Powered By Blogger
Showing posts with label Pakistan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pakistan. Show all posts

Tuesday, 12 December 2017

Eden Park - results and stats. Previewing Day/Night Test 22 March 2017.

I have taken the liberty of reviewing the previous 10 tests at The Garden.  One thing to note - 8 of 10 tests were low scoring affairs.  The 10th was the last when BMac lashed to all parts.

I found this hard to fathom as Eden Park has long had a reputation for being boundary friendly, but not necessarily so.

In those last 10 tests we have had 5 wins, 2 draws and 3 losses, not a bad record all round.  Below are the stat's (Blackcap players only)

Zimbabwe 1998 NZ Win by Innings and 13 runs.

Horne  157  Astle  114

Doull  two 4 fors.


South Africa - 1999- Drawn

Horne 93




Australia 2000  -  NZ Loss by 62 runs

Vettori  7- 87





Pakistan - 2001 - NZ Loss by 299 runs

Martin and Tuffey 4 fors.



  England - 2002 - NZ 78 Run Win

Tuffey  6 for 54






South Africa - 2004  -  NZ 9 wicket win.

Martin 11 wickets - 180

Styris  170

Cairns  158

Oram 90


Australia  -  2005  -  NZ 9 Wicket loss

Franklin 6 - 119


West Indies  2006 - NZ 27 run win.

Styris  103*
Bond 5 - 69

England - 2013 - Drawn

Fulton 136 and 110 (nice!!)
Williamson 91 and 4 for 44.

Boult  6-68


India  -  2014 -  NZ win by 40 runs.

Williamson  113
McCullum - 224

Wagner 4 for and 4 for (8 Wickets)


So given those figures, it appears that results are hard to come by for visiting teams.  2 out of 10 seem a turn out of the blue as high scoring and result driven.  With that in mind it is fair to say despite the advent of day/night cricket it's going to be a bit dicey for both teams anyway.  Essentially it's a clean slate with which both teams will have to feel their way.  Unless two or three batsmen use T20 form to take advantage of the awkward boundary positions.

And a footnote - between 2006 and 2014 (inclusive) there have been only 3 tests (2006, 2013 and 2014)

The Day/Night Test stats.


2018

England versus Blackcaps.

Won by NZ in an innings and 49 runs.

Williamson 102
Nichols  145
Boult 6 for 32 and 3 for 67 (9 for)
Southee  4 for 25.

Monday, 11 December 2017

ODI's in New Zealand 2017/18 and the Kane/Ross battle

Starting soon are the first of 13 ODI's on our shores.  And inside those ODI's is the pecking order for our 26 ODI 100 getters.

Ross has had 179 innings for his 17 x 100's
Kane has had 111 innings for 9 x 100's

Be nice to see Ross break 20 x 100 and Kane to increase his tally.

Yes will be a great summer.




First up are the Windies following their test series. If their form in the longer form is anything to go by it's gonna be a tough ride for them.  The team is young but it's fair to say their short form records are different and will mean they have a chance.



Next cab off the ramp is the ever competitive Pakistan.  They land on our shores in January with recent ODI form.  And you can always count on Pakistan to rattle the cages.

Will be a tough series (5 ODI's) for Blackcaps but one we should win.

If they are in your city, go and watch them.


England in March - 5 ODI's.  Leading up to the tests are 5 ODI's.  Both teams have played T20 prior to these matches so should be in cracking form.

Time for Blackcaps supporters to deck out in Black (or Beige) to drown out the Balmy Army.





So what do we want to happen in these ODI's?  If there are needs to blood someone then the Windies matches are good. Fair to say form players in top tier be given all the backing they deserve.

Sunday, 1 October 2017

New Zealand cricket 2017/18 - international and domestic.

Yeah I know, it's almost upon us, well the domestic stuff is.  Remembering last seasons winners:

Plunket Shield - Canterbury
Ford Trophy - Canterbury
Super Smash - Wellington Firebirds.

Fair to say it's going to be a funny season, not funny as in Hahaha funny - no "the format and draws" funny.  And to confuse things even further, the International fixtures have the Blackcaps playing India away in October/November, West Indies in December/January, Pakistan for ODI's in January, a T20 tri series in Australia and back to home versus England.

The staggering thing for the coming series, 4 tests (WI and Eng 2 each) and 16 ODI's (not to mention 12 or so T20's) which sort of means that Blackcaps are out of domestic cricket for most of the season, maybe only playing domestic stuff after England.

It is good though we have plenty cricket, International and Domestic.  I'm wondering why former powerhouse in International cricket is once again relegated to December.  The West Indies need good cricket in good cricketing conditions and a little warmer in the summer sun.  And Pakistan seem to be perennially fixed with the shorter form of the game here in January.

The internationals pretty much take care of themselves. So what of the next level down??



Starting with the premier trophy - The Plunket Shield.  Starts on 23 October and plays through to 24th November and resumes on March 4th and goes through to 5th April 2018.  I seem to recall some marquee long serving stalwarts retired at end of last 2016/17 season and with a huge international schedule, it's important going ahead to cater for injuries and cover, so plenty for the domestic boys  to look forward to.

The Ford Trophy (3rd December to 24th February) is enticing this season (and Supersmash 13th  December  to 14th January 2018) so a must viewing that domestic line up.  Be good for selectors too to bring in fostered talent and give them a chance to shine (no pressure).

My biggest disappointment is that lack of a 3rd test?  If we can share with other teams then why not here?? And how did the Day/Night test impact on the draw for those tests??


Roll on Team Blackcaps, will be with you (and my Central Stags) all the way!!




Monday, 28 December 2015

ODI - 10 wicket wins - stats.

There have been 48 10 wicket wins in all ODI's since 1970's.  The only two nations not to score a victory by that means are Bangladesh and Zimbabwe.  All other nations are represented.  Here they are by order with greatest exponent of that win format last.

1  Kenya

4  Australia
    Pakistan

5  India
    Sri Lanka
    England

6  South Africa

8  New Zealand  (1981 India, 2007 Australia, Bangladesh, England, 2011 Kenya, 2012 Zimbabwe, 2015 Zimbabwe and Sri Lanka)


10  West Indies

Thursday, 4 June 2015

Tale of the Tape - Test cricket series results from May 2013 to June 2015 inclusive.

Just a little exercise in boredom. Results tabulated in Latest Test Ranking Order.  These results cover two years from May 2013 to June 2015 inclusive.

South Africa
Played 6  Won 4 Lost 1 Drawn 1

Australia
Played 5  Won 3 Lost 2

India
Played 5  Won 1 Lost 4

New Zealand
Played 7  Won 3, Lost 1, Drawn 3.

England
Played 6  Won 3 Lost 2  Drawn 1

Pakistan
Played 7  Won 2  Lost 1  Drawn 4

Sri Lanka
Played 6  Won 3  Lost 2  Drawn 1

West Indies
Played 6  Won 1  Lost 4  Drawn 1

Just goes to show the current ranking format is shit!!  India ahead of NZ, England, Pakistan and Sri Lanka??

Editted to Add:

If one was to apportion points for series results (3 for series win, 1 for series draw) and individual test results (2 for Test win, 1 for Test draw) for the past two years as quoted above this is how the teams would stack up in order:


Series Points Individual Tests Points Total for Ranking
New Zealand 12 23 35
Australia 9 22 31
England 10 19 29
South Africa 13 14 27
Pakistan 10 16 26
Sri Lanka 10 10 20
West Indies 4 11 15
India 3 11 14








Wednesday, 11 March 2015

Digesting the finalists - Cricket World Cup 2015

It's fast drawing on finals times and so far the table looks set in stone.  Well almost!  Pool B top four is not clear cut.  Windies will beat UAE in their final match and end up on 6 point, same as Ireland and Pakistan.Temporarily they will fill 4th spot on NRR until the Ireland and Pakistan match is played.  And here is the rub of the green.  If Pakistan beat Ireland and Irelands NRR worsens, the Windies go through (as they will improve their NRR vs UAE one suspects.)  So the likely Pool matchups are this after some crystal ball gazing and interpretations:

Pool A
New Zealand Should end on 12 points but could be on 10 - 1st
Australia  Should beat Scotland and progress to 9 points - 2nd
Sri Lanka who will end on 8 points - 3rd or 4th
Bangladesh - now here's the rub of the green, if they beat New Zealand then they move into 3rd on 9 points behind Australia on NRR. Probably 4th.

Pool B
India - Should beat Zimbabwe and top the group. 1st
South Africa should beat UAE and finish 2nd on 8 points
Pakistan should conquer Ireland and end up 3rd on 8 points and weaker NRR than SA
West Indies should knock Ireland out on NRR which is strange as Ireland beat West Indies in Pool play and probably have a stronger case to go through.

So Quarterfinals matchups.

New Zealand vs West Indies  New Zealand are the form team with India in this Cup, but against a resurgent West Indies will have to be on their A game.  The Windies does have some class, but across the board they appear a little fragile.  Win Rating NZ 80% WI 20%

Australia vs Pakistan - On paper the Australians should prove too strong but what is well known, given a chance to upset, Pakistan will and they have the firepower to do so, as long as their top order fires and helps the team cause.  Win Rating  Aus 65%  Pakistan 35%

India vs Bangladesh - really, no contest and this game will serve as a warning to all other teams in the finals.  Win Rating  India 100%  Bangladesh 0%

South Africa vs Sri Lanka  The Big Game!!  These two sides are excitement machines and it would be a shame one doesn't make it to semis or final.  So where will a win come from.  Both have formidable batting lineups and a strong bowling cadre.  The key is how Malinga goes.  If he doesn't take wickets then South Africa are ahead on points.  Win Rating  SA 55%  SL 45%

Tuesday, 6 January 2015

All eyes on the prize

With a little under 5 weeks to go all eyes in the cricketing world are switching to Australia and New Zealand.  No not the SLvNZ and AusvInd test series, the domestic cricket.  How so??

A while back (maybe a  week or so) an Indian on my twitter feed was ruing the state of his team and was not looking forward to the world cup as the pitches would favour the two local teams and countries that play on similar surfaces.  This was also echoed by a Pakistani tweep.  Australia they're not too worried about as pitches tend to favour runs scoring with plenty of bounce and true lines.  But New Zealand pitches have a reputation of being green decks with plenty for the bowlers and the batsmen have to really dig in to score runs  At that time I told both that they had nothing to worry about as our domestic pitches are roads now and runscoring is not an issue.

And that seems to be the truth.  Saxton Oval is the only CWC pitch to be used thus far in Ford Trophy and a highscoring game, and Hagley had a test that produced plenty of runs. McLean Park is historically a road, so that leaves Eden Park and Westpac Stadium (drop ins) and University Oval and Seddon Park (test venues).  I think it's fair to say the drop ins are generally conducive to run getting so there should be no fears there.  Of all the venues, the unknown quantity will be University Oval and Seddon Park.

I'd say all teams coming here shall be greeted by hard dry pitches with runs in them (as a hot dry summer goes on).  And should New Zealand progress to finals stage at MCG having played on those decks should stand them in good stead in Aussie.

Thursday, 6 November 2014

Dare to Dream - Blackcaps vs Pakistan

Quite literally, the Blackcaps are about to launch themselves into a new era of cricket.  Yes, so Pakistan beat Australia in a recently completed series and in so doing leapfrogged England, Sri Lanka and India to sit 3rd on the Test rankings.  Yes the wins were seemingly comprehensive.  Yes Pakistan seemed to have resolved their off field issues.  Yes Pakistan are very strong at the moment.  Yes we should expect our Blackcaps to wilt under the pressure of playing that 3rd ranked test team.

However!!

The Blackcaps in the past year or so have stood up as a test outfit.  No longer easy beats on the test floor and willing to mix it with the best of teams.  Their form is good, all players that have driven that success will be available AND should any fail, there is adequate backup.  Strong indeed!

And here's the rub.  Pakistan will go into this series with us on a high.  They will be confident, and
seeing it's only us on their "turf" some may say over confident.  And that could be their downfall.  I think our bowlers as a whole are far better now than the outfit Aussie put out on the field.  The quicks are performing and with Craig in good nick, and Sodhi performing well in the recent A game we stand to be a smarter outfit on the field than most test playing nations.  And therein lies the key to our success.  Australia failed to take wickets.  We can and will.  I think the Pakistani batsmen that succeeded recently won't be given the luxuries afforded them then.

This will be a very tight series no doubt about it.  Pakistan will not whitewash us, nor we them.  In the end it will be down to who best capitalises on the opportunities afforded them.

And here is a tasty morsel the Blackcaps can savour.  It's possible that if they win the series, they'll jump over India on the rankings!!


Wednesday, 2 July 2014

The ICC World Test rankings - my view

Ok it's fair to say the rankings don't (and probably never will) reflect the current status of Test Cricket.  As with all systems, there are either inherent calculation flaws or teams swing up and down with impunity.  They are also weighted to some degree by who plays whom and how often.  Take for example the West Indies, they do play Zimbabwe and Bangladesh a lot and as a result their current ranking has them down the ladder.

Is there a fairer way of doing the rankings?  If you go to the ICC World Rankings you'll see that they have a rather good way of determining placings on the table, but could it be better?  I think personally they need to cover more series results and not governed by years but rather say the last ten series results.  That way we see teams playing between 5 and 7 other teams over the period and it also reflects form loss and recovery over a period of playing time.

I am in the process of designing a rankings system based on the last ten test match series.  So far I haven't done any weighting (scoring points based on where opponents are on the ranking) but with the work today I have found some intriguing results.  Below is the table as it stands according to my ranking calculations.  Of course this doesn't factor in 4 or 5 test match series and actually gives weight to the fact all series should be of 3 test matches regardless so all rankings have merit (even the current system):

Based on Last 10 Series
South Africa Points given Total Played Points Awarded
Away Series Win 8 3 24
Home Series Win 7 4 28
Away Series Drawn 6 1 6
Home Series Drawn 5 1 5
Away Matches Won 4 5 20
Home Matches Won 3 10 30
Away Matches Drawn 2 5 10
Home Matches Drawn 1 1 1
124 Total for Ranking
Australia Points given Total Played Points Awarded
Away Series Win 8 3 24
Home Series Win 7 3 21
Away Series Drawn 6 1 6
Home Series Drawn 5 1 5
Away Matches Won 4 5 20
Home Matches Won 3 13 39
Away Matches Drawn 2 3 6
Home Matches Drawn 1 0 0
121 Total for Ranking
Pakistan Points given Total Played Points Awarded
Away Series Win 8 2 16
Home Series Win 7 2 14
Away Series Drawn 6 2 12
Home Series Drawn 5 2 10
Away Matches Won 4 5 20
Home Matches Won 3 6 18
Away Matches Drawn 2 2 4
Home Matches Drawn 1 3 3
97 Total for Ranking
Sri Lanka Points given Total Played Points Awarded
Away Series Win 8 2 16
Home Series Win 7 2 14
Away Series Drawn 6 1 6
Home Series Drawn 5 2 10
Away Matches Won 4 4 16
Home Matches Won 3 4 12
Away Matches Drawn 2 5 10
Home Matches Drawn 1 3 3
87 Total for Ranking
England Points given Total Played Points Awarded
Away Series Win 8 1 8
Home Series Win 7 3 21
Away Series Drawn 6 2 12
Home Series Drawn 5 0 0
Away Matches Won 4 3 12
Home Matches Won 3 7 21
Away Matches Drawn 2 4 8
Home Matches Drawn 1 4 4
86 Total for Ranking
India Points given Total Played Points Awarded
Away Series Win 8 1 8
Home Series Win 7 4 28
Away Series Drawn 6 0 0
Home Series Drawn 5 0 0
Away Matches Won 4 1 4
Home Matches Won 3 11 33
Away Matches Drawn 2 4 8
Home Matches Drawn 1 2 2
83 Total for Ranking
West Indies Points given Total Played Points Awarded
Away Series Win 8 3 24
Home Series Win 7 2 14
Away Series Drawn 6 0 0
Home Series Drawn 5 0 0
Away Matches Won 4 3 12
Home Matches Won 3 5 15
Away Matches Drawn 2 4 8
Home Matches Drawn 1 1 1
74 Total for Ranking
New Zealand  Points given Total Played Points Awarded
Away Series Win 8 1 8
Home Series Win 7 2 14
Away Series Drawn 6 2 12
Home Series Drawn 5 1 5
Away Matches Won 4 3 12
Home Matches Won 3 3 9
Away Matches Drawn 2 2 4
Home Matches Drawn 1 5 5
69 Total for Ranking

Saturday, 15 March 2014

Old Age Catching Up with Some Teams

The New Age of Test Cricket

The key indicator as to how a test team is doing is by its results.  And generally teams that have had steady selections and have played together for many years are the ones that have good results, a majority of the time.  Case in point is the current Australian Team.  Apart from that Ashes Blip and the loss of some key players over a staggered time-frame, they have been near nigh unbeatable. But is their star about to wane?

Yes I got to wondering, what does age mean to a team, more importantly a winning team?  So I did some delving and decided to analyse all the ages of the top 8 teams in world Test Cricket (Based on the teams last test line up) and the results tend to suggest older teams get better results and you’d expect that, with one exception.  See if you can spot it?

Country                                Average Age                      Last Five Test Results
Pakistan                                          31                                           2W,2L,1D
Australia                                         30                                           4W,1L
Sri Lanka                                        30                                           3W,1L,1D
West Indies                                     29                                           4L,1D
South Africa                                    29                                           2W,2L,1D
England                                           28                                           5L
India                                                28                                           1W,2L,2D
New Zealand                                   26                                           3W,2D

Yes you see it too, a team that is very young (the age weighted up with Fulton and Taylor) and playing
winning cricket.  But it asks a question of the teams at the top of that age ranking.  How long will the top three go before they are forced to inject youth to replace the old guard?  Australia, especially the likes of Harris and Johnson, will be one that shouldn't be too affected by player replacement as they have a good domestic competition that breeds replacements.  Historically they inject, adapt and show promise pretty quickly.  But will they have the same competitiveness we expect from that team in two years’ time?

And that’s the point of this article.  Two years from now??  How many teams are in rebuilding mode as we speak?  New Zealand has injected youth over the past few years (7 players 25 years and under) and that team is now showing promise.  The West Indies too are a team playing the selection game but fair to say their test results don’t reflect just yet?  Teams like Sri Lanka and Pakistan will soon need to start shedding that old guard so in two years’ time expect them both to be struggling a little for a time.  South Africa, India and England are at crossroads.  Retirements, selection quandaries, and just poor play are crippling them.  All teams are (or were) littered with older players and they just aren’t making things happen.  Seniority should mean general good form and at times they do show it, but not enough.


I guess one could quite easily dismiss this study.  Results will vary, home and away competitions tend to do that, but my bet come 2016 there will be some very real surprises in world cricket.

Monday, 3 March 2014

A Year Out from the CWC 2015 - Who is in the Frame


A Year Out from the CWC 2015 - Who is in the Frame

One Day Cricket, often lately as seen the lesser light of the three forms by cricketing pundits, is resurgent.  It's unfair to say the players don't like it as judging by recent matches, there is plenty to play for and series haven't been cut and dry nor dominated by one side, except perhaps the New Zealand versus India home series just completed and Aussie over England.

Teams do love the game, it's generally close and generally well followed by the spectators. Last year, especially in New Zealand, there had been calls from the cricketing public to just play Tests and T20, but to be fair that was by a public that was following a team that couldn't compete too well.  The recent series wins by New Zealand away to South Africa and England started to change some minds, then the good performances at home to West Indies and India, coupled with the launch of the CWC 2015 has seen those detractors diminish and more folks going to games and being in a positive frame.

So what of the Cricket World Cup.  Who will be the teams to watch?  Well it's a year away yet and to be fair there are some critical series to be played out this year.  I'm going to analyse the teams and will firstly highlight those cricketing nations that are causing all the ructions in world cricket with their stance on controlling the game.

Australia.  Currently Number One in the rankings and with a comprehensive 4-1 defeat over England at home suggests they will be in the mix next year.  But their 3-2 loss earlier last year in India suggests on their day they could be fragile, but on home soil clear favourites.  However I do think come semi's they'll fold.

India.  Currently Number Two.  With a series win over Aussie last year, and a win over Windies at home too, they looked the goods, but away losses to South Africa and New Zealand must have dented their chances, and with recent losses to Pakistan and Sri Lanka in the Asia Cup, they may be struggling.  They are a young new team with some old heads, but they need to pull some more consistency out of the bag, especially away, to be a threat at CWC 2015.

England.  With series losses in 2013 to New Zealand and Australia at home, then a 4-1 thumping away to Australia, England are struggling.  They are still rebuilding to some extent and at time of writing have managed to square their ODI series in the Caribbean after two matches.  In a years’ time, maybe a semi-finalist come CWC 2015, but have to improve markedly.

And now the teams biting at the top three’s heels.

Sri Lanka are a dark horse in the equation.  Perennially a top five ODI team, they do have the fire power to win matches, though they do tend to rely heavily on Kumar Sangakkara, Lasith Malinga, and spin.  If they appear at CWC 2015 without one or two of those three they'll be in the mix but not rated a chance. The key to this supposition is their recent loss to Pakistan 3-2 at home.

South Africa are also a dark horse.  They do alright at home but also have issues playing away and with CWC 2015 being an away tournament they may find themselves on the losing end more often than not.  They do have a good well balanced unit so in with a chance but they'll need a lot going for them.

West Indies are another to watch.  They seem to be a team that one day plays very well, the next playing like dogs.  They recently drew the series versus New Zealand, and currently share the series with England.  The Calypso kings on their day could be world beaters, but realistically they may end up also-rans.  Mind you, in the past few months they have been a young team playing on the back of key players out injured.  They have a year to get it right.  Can they?

Pakistan to me are the form team in world ODI cricket.  They win the tight ones.  They win away (naturally they can’t play at home).  They play a good 50 over game, across the park.  Well balanced, well captained, playing well.  I'm sticking my neck out here, but I'm going to say they will be in the final of next year’s CWC 2015.

New Zealand.  The other finalist.  I think the key to how both Pakistan and New Zealand are going is New Zealand's series coming up in UAE in November.  This series to me will be the defining moment for both teams and a momentum swing leading into CWC2015.  New Zealand in the last year have won three ODI series (2 away), drawn 2 (1 away 1 home) and lost a series in Bangladesh, a blip on the radar (and a different team now).  Playing the CWC games at home will be a fillip, thinking back to 1992, and they should ride a wave of support and parochialism.


Of the rest, Bangladesh will provide nuisance factor, winning the odd one or two, yes they should be buoyed with their series whitewash of a weakened New Zealand team last year, but as can be seen in the Asia Cup, against the top teams, and even on their home soil, they are out of their depth.  Afghanistan will also be a fun team to watch, winning their match versus Bangladesh quite comprehensively means they too will surprise in some games. Ireland, Scotland, United Arab Emirates and Zimbabwe will be there to make up numbers.