2013 Page 1
<February 8>
Having watched the Australia/England match I am left wondering if the
England bowlers are talking to the batsmen this evening. The coaches say
you should always look for the positives in any performance. And they
were there. The England opening pair Brunt and Shrubsole bowled
superbly! It's a while since I have seen an opening spell by both
players to rival that in this match. Australia have fine batting line up
as England will know well and will probably be reminded during this
coming summer, and at 27 for 4 in the 10th over, England were on a roll.
I have watched this sport now for almost 20 years and even if conditions
are in your favour you need to take advantage of them and the pair did.
Anya Shrubsole bowling in the Super 4s
Some asides on the match;
-
I once disagreed with a senior figure in the ECB
about the best fast bowling performance I had seen in
internationals. I was asked only minutes after the match by a friend
calling me, where Anya's rated in my opinion. I would certainly put
this in the top three which are (in chronological order since I
would find it hard to sort a one, two, three in any other way)
Catherine Fitzpatrick in the semi-final of the World Cup in South
Africa in 2005 against England, Katherine Brunt in a one-day
international at Wormsley the last time the Australians visited
these shores, and now Anya today.
-
Commentators were saying the start was too early which is
possibly true and something for the organisers to think about,
although with TV schedules sorted (and that's probably what fixed
the times in the first place) don't expect any changes!
-
England's fielding looked to me to be slightly
off the pace. An odd thing to say you might think when you see the
other side dismissed for less than 150 but every run was to count
later.
-
The umpiring was rather worse than abysmal! Both
teams suffered although I felt England got the worst of it,
especially when the 3rd umpire didn't appear to know his job either.
The lbw dismissal of Edwards was particularly ridiculous as the ball
would only have struck the second stump outside the leg stump; not
even the first. It would have been a glancing blow even then. I
doubt many club umpires would have got that wrong and I keep asking
my TV where Lorraine Elgar has got to as we need someone of her
class at this tournament. One of my correspondent has noted " I
think we ought to have had drs at such important matches."
-
I enjoyed one or two moments especially. I liked
Holly Ferling's grin when bounced by Katherine Brunt. If you need to
show a bowler she doesn't intimidate you there are few better ways
of doing it. Sarah Taylor's catch to dismiss Kate Blackwell also got
little attention from the commentators and left me wondering how
many of them could have taken an inside edge quite so cleanly. It's
the outside edge you always expect and it's because Sarah does it
with so little fuss she is rather taken for granted. I also liked
the fact Lanning walked and didn't wait for the decision. I know
everyone round the ground heard the edge but many players look as if
their boots are anchored to the pitch at such moments. Don't make
yourself look stupid - follow Lanning's example.
-
The Australians showed great attacking spirit.
The TV coverage was a little annoying as it was often not possible
to take in the obviously very attacking fields they set. I have seen
sides try and defend a total like this and pay the price. Instead
the Aussies attacked and reaped the reward (just!)
-
Only Greenway and Marsh seemed to realise there
was all the time in the world. Yes, I know run-rate might have
counted later in the competition, but losing counts rather more!
-
England's last wicket stand showed some spirit
and came within an ace of winning the match. The Aussies will take
the win - well so would England have done if they'd sneaked over the
line - but in many ways this match deserved to be a tie. It was a
different kind of advert for the women's game; not the plethora of
runs we have seen at times, but it did highlight the superb skills
of the quicks on both sides.
Australia would seem to have a place
booked in the final. But who will join them? The White Ferns have had a
pretty good ride to date and must be somewhere high in the bookmakers
minds. Can England get it back? I haven't tried any "if this and that"
type calculations but it would seem to me that their chance of a final's
place is now in hands other than their own.
And I've received the following
concerning the rather strange idea of several games in the competition
being irrelevant. I refer, of course, to the fact that you do not carry
forward any points won against the sides that are eliminated after the
group stage. Also
the fact that net-run rate counts for more than what happened when the
two sides met, can lead to some odd repercussions.
As the England / West Indies situation has demonstrated, it has to be a flawed system if England,
having finished above the West Indies – and therefore played overall
better than them – finds themselves below the West
Indies in the Super 6. It makes a mockery of the concept of the initial groups. There are other
flaws and some of these will happen eventually.
Picture
the situation where team A and B are playing their final game of the
group stage and A is playing B. A bowls B out for a low score, say, 100.
A then bats well to about 90 with 20 overs left but then has to play out
about 15 maidens because its in their interest to beat B but without
damaging B’s net run rate too much because its in A’s interest to let B
through to the Super 6 because they are about to beat B and having
previously lost to C they want B to progress at the expense of C. This
nearly happened in this World Cup. If the Sri Lanka / India match had
occurred before England / West Indies we could have found ourselves in a
situation where England, having bowled West Indies out for very little,
could have had to deliberately play out maidens towards the end of their
innings (say in the 90s) to allow the West Indies through on net run
rate over Sri Lanka because Sri Lanka beat us and we didn’t want that
result to carry forward. So Sri
Lanka’s reward for beating us would have been to sit and watch as we
engineered their demise in favour of the West
Indies. This scenario will happen sooner or later.
Any
system that can allow a team or encourage a team not to perform to their
best is odd to say the least!
The one action they could take to try to mitigate the unfairness of the system
is to allow the 1st to play 4th and 2nd and
3rd as semi-finals after the Super 6.
One gets an interesting situation if WI were to beat NZ (unlikely I know). With Australia by
then at least being on 8 pts they could deliberately lose to WI in order
to ensure that they play WI in the final rather than either NZ or
England !! Given a choice between WI, NZ or England I know which they
would go for.
I thought Australia would win it before hand and I still think they will. They’ve found some
fantastic young players (most markedly the wonderful Meg Lanning) and look a lot better than any other team.
Final thought. The umpires might have made 2 serious mistakes but that still leaves England
batsmen making a heck of a lot more.
This scenario that's been sent to me
illustrates beautifully the nonsense of the net run rate being used to
decide anything when there is a much simpler way of deciding on the
order in the points table when two countries finish up on the same point
score. All you need is the very simple - "who won when those two sides
met during the competition" - which, of course they must have done.
<February 10>
And yet again the format and rules are
puzzling visitors to this site. This is an extract from an email by
Martin Woodward...
There is one thing that
bothers me particularly and that is the rules regarding qualification
for the Super 6s. In the final game of Group A Sri Lanka beat India very
convincingly and deservedly qualified for the Super 6s. But they only
proceeded with 2 points. If the match had been much closer and India had
scored 251 Sri Lanka would have had 4 points. How can this be fair? They
have been penalised for their great performance.
If Sri Lanka were more
worldly wise when they knew the match was won they could have conceded a
few extras by bowling a few wides to ensure India scored 251. Had this
have happened India would have qualified with 2 points at the expense of
West Indies and Sri Lanka would have had 4. It seems the rules are very
bad and are encouraging negative play and the possibility of matches
being manipulated.
{This point was also
made by Sri Lankan batsman Russell Arnold on Twitter}
West Indies would
rightly have been very upset had this happened but Sri Lanka surely
would have been right to have tried to gain the most points they could.
While 251 might have been a tad close
the the score India needed to win the match for the Sri Lankans to take
this chance I can see exactly the point Martin is making. They have paid
a penalty for winning well instead of just managing to scrape a
win.
I have also witnessed today, following
England's win over South Africa, the unedifying prospect of sides
struggling with spreadsheets to work out how fast they have to bat next
time (or possibly how slowly in order to pick the opponents they would
rather chose in the final). Is this what cricket should be about?
Duckworth/Lewis has made a great contribution to deciding winners in
shortened games but my feeling is the maths should be left there.
It is even crossing my mind that we
could finish with a situation where Australia make it to the final
unbeaten and lose to a side that has lost twice. If you can find logic
here then I am blessed if I can. I am getting deja vu of the county
championship in England last year where drafting of strange rules
combined with strange weather gave a - well you can guess the adjective
- final. I suggested to others involved in the game that the
Championship should be decided by who finished top of the league. Why
play a final? If it's a league it's a league. If it's a knock-out you
have a final. You can't do that with the World Cup I guess or the TV
people would not be happy but it has a greater logic than any other
scenario I can think of. That, of course would hand it to Australia
right now (barring some really weird goings on), but then they've played
that well maybe they deserve it (and that's never an easy thing for an
Englishman to say).
And for today's televised game...
Australia v Sri Lanka... some
rambling thoughts...
-
Good to see a woman umpire at
last. One run would hardly have made any difference but leg side
balls should be wide in this class of cricket.
-
I must take umbrage with Mel
Jones. What's wrong with Holly Ferling smiling at the batsman after
beating her convincingly? Both individuals know full well what that
smile meant and I'd suggest it can be more effective than a glower.
The latter is possibly going to stiffen your resolve but the former
is rather disarming. Mel perhaps never batted in front of a certain
Yorkshire wicket keeper who was known to distract batsmen using
humour. It was rather effective I gather. A batsman trying to stop
laughing is perhaps not concentrating as she might.
-
Ferling was most refreshing to
watch; the smile rarely left her face and her attacking mode for
someone so new to international cricket shows the Aussies could have
a strike bowling find here.
-
I felt Rasangika played very
sensibly. With a tightly packed field singles were always going to
be difficult, so chose your delivery and give it everything. It was
all defence or all attack and that she did very competently!
-
I agree with Mel totally however
on the need for SL to play more top sides. Perhaps also sides like
the England Academy and the Australian Shooting Stars could tour
there more often.
-
I feel Kaushalya should bat one
spot higher up. I know she came in early (in terms of overs) in this
match but there is always the potential for her to be left with the
tail struggling. There should be one regular batsman to follow her
to ensure you get the best from what can be a mighty hitter, or she
could run out of partners.
-
Blackwell's catch was extremely
difficult. Get it wrong and a visit to the dentist might well be
required. It showed great courage as well as skill.
-
I noticed that at times Fields had
sufficient faith in Schutt that 7-2 fields were set. It was hard to
tell from the TV coverage if that was true of any of the other
bowlers.
-
Osborne's bowling was quite
remarkable and her pitch map showed a grouping any man or women in
the world would have been proud of. She earned her career best
today.
-
Sri Lanka have only managed to
score 82 against Australia in 2000 and 57 in 2005. That's the only
two previous occasions these sides have met. As easy a victory as
this was for Australia 131 is a great improvement! Sri Lanka should
also take away from this tournament their two giant killing
escapades. Today they batted in the most difficult conditions of the
day or their score might have been greater.
-
Meg Lanning was the best looking
player of the tournament so far. I know Haynes got the higher score
but Lanning's obvious power to simply take over the game was obvious
even in an innings in the thirties.
-
Cameron got away with an lbw that
might well have been overturned by drs. As one of my emailers
suggested this tournament needs that, especially if they are to
continue with umpires of this quality. Today they were pretty good
on the whole, but we have seen some nightmares in several games.
-
And as for England v South Africa...
-
Shrubsole appears to go from
strength to strength. 5-17 is a fine performance against any of the
sides in Mumbai. She, above anyone in the England team, has given
them a chance at the final, slim as that chance now is. She can
certainly fly home content she has done more than her share, final
or no final.
-
Taylor's three ducks in a row is
cause for concern, especially when the last two innings have lasted
only three balls. Form is temporary, class permanent so they say -
England must hope the form returns soon.
If England have been muttering prayers to the gods recently, they
were answered today as West Indies defeated New Zealand with relative
ease and a margin of 48 runs. This it must be said would be considered
against the 'form book' and leaves all kinds of scenarios possible for
the final. It feels as if the fate of the teams is more in the hands of
the mathematicians than the players, although this is, of course, not
the case, but it has been necessary to drag out the spreadsheets to see
exactly who's where and what they need to do from here. There is also
the potential for some very slow batting by one side but I'll elaborate
more at the end of this World Cup with some suggestions on how some of
the dafter situations that have arisen might be prevented next time. If
you'd like to make any suggestions for that list then do
email me.
And some ramblings on West Indies v New
Zealand...
-
Did I hear some of the commentators call the NZ team the Silver Ferns? A 'Net search
reveals this is the NZ netball team.
-
I also noticed the women's kit
worn by the White Ferns is not identical with the NZ men's. While
the design seemed preferably, I did notice the ANZ bank logo was
missing. Don't they sponsor the women's team? Not necessarily a wise
commercial decision I would have thought.
-
Stafanie Taylor was very
impressive on both back foot and front. She picked her attacking
shots with great care and showed she had a great technique for
building a long innings. I look forward to seeing her play one
and I don't think that's likely to be long coming.
-
Kycia Knight seems to be
predominantly a back foot player.
-
West Indies generally looked for
the singles perhaps more efficiently than any side in this
tournament so far, and they were up against a team with the
reputation of being one of the best, if not the best, fielding side
in Mumbai.
-
Ruck's boundary fielding was
outstanding.
-
The pitch did not give the swing
previously evident in earlier matches, although some gentle swing
was still present. This did not give the kiwis as big an advantage
in winning the toss as they had hoped and is something captains in
the future matches may have to think about rather carefully when
choosing whether to bowl or bat.
-
I noticed many of the West Indies
women walked when dismissed without waiting for the umpire's
decision. I have always approved of this habit but sadly I know many
coaches encourage or even bully players into standing and waiting. I
suppose I have no quarrel with this as long as players make no sign
whatever of dissent when they get a shocker of a decision. You chose
to go with the umpire so you have to put up with the result. A
'walker' is perhaps entitled to look surprised but I would say a
'non-walker' is not.
-
On a related note, this match was
once again marred by poor umpiring. Where are the international
umpires we've had in the past?
-
I was amused by the "Come on,
ladies" heard regularly from the West Indies fielders .. Not what
you'd hear from England or Australia I suspect.
-
The commentators remarked that
Anisa Mohammed had never bowled a no ball in her career since she
bowls from the back crease rather than the popping crease. Although
I did not notice it in this match I have seen her touch the return
crease, unnoticed by the umpire.
-
Dottin's bowling was at times
within a one or two mph of Katherine Brunt. I had no idea she was
this quick.
-
Following an absolutely superb
piece of fielding resulting in a run out, I noticed NZ singles were
no longer taken if the ball was within many yards of Dottin!
-
It was good to see Haidee Tiffen
and Katrina Keenan in the management of the NZ team. Their wealth of
experience must count hugely in their team's favour.
|
|
Anisa Mohammed is Player of the Match with
31* and bowling figures of
8.3 - 3 - 13 - 1 giving an economy
rate
of 1.52 |
Stafanie Taylor 49 from 53 balls and bowling
figures of 10-1-26-2 |
One other anomaly has just crossed my
eyes in the regulations in this World Cup. For some reason it slipped my
notice that while points against the teams relegated before the Super 6s
are dropped for the later stages (and I've already remarked on the fact
that's odd in itself) the Run Rates are carried forward! Now I am no fan
of NRR as you will know, but this seems to make the inconsistencies in
these regulations even crazier!!
Also one other reputable site has
written on the poor standard of umpiring. How's this for a headline?
And yet more nonsense on the NRR
(although perfect sense from my correspondent), written before the final
round games were played.
If you want the
latest dose of NRR insanity - here it is. Consider (a) Aus score 250
from 50 overs and the West Indies score 249 from 50
overs and (b) Eng score 250 from 50 overs and NZ score 249 from 50 overs.
You might think that the WI (current NRR of 1.136) would still be ahead
of England (current NRR of 1.079) but no. WI would drop to 0.8869 and
England would drop to only 0.9285.
Here’s another one.
If Aus were to beat the WI well enough and England and
NZ were to tie then who of Eng or NZ goes through depends on the score.
Any score of 52 or less and NZ would go through on better NRR – even
though Eng started with a better NRR and the scores are tied !! You
couldn’t make it up.
<February 13>
Well now we know that West Indies have
decided not just their own fate but those of England and New Zealand
also. If you were a real cynic you might ask whether Australia 'chose'
their opponents for the final. I think there's probably about a 1%
chance that is so. Let's take the position though that those kind of
tactics were considered. You then have to decide if you wish to face
more consistent teams in NZ or England (and the choice of which would be
out of your hands) or a volatile team who you might well blow away or
who might just as readily blow you away. Not an easy choice to make!
<February 14>
I was somewhat distressed to see a quote from Catherine Fitzpatrick,
arguably the finest fast bowler the sport has seen, which included the
phrase "the focus in women's cricket shifting to Twenty20." All I can say is "Please
- No!!" Surely, if anything special has come out of this tournament, it
is that 50-over cricket is where the future should lie. We have had some
hugely exciting games, minnows beating the big guys, and fine cricket in
all the televised matches. Obviously I can't speak for the others but
surely it would be true there too. T20 may have its place, but you will
have noticed that already in men's international cricket, the number of
T20 matches played in any tour is on the decline. Some said the format
would be a 10 minute wonder, and while it has been more than that, the
enthusiasm of the initial launch is now looking to have been over blown.
The next time West Indies, and the first time Sri Lanka, tour England to
offer them only, or even mainly, T20 matches would be an insult in view of the status of those two sides at this World
Cup. There might even be those suggesting England were scared of meeting
them in the 50 over format. Still, I am sure that won't happen and those
sides would be offered games befitting their new-found status.
During this tournament I
have been preparing a note on how I would have changed the rules to try
and eliminate the idiosyncrasies the current set have thrown up, only
some of which appear earlier in this ramble. Yes - I could have listed
even more and one last summary is shown below! I will make this list live after the final match and would
very much welcome your thoughts. My main aim is to remove (or at worst
reduce) the importance of NRR for which no one I have been in
communication with so far has managed to even propose a rationale let
alone an explanation, and to increase the importance of actual match
results. These ideas, proposed and circulated to a few correspondents
long before the end of this tournament would have given rise to a
different final. Whether it would have been a more 'just' result you can debate.
From a regular contributor...
The
final dagger in the heart of the ‘Super 6 NRR’ fiasco has to be the
following.
England and the West Indies played exactly the same teams in this competition.
In the group stage:- England W2 L1 4pts NRR = 0.64
West Indies W1 L2 2 pts NRR = 0.275
In the Super 6 (ie the 3 games played in the Super 6):-
England W2 L1 4pts NRR = 1.32
West Indies W3 L0
6 pts NRR = 0.52
I would only add that you play to the rules you have but I can see his
point. As you will see later - if you're not nodding off already at this
stage - is how a simpler system, NRR being largely ignored, would have
been fairer to all sides.
Overall, having played exactly the same teams:-
England W4 L2 NRR = 0.98
West Indies W4 L2 NRR = 0.412
...
yet despite the better performance England did not make the final
and West Indies did. In other words the system did not deliver the
better team into the final. A completely discredited system.
What is more England soundly beat the West Indies.
It is utterly beyond my understanding how cricket can be run by
people that actually think this is a fair system.
I would only add that you play to the rules you have but I can see
his point. As you will see later - if you're not nodding off already at
this stage - is how a simpler system, NRR being largely ignored, would
have been fairer to all sides.
To me the success story of this tournament is how the minnows have
performed. Indeed are we fair calling any of them that any more? My
congratulations go to Sri Lanka and the West Indies for showing what
they can do and a possible (I hope probable) glimpse into the future.
<February 17>
And a final no one would have expected when starting this
tournament, or indeed after the West Indies performance in the group
stages. Before the first game was played it might have been difficult to
get any odds about the Australians reaching the final but who would be
there opponents? With India the host country there would have been quite
a few thinking they had an excellent chance and serious money could have
been made if you could have found anyone to take a bet on India going
out before the 'Super 6s'. Then Sri Lanka started beating teams who must
have taken the field thinking this was a handy warm-up game. Add to all
that England losing to Australia when it was in the palm of their hands,
and you've had probably the most unpredictable Word Cup ever, and the
girls have been at this longer than the men.
And odd thoughts on the final...
-
Good to see Perry and Hunter high 'fiveing' (or more like low 'fiveing')
the young kids after the opening ceremony. Some of those kids will
never forget that. It's a way of giving back to the sport that has
taken you to the top.
-
Australia
winning the toss has almost decided this game before it starts (and
I'm typing with only a few overs gone in the game so far). The
organisers will have to rethink this day/night business - comments
later on this.
-
Surprised to see no Holly Ferling in the team. I know exactly who I
would have dropped to make a place for her but perhaps not polite to
say. Why not play her and Perry? I don't feel this would have
unbalanced the side but presumably the Australian management did.
I'd have to agree (yet again in this competition) with Mark Butcher
on this one.
-
I like the maroon and blue cream on the WIndies players faces - very
patriotic.
-
Taylor bowling full and straight and it is so obvious that's what's
required that I can't understand why the other bowlers haven't clocked
it.
-
Typing as the match goes on - Quintyne is by far the pick of the
bowlers and the trick has been length.
-
Rachel Hynes was very undemonstrative on reaching her 50 - it seemed
she realised a bigger score was on the cards.
-
Kyshona Knight takes a fine over the shoulder catch. On the run
there's no such thing as an easy one.
And later
-
Poor umpiring again as a field change is allowed for a free hit, the
batsman not changing - a short run was also missed a little later.
-
West Indies fielding becomes some of the poorest seen in the
competition. While there are a lot of wickets to contend with the
Australians later didn't seem to have the same trouble
-
At one point two catches go down in the same over. If catches win
matches then it follows what happens when you drop them
-
One commentator said about the 'catch' that was turned down
apparently taken by an Australian slip fielder that "you have to go
with the player". This is nonsense! Players don't always know if
they have taken it on the half volley, and today, when players don't
walk but stand in spite of the fact they know they should be out, I
am sure fielders sometimes claim what they know is not a catch. I am
utterly convinced that Lanning thought she had it, and she probably
did, but umpires can no longer go by such protestations because of
the actions of a few. It is one of the sadder aspects of the modern
game. With Lanning and 95% of current players I would be happy to
accept their word being a spectator, but the umpire has to be
independently sure and when he can't be 'not out' is the right
decision.
-
Perry was quite amazing considering the ankle was always bothering
her, and the way Dottin played out a maiden showed both Perry's
prowess and Dottin's level head.
-
Aguillera's six off Osborne was brilliant and I wondered if Dottin's
was the biggest of the tournament as it bounced up the concrete
steps in the stand.
-
When Dottin went everyone except the commentators must have known
the match was over. The tail added a few runs more as a matter of
personal pride (and quite right too) but WI were never going to win
from that point.
There have been many highlights in these last few weeks and maybe I'll
pick the players who have impressed me most. I must think about it.
But meantime a quote ... " It was not an exciting game of women's cricket, it was exciting
cricket"
Jarrod Kimber. From
"A Disgrace no More"
2013 Page 3
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