Im now 26 and you guessed it, to everyone i know im still BennY.

by whufc » Thu Jul 16, 2009 8:29 pm
by dedja » Thu Jul 16, 2009 8:56 pm
whufc wrote:I kind of know how RickY feels. Having the name Ben and not been gifted with great height, i was always little Benny. Being involved in many different sporting clubs as a youngster everyone knew me as Benny (to the point if someone called me Ben / Benjamin i wouldn't react)
Im now 26 and you guessed it, to everyone i know im still BennY.
by dedja » Thu Jul 16, 2009 9:06 pm
Adelaide Hawk wrote:Ponting, as others have said, a world class batsman, possibly the best Australian batsman I've seen. I've always struggled with the Ponting v Greg Chappell argument, Ponting's record slightly superior but G.Chappell played at a time when the depth of world bowling was the best ever. Ponting is certainly the best puller of the ball forward of square I have seen. Backward of square he tends to loft the ball a little but still scores plenty of runs there.
As a captain, he's okay at setting fields for bowlers and against certain batsmen, but his use of bowler is poor. IMHO, he fails repeatedly at using the correct bowler for a given situation. He also lacks the ability for the instinctive that Taylor and I.Chappell had. His gambles appear to be based more on hunches than educated assessment. Tactically brittle, as seen by his decision to send England into bat in the 2nd Test of the 2005 Ashes. With McGrath not playing, Australia 1-0 in the series, I could never imagine previous Aussie leaders making that choice.
In his defence, I'd have to say no Australian captain in the history of the game has received such poor treatment by the media which possibly accounts for his demeanour. Some articles written about him by idiots like Roebuck were disgraceful.
by MAY-Z » Fri Jul 17, 2009 2:17 pm
dedja wrote:Adelaide Hawk wrote:Ponting, as others have said, a world class batsman, possibly the best Australian batsman I've seen. I've always struggled with the Ponting v Greg Chappell argument, Ponting's record slightly superior but G.Chappell played at a time when the depth of world bowling was the best ever. Ponting is certainly the best puller of the ball forward of square I have seen. Backward of square he tends to loft the ball a little but still scores plenty of runs there.
As a captain, he's okay at setting fields for bowlers and against certain batsmen, but his use of bowler is poor. IMHO, he fails repeatedly at using the correct bowler for a given situation. He also lacks the ability for the instinctive that Taylor and I.Chappell had. His gambles appear to be based more on hunches than educated assessment. Tactically brittle, as seen by his decision to send England into bat in the 2nd Test of the 2005 Ashes. With McGrath not playing, Australia 1-0 in the series, I could never imagine previous Aussie leaders making that choice.
In his defence, I'd have to say no Australian captain in the history of the game has received such poor treatment by the media which possibly accounts for his demeanour. Some articles written about him by idiots like Roebuck were disgraceful.
That's a pretty fair assessment AH ... one extra thing I think he brings to the table as captain is the ability to lift the team by his performances and the respect he has amongst the players. On the other side, I've mentioned before that maybe he's too close to some players which affects his judgement at times.
by rogernumber10 » Fri Jul 17, 2009 5:14 pm
Adelaide Hawk wrote:In his defence, I'd have to say no Australian captain in the history of the game has received such poor treatment by the media which possibly accounts for his demeanour. Some articles written about him by idiots like Roebuck were disgraceful.
by Adelaide Hawk » Fri Jul 17, 2009 5:32 pm
MAY-Z wrote:an interesting book to read is david fultons book about ashes captains from the last 30 years or so. the poorest captains in terms of their captaincy ability are those who lead via their perfomances (ie ponting, gooch etc). an interesting quote by michael vaughan was that he was happy to lose around 15% of his form because he felt he could lift every other member of the team by 10% through man-management and tactical abilitly. without looking it up i think trescothick, strauss, pitersen, bell, flintoff, harmison, jones, hoggard etc alll performed better when vaughan was captain than the rest of their career
by Dogwatcher » Fri Jul 17, 2009 10:49 pm
rogernumber10 wrote:Adelaide Hawk wrote:In his defence, I'd have to say no Australian captain in the history of the game has received such poor treatment by the media which possibly accounts for his demeanour. Some articles written about him by idiots like Roebuck were disgraceful.
Agreed. When Roebuck then admitted a couple of days later he only wrote the 'sack Ricky' story to stir the pot, and didn't actually believe it, that was a total disgrace.
by gadj1976 » Fri Jul 17, 2009 11:01 pm
rogernumber10 wrote:Adelaide Hawk wrote:In his defence, I'd have to say no Australian captain in the history of the game has received such poor treatment by the media which possibly accounts for his demeanour. Some articles written about him by idiots like Roebuck were disgraceful.
Agreed. When Roebuck then admitted a couple of days later he only wrote the 'sack Ricky' story to stir the pot, and didn't actually believe it, that was a total disgrace.
by spell_check » Sat Jul 18, 2009 3:02 am
by Gozu » Sat Jul 18, 2009 3:21 am
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