29thMay
Commentators are the best!
My favorite is from Beefy slating the filed settings!
Have they got the best job in the world or what?!
Our nation’s cricketing heroes hidden in the county game
29thMay
My favorite is from Beefy slating the filed settings!
Have they got the best job in the world or what?!
6thMay
Flintoff Back in the Runs!
It’s not a “Hold the Press” situation by any means, but considering that he couldn’t hit a cows behind with a banjo in the World Cup, his 66 form 84 balls for Lancashire against Northants may be just what the doctor ordered.
Is this the first step in Flintoff’s road to form?
Is this a principle often overlooked when thinking about the game of cricket?
Cricket is a game of individual performances combined into a “team” as it is very rare that more than 3 people are included in any one phase of play, out of a team of 11. Take the rare example of a run out:
IF THE BALL HITS THE STUMPS DIRECTLY THEN THERE HAS ONLY BEEN A MAXIMUM OF 2 PLAYERS PLAYING AT THIS STAGE
So how can a game that has such a limited amount of team interaction depend on team awareness and the need for selfless team play and mentality?
In the past this was never a problem. There was an England Cricket Team who would play every facet of the game and remain a united bond and team. Nobody was bigger than the team; everyone was humbled by the opportunity for playing for their Country. Nothing was more important! I believe that this is where the Australian Cricket team is at right now, and to a lesser extent, Sri Lanka (the 2 World Cup Finalists).
This has been something that I feel, has been chipped away at, regularly for a number of reasons in England.

I believe it is a combination of all the above, that leads to the degradation of the team spirit that is absolutely necessary, for a unit of players that spend so long together, to want to perform for each other, toward one unified goal. we had this in 2005, but i fear we have never been further away from this as we are now.
3rdMay

VAUGHAN SHOWING PROMISE as he gets some runs for Yorkshire. The usual critics were asking for Vaughan’s head as England’s one day captain. As the captain he has to shoulder some of the responsibility for the poor performances, but believe it or not he was one of our best performers with the bat!
He got 72 before getting run out in his first innings and was alarmingly retired hurt in the second innings with a damaged finger.
Lets hope cricket’s equivalent to footbll’s Michael Owen (Mr Glass) is fit enough for the up coming tests.
My verdict is that a pack of wild horses couldn’t drag him away from the up coming series with the West Indies on home soil. He was he missing link in the Ashes and I believe his influence both on and off the field will lead us to a series victory over new captain, Ramnaresh Sarwan’s West Indies side.