The player that is of course not there who was the fulcrum of Bazzball when it started is Bairstow.
Shame he isn't playing
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The player that is of course not there who was the fulcrum of Bazzball when it started is Bairstow.
Don’t get sucked in. They’ve got other options but this regime is all in on the same type of player and only that type of player.It seems to be a way to mitigate the fact that England don't have many batsmen capable on knuckling down through tough periods (obviously a few like Stokes, Root ect can).
I might have less strong feelings towards it if the English didn't carry on like they've invented aggressive cricket.
The 2023 series really rubbed me the wrong way, the way they carried on after they lost the first test saying the "played all the cricket in the game". The cult that has been created around bazball is embarrassing
Yep winning comes first.The idea that aggressive cricket is called Bazball is part of the problem. They've patted themselves ont he back about being entertainers but at the end of the day the fans want winners!
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ECB should revive the Gentleman vs Players match concept but instead have Bazballers vs a best XI from the county system. I imagine there'd be a few players like Foakes who would love the opportunity to grind these charlatans that have robbed them of playing test cricket.Don’t get sucked in. They’ve got other options but this regime is all in on the same type of player and only that type of player.
Sibley, Foakes amongst others have been jettisoned to bring in Bazballers. Bethell is a very good white ball prospect but he’s not anywhere near a Test No.3. He’s the only reserve batsman they’ve got.
And there is the dilemma....You’d swear blind that Ben Foakes is the first keeper in history to miss a spot to a superior batsman. The bloke has had more sympathy than Africa in the mid-1980s.
And there is the dilemma....
Do you play a keeper who is excellent with the gloves but perhaps not as good as a keeper who isn't that good with the gloves but can bat better?
If it is the latter, then you have to accept that chances will be botched ....but then how long do you persist with that player, especially if the botched chances cause a lot of scoreboard damage?
I'm sure someone smarter than me can compare Bazball vs pre-Bazball stats on the test batting average and strike rate of Joe Root, and it would be a fun exercise to see the change in Ben Stokes' batting and bowling averages too.Basically it boils down to this:
- Duckett plays his cricket very fast but generally isn’t just absolutely stupid. He bats not unlike David Warner, he’s just a naturally fast scorer at the crease and his technique while not especially orthodox, is reasonably reliable.
- Crawley doesn’t score as quick but scores fast, but is also less reliable.
- Brook scores at breakneck speed and seemingly always plays that way.
- Root, Stokes and Pope will play fast if they can, but will play slow if they need to
- smith since he has come in has always played fast but he’s been exposed a bit here
The player that is of course not there who was the fulcrum of Bazzball when it started is Bairstow.
He was uninhibited and just went to town a few times in those big chases against NZ and his fast-and-loose approach was what it was all about.
I'm sure someone smarter than me can compare Bazball vs pre-Bazball stats on the test batting average and strike rate of Joe Root, and it would be a fun exercise to see the change in Ben Stokes' batting and bowling averages too.
I suspect all have improved.
There's no space for a keeper who can't bat in a modern test team. They need to be an all rounder.And there is the dilemma....
Do you play a keeper who is excellent with the gloves but perhaps not as good as a keeper who isn't that good with the gloves but can bat better?
If it is the latter, then you have to accept that chances will be botched ....but then how long do you persist with that player, especially if the botched chances cause a lot of scoreboard damage?
Gilly ****ed that good and proper for all those keepers averaging in the teensThere's no space for a keeper who can't bat in a modern test team. They need to be an all rounder.
You're competing on both facets for a place in the side.
And Woakes. Time to unleash Foakes, Stokes and Woakes to confuse us as a last resortBring back Ben Foakes
Just for Foakesy
It was a reaction to the cycle of timidity and failure that England had found themselves in. Seems to have run its course now.Bazball to me seems like a reaction to the mass appeal of t20 cricket an appealing to a new age of cricketers without attention spans or any sort of grit.
If it catches on and we start seeing 2 day tests regularly it will be bad for the format IMO.
Don't get me wrong I like t20s, just like I like ODIs and I like attacking cricket.
But attacking just for the sake of it to me is not what a test cricket is about.
There's no space for a keeper who can't bat in a modern test team. They need to be an all rounder.
You're competing on both facets for a place in the side.
And Dujon and Marsh before himGilly ****ed that good and proper for all those keepers averaging in the teens
Comparing Foakes to Smith is too early to tell.
Smith has had one great series at home vs India but other than that played the dregs of test cricket.
Pak, SL, WI. Not much stock to be put into doing well against them.
Let's see what his average is after a couple series against each of Ind, Aus, SA.
As for Bazball, surely there's no defenders of it left on here. Surely.



The 'superior batsman' still has to be a very good keeper, though.You’d swear blind that Ben Foakes is the first keeper in history to miss a spot to a superior batsman. The bloke has had more sympathy than Africa in the mid-1980s.
Gilly ****ed that good and proper for all those keepers averaging in the teens
The 'superior batsman' still has to be a very good keeper, though.
Has picking a "batsman who can keep" ever really worked in Test cricket?
Gilly was brought into the Aus XI as a batsman who could keep, displacing a keeper who could bat.AB de Villiers averaged 60 as a batsman who could keep and didn’t really impact on the quality of their output as a side.