Bryson Carse makes his Test debut, in the revolving door that is the England seam bowling department post Jimmy and Broady.
They're trying so hard to make this happen aren't they. His recent FC record is....let's be polite and say it isn't encouraging. But, yknow. He has attributes
Rewind 5 months and delete cares and add Atkinson and I could be reading similar posts on the same thread
I hope he continues to do it but I can see this approach to fast bowling absolutely melting down when a serious batting lineup gets its mitts on England. Pakistan should be rubbing their hands frankly. Alas they're a rabble
Pakistan, having won the toss, elected to bat and on a docile pitch, have made England's attack look somewhat ordinary. A legside strangle from Atkinson is all we have to show for our efforts. The mystery is why Pope persisted with Bashir (6-0-42-0) but only threw the ball to our senior (and better) spinner, Leach, for a token over at the end of the session.
Shan Masood can't have been too far away from qualifying for England at one point. He was born in Kuwait but went to Stamford School (as did MJK Smith, Josh Hull, Joey Evison and Zak Chappell), then studied economics at Durham University after which he undertook a long distance course in Management and Sports Sciences at Loughborough University. More recently, he captained Yorkshire to promotion.
Bryson Carse makes his Test debut, in the revolving door that is the England seam bowling department post Jimmy and Broady.
They're trying so hard to make this happen aren't they. His recent FC record is....let's be polite and say it isn't encouraging. But, yknow. He has attributes
Rewind 5 months and delete cares and add Atkinson and I could be reading similar posts on the same thread
I hope he continues to do it but I can see this approach to fast bowling absolutely melting down when a serious batting lineup gets its mitts on England. Pakistan should be rubbing their hands frankly. Alas they're a rabble
England's weak and underprepared bowling getting carted all over Multan .. the pacemen moving from chilly Bristol to the Multan oven are really suffering
Obviously England not doing great but this pitch is shockingly flat. Think it’s one of those games you can only judge after both teams have batted a bit. Has draw written all over it for me
Obviously England not doing great but this pitch is shockingly flat. Think it’s one of those games you can only judge after both teams have batted a bit. Has draw written all over it for me
I'm sure England will do their best to find different ways to be all out for under 300. Top edging their spinner first ball received or being stumped walking down the wicket to a wide one.
Obviously England not doing great but this pitch is shockingly flat. Think it’s one of those games you can only judge after both teams have batted a bit. Has draw written all over it for me
I'm sure England will do their best to find different ways to be all out for under 300. Top edging their spinner first ball received or being stumped walking down the wicket to a wide one.
My money is on an Ollie Pope reverse sweep in his first over
Obviously England not doing great but this pitch is shockingly flat. Think it’s one of those games you can only judge after both teams have batted a bit. Has draw written all over it for me
I know it's fairly common to see pitches that are like a road on the sub-continent but what exactly do they get out of preparing such pitches?
Why not prepare a pitch that is more likely to see a result?
Although i wouldn't be surprised if we go and do what Golfie posted above though.
England's weak and underprepared bowling getting carted all over Multan .. the pacemen moving from chilly Bristol to the Multan oven are really suffering
You could have the peak West Indies bowling attack out there and it would make little difference. It's like playing on the M25
Obviously England not doing great but this pitch is shockingly flat. Think it’s one of those games you can only judge after both teams have batted a bit. Has draw written all over it for me
I know it's fairly common to see pitches that are like a road on the sub-continent but what exactly do they get out of preparing such pitches?
Why not prepare a pitch that is more likely to see a result?
Although i wouldn't be surprised if we go and do what Golfie posted above though.
My guess is you're more likely to get 4/5 days play so you can sell a few more tickets and you can tell your broadcasters they're getting more bang for your buck. The reality is you get a less good spectacle.
I also think Golfie could be right so another theory with the flat pitch is that England will throw wickets away anyway, why not create a pitch that's easy for your batters to score on? Must massively increase their chances of winning.
You'd have hoped it would be reverse swinging a bit by now. Not sure this England attack has those skills though
if only they had a legendary seam bowler on their coaching staff they could turn to for advice
When he's not playing golf
Exactly. He was playing in the Alfred Dunhill Tournamount up until Saturday. Don't think he made it through to Sunday but in any case I doubt he's been able to give the bowlers much input before this Test.
Obviously England not doing great but this pitch is shockingly flat. Think it’s one of those games you can only judge after both teams have batted a bit. Has draw written all over it for me
I know it's fairly common to see pitches that are like a road on the sub-continent but what exactly do they get out of preparing such pitches?
Why not prepare a pitch that is more likely to see a result?
Although i wouldn't be surprised if we go and do what Golfie posted above though.
My guess is you're more likely to get 4/5 days play so you can sell a few more tickets and you can tell your broadcasters they're getting more bang for your buck. The reality is you get a less good spectacle.
I also think Golfie could be right so another theory with the flat pitch is that England will throw wickets away anyway, why not create a pitch that's easy for your batters to score on? Must massively increase their chances of winning.
Yeah, I think that's probably the thinking - if you know the opposition always play aggressively regardless of the situation, prepare a pitch the rewards patience and slow steady progress, then watch the opposition miss out on the extra scoring opportunities because they still want to score at 5 an over.
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Why not prepare a pitch that is more likely to see a result?
Although i wouldn't be surprised if we go and do what Golfie posted above though.
246-1 (55)
I also think Golfie could be right so another theory with the flat pitch is that England will throw wickets away anyway, why not create a pitch that's easy for your batters to score on? Must massively increase their chances of winning.
263-3