCI to bash Sky through NZC?

The first reports of the latest dastardly move by the BCCI took the line that the IPL sponsor Sony weren’t happy with McMillan commentating on Sky on the current Indian series because of his involvment with the ICL. No real evidence for this claim was put forward apart from the fact that Ravi Shastri, who has been commentating on the ODIs, suggested it might be a problem. And no indication that the BCCI are involved.

It seems incredible that this infantile feud should spread to the commentary box, but enough insanity has been perpetuated in the pursuit of exiling the ICL that it didn’t seem impossible.

The development of the story, reported later today, is that the BCCI themselves are involved and that they are requesting that NZC stand McMillan down.

There has to come a point when this insanity will bite the BCCI on the arse. How embarrased would the BCCI be if McMillan does get to publically talk about the Indian team? I’m pretty sure that Macca won’t get his chance to commentate. But there are some barriers for the BCCI getting their way. Firstly, they can’t tell NZC to get McMillan off the Sky commentary team. Surely. What influence does NZC have over Sky? And what right would they have to use any influence? Secondly, Sky and Sony may have a bit more business sense than to allow themselves to get themselves involved in feuds between sporting organisations. Maybe one of them can knock some sense into the BCCI.

Does Radio Sport get anything from Sony? Perhaps McMillan could get a gig there.


Mar 12 2009

Mauling

10 wickets is as bad a loss as you can suffer when you are defending in an ODI, but that doesn’t begin to describe yesterday’s mauling. After all, if the rain hadn’t intervened, India may have lost a wicket or two chasing down the full total, and the official margin of victory would have been even less representative. I see that India were 84 runs in excess of their D-L target when the game was called off.

As meaningless as the exercise is, it is rather mindboggling to compare India’s innings last night with their innings at Christchurch, where they scored the highest ODI total ever scored in New Zealand. After 23.3 overs, from which they scored 201 yesterday, in Christchurch they were 139/2. If last night’s innings had been allowed to unfold to as it had in Christchurch, they would have scored well in exces of 500 over 50 overs.

As I say, a meaningless exercise (try extrapolating NZ’s innings in this game over 50 overs), but it does make you wonder just what this Indian team is ultimately capable of.


Mar 9 2009

Who was watching?

Yesterday I saw the work of a master, which first appeared in the 80s, but has been updated to the new millennium. While a handful of gifted costumed champions were featured, one stood apart from the others – a blue god, indomitable, possessing abilities beyond those of common men, an unnatural vision of what’s coming and an inhuman calm.  It was several hours of sustained, often brutal, action and spectacle…though the ending was a bit disappointing.

And I also saw Watchmen.


Mar 8 2009

OMG!!1!

India 392/4 off 50.  NZ’s required run rate = 7.86. That’s insane!

Good luck boys, but I see some major embarrassment coming up. I can’t watch. I’m going out to the movies.