by am Bays » Mon Jan 29, 2024 6:53 am
by mighty_tiger_79 » Mon Jan 29, 2024 9:28 am
by woodublieve12 » Mon Jan 29, 2024 10:22 am
mighty_tiger_79 wrote:Just heard on SEN that Tim Paine wasn't a fan of past players cheering for the Windies.
I'm fairly sure the cheering for the Windies is more based on how good it is to see some competitive cricket and how hopeful we all are that this may be the start of a new era for Windies cricket.
Cricket had missed a competitive Windies team in recent years.
by rd » Mon Jan 29, 2024 10:45 am
woodublieve12 wrote:mighty_tiger_79 wrote:Just heard on SEN that Tim Paine wasn't a fan of past players cheering for the Windies.
I'm fairly sure the cheering for the Windies is more based on how good it is to see some competitive cricket and how hopeful we all are that this may be the start of a new era for Windies cricket.
Cricket had missed a competitive Windies team in recent years.
i love Australia. But i was cheering for the Windies. How could you not? They responded after one of the worst loses, played with incredible confidence, very likable players and sheer t
oughness in the end with one of the best displays of grit in cricket in some time...
Great for cricket
by dedja » Mon Jan 29, 2024 10:46 am
by dedja » Mon Jan 29, 2024 10:47 am
rd wrote:woodublieve12 wrote:mighty_tiger_79 wrote:Just heard on SEN that Tim Paine wasn't a fan of past players cheering for the Windies.
I'm fairly sure the cheering for the Windies is more based on how good it is to see some competitive cricket and how hopeful we all are that this may be the start of a new era for Windies cricket.
Cricket had missed a competitive Windies team in recent years.
i love Australia. But i was cheering for the Windies. How could you not? They responded after one of the worst loses, played with incredible confidence, very likable players and sheer t
oughness in the end with one of the best displays of grit in cricket in some time...
Great for cricket
It seems plenty of people were cheering for the Windies this weekend in view of the Aust Day comments made by members of the Aust Test team. I'm hearing the word "karma" in a lot of conversations today and it seems that the popularity of the Aust Test team may have returned to the levels seen immediately after the South African Sandpaper Gate scandal.
by woodublieve12 » Mon Jan 29, 2024 10:48 am
rd wrote:woodublieve12 wrote:mighty_tiger_79 wrote:Just heard on SEN that Tim Paine wasn't a fan of past players cheering for the Windies.
I'm fairly sure the cheering for the Windies is more based on how good it is to see some competitive cricket and how hopeful we all are that this may be the start of a new era for Windies cricket.
Cricket had missed a competitive Windies team in recent years.
i love Australia. But i was cheering for the Windies. How could you not? They responded after one of the worst loses, played with incredible confidence, very likable players and sheer t
oughness in the end with one of the best displays of grit in cricket in some time...
Great for cricket
It seems plenty of people were cheering for the Windies this weekend in view of the Aust Day comments made by members of the Aust Test team. I'm hearing the word "karma" in a lot of conversations today and it seems that the popularity of the Aust Test team may have returned to the levels seen immediately after the South African Sandpaper Gate scandal.
by mighty_tiger_79 » Mon Jan 29, 2024 11:31 am
dedja wrote:They captured the spirit of the great 60-61 Windies tour here.
I can’t remember so much love for an opposition team beating Australia in Australia … ever.
What does that say to us?
by Trader » Mon Jan 29, 2024 11:41 am
by woodublieve12 » Mon Jan 29, 2024 11:47 am
Trader wrote:I wasn't mad with Pat's comments.
I was upset with Cricket Australia issuing an instruction to delete all references to Australia Day.
Listening to the commentators say 'this public holiday Friday', and phrases like that, rather than Australia Day, irked me.
People can support changing the date, while still acknowledging that the current date is Jan 26th.
If Cricket Australia doesn't want to have anything to do with Australia Day, then they shouldn't schedule cricket on Jan 26th.
by Dinglinga75 » Mon Jan 29, 2024 12:07 pm
by rd » Mon Jan 29, 2024 12:51 pm
woodublieve12 wrote:Trader wrote:I wasn't mad with Pat's comments.
I was upset with Cricket Australia issuing an instruction to delete all references to Australia Day.
Listening to the commentators say 'this public holiday Friday', and phrases like that, rather than Australia Day, irked me.
People can support changing the date, while still acknowledging that the current date is Jan 26th.
If Cricket Australia doesn't want to have anything to do with Australia Day, then they shouldn't schedule cricket on Jan 26th.
Agreed. But has to work the other way too. Understanding why some people want the date changed.
Tolerance on both sides
by mal » Mon Jan 29, 2024 3:29 pm
by Booney » Mon Jan 29, 2024 3:37 pm
mighty_tiger_79 wrote:dedja wrote:They captured the spirit of the great 60-61 Windies tour here.
I can’t remember so much love for an opposition team beating Australia in Australia … ever.
What does that say to us?
A ) we dont love our test team as much as we have previously for various reasons
B ) we actually enjoy seeing a contest. I enjoyed watching Pakistan be competitive in parts during that series.
C ) I think we all hope that the Windies can build from this win and be competitive in test crickrt
by MW » Mon Jan 29, 2024 3:40 pm
by Booney » Mon Jan 29, 2024 3:43 pm
by amber_fluid » Mon Jan 29, 2024 3:45 pm
MW wrote:The only reason I enjoyed the Aussies losing was to wake them up. A little bit of luck and we lose both the series this summer.
Is it fatigue? Have they taken the oppo easy? Maybe a little of both.
by Booney » Mon Jan 29, 2024 3:49 pm
The Dark Knight wrote:https://www.espncricinfo.com/story/stats-wi-s-first-test-win-in-australia-since-1997-1418727
1- Australia's eight-run defeat against West Indies was their first in a day-night Test match. Australia won each of their previous 11 day-night Test matches. In contrast, this was West Indies' first-ever win in a day-night Test match, having lost all their previous four games.
2003- West Indies' last win against Australia in Test cricket - by three wickets at St John's. West Indies played 20 Tests against Australia in the previous 20 years, losing in 16 while another four ended in a draw.
It is also the first win for West Indies in Australia since the ten-wicket win in Perth in February 1997. West Indies lost 15 of the 17 Tests they played in Australia between the two wins.
8- West Indies' win margin in Brisbane is their second narrowest by runs in men's Tests. They defeated Australia by one run in 1993 at the Adelaide Oval while defending a target of 186. Six of the twelve men's Tests to be decided by less than ten runs have come against Australia.
10- Test defeats for Australia at the Gabba out of the 66 they played. Sunday's defeat was their second in four matches at the venue since 2021, where they did not lose one in the 31 played between 1989 and 2020.
1- Previous instance of Australia losing a Test match after declaring in an innings at home. Australia declared their first innings on 395 for 8 despite being 54 behind West Indies in the 1988 Perth Test but lost by 169. Overall, this was only the fifth instance of Australia losing a Test match where they declared in one of their innings.
5- Players, including Shamar Joseph, with a seven-wicket haul for West Indies against Australia in Test cricket. Three of the previous seven-fors by the West Indies bowlers came in Australia only.
Joseph is also the first visiting bowler with a seven-plus wicket haul in Australia since Matthew Hoggard's 7 for 109 in 2006 at the Adelaide Oval.
2- Players with five-wicket hauls in their first two Test matches for West Indies. Before Joseph, only Fidel Edwards accomplished this feat, with five-fors against Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe in 2003.
2- Bowlers with better figures for West Indies in the fourth innings than Joseph's 7 for 68 in Brisbane. Curtley Ambrose in 1990 and Roston Chase in 2019 bagged eight-wicket hauls - against England in Bridgetown.
11.5- Overs bowled by Shamar in Australia's second innings. These are the fewest overs bowled by a player in a Test innings for West Indies while picking up seven or more wickets.
216- Fourth-innings target that Australia failed to chase at the Gabba is the lowest for them at home in the last 25 years. The previous instance of Australia losing at home chasing a lower target was 175 against England at the MCG in 1998.
9- Batters, including Steven Smith at the Gabba, to carry their bat in the fourth innings of a Test match. Smith is also the first opener to carry the bat in the fourth innings since Dean Elgar against India in 2018. The previous Australian to carry the bat was David Warner against New Zealand in 2011, also in an unsuccessful chase in Hobart. Smith also became the first opener to carry his bat in Tests since Tom Latham against Sri Lanka in December 2018.
3- Travis Head is the third to bag a king's pair in men's Tests for Australia, after Adam Gilchrist against India at the Eden Gardens in 2001 and Ryan Harris against England at the Adelaide Oval in 2010.
by dedja » Mon Jan 29, 2024 4:05 pm
by whufc » Mon Jan 29, 2024 4:33 pm
Booney wrote:Our bowling line up wins us matches, our batting is suspect all the way through the order and come the last Test of a 5 Test summer where the bowlers played all the matches and bowled on each the first 3 days in a stinking Brisbane heat wave were flat when we needed to roll them in the second dig.
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