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Stefan

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ICC don't like tech they much prefer to protect their umpires.

The problem with the Sydney test was that the decision went 7-1 in Aus's favour it wasn't like the other 2 tests were it was 5-6 in either teams favour.
 

Durai

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well played kumble and harbajan in getting india to the promise land of cricket; 500+ runs.
 

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Lets hope they can bowl as well as they batted.
 

Stefan

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Gilly also retiring. Wonder who will replace him for the aussies??

Australia v India, 4th Test, Adelaide, 3rd day
Gilchrist retires from Tests
Peter English at the Adelaide Oval
January 26, 2008


331842.jpg

Adam Gilchrist has decided to end his Test career while he has the world record for most dismissals © Getty Images

Adam Gilchrist, who revolutionised the role of the wicketkeeper-batsman, has retired from Tests barely 24 hours after taking the world record for dismissals. The shock news means Gilchrist will depart on a global high at the end of the fourth match against India on Monday and his last ODI appearances will come in the CB Series, which finishes in March.
Over the past couple of years Gilchrist, 36, has been worn down by the grind of international touring and has been desperate to spend more time with his wife Mel and their three children. Despite his family circumstances, Gilchrist's announcement at the end of the third day came as a surprise after he had spent much of the previous evening denying he was close to walking away.
"I'll let people know when I'm going to retire," he said on Friday, "whether it's tomorrow or in 12 months. At the moment I'm going to keep focussing on giving everything I've got to this team."
He told his team-mates in the morning he was leaving and it was an emotional time. "I've come to this decision after much thought and discussion with those most important to me," Gilchrist said before boarding the team bus. "My family and I have been fortunate to have had an amazing journey full of rich experiences throughout my career."
Gilchrist played 96 Tests, the same number as Rod Marsh, and has collected 414 dismissals, currently one more than South Africa's Mark Boucher. However, his glovework, which has diminished over the past month, will not be why he is remembered as one of Australia's most significant players.
Matthew Hayden, who has been a team-mate of Gilchrist's for the past eight years, called it "massive news" and said he would be "deeply, deeply missed". "He is one of the greatest to have ever played the game," Hayden said. "He was incredibly positive and his flamboyant nature equals the greats of Viv Richards and other calypso characters over the years.
"He entertained everyone globally and has done it in a statesman-like way. He changed cricketers throughout the world and is a tremendous individual."
Gilchrist brought a limited-overs approach to Tests, becoming the first man to launch 100 sixes in the format, registering the most centuries by a wicketkeeper-batsman, and scoring at a phenomenal strike-rate in the low 80s. Apart from posting almost 6000 runs, he was also responsible for the more aggressive approach to a game where three runs an over was previously considered reckless.
Growing up in New South Wales, he moved to Western Australia to collect a first-class opportunity and made his Test debut to a chorus of boos after replacing Ian Healy in Brisbane. He scored 81 against Pakistan and brought up his first century in the following match in a miracle chase in Hobart. From 1999 the Australia team was never the same, winning 16 Tests in a row under Steve Waugh, a streak that was matched by Ricky Ponting's outfit over the past three years.
One of only three players to have won a trio of World Cup titles, Gilchrist was picked to open on a Waugh hunch over a bowl of ice-cream and quickly became one of the most threatening limited-overs players of all time. Others have tried to adopt his style but none has managed it for a decade, which is a tribute to the traits developed by a country boy from northern New South Wales.
"I am now ready and excited to move into the next phase of my life, which will include much more time with Mel, Harrison, Annie and Archie," Gilchrist said. He thanked his state and country associations and his team-mates for the "most enjoyable, fun career anyone could hope for". Brad Haddin, the New South Wales wicketkeeper, has spent the past couple of years with the limited-overs team and should get his first taste of Test action if the March tour to Pakistan goes ahead.
Two more wickets need to fall before Gilchrist will appear at Adelaide Oval and he will be celebrated like Shane Warne, Glenn McGrath and Justin Langer were last year. Adelaide has not been the normal place for farewells over the past decade, but Gilchrist has not been a traditional player.


Peter English is the Australasia editor of Cricinfo
© Cricinfo
 

Durai

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yep that is big news

finally a balance in world cricket.

gilchrist has been a great servant for cricket and will be there with the legends.

did he entertain? HE DAMN WELL DID!
 

Durai

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also hayden isnt gonna be around for long either he is now 36.

he may also call it a day.

without gilchrist and hayden australia wont be formidable.

a new world order is about to begin in cricket, its good for the sport.
 

Stefan

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India have already shown in this series the aussies aren't quite as good without warne and mcgrath. All the tests except for the first one has been very close.

Should be very interesting. And yeah Haydos only has a year or two to go.
 

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Sad about Gilly, he shoudnt have retired, I doubt Australia or for that matter the whole world will have fair and talented players even 50% of what Gilly was.
 

Durai

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something tells me the next decade is gonna be boring with a lot of slow test matches with 200 runs a day matches etc.

i dont think 20/20 will really increase batsmen strike rates in test matches.

i also dont see any express quick fast bowlers coming through.
 

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before you get onto this, better for world cricket shit.. try to admire the bloke who gave us so much and changed world cricket keeping.


and if you think australia's dominance is over:lol: just wait till brad haddin comes to keep with us in pakistan. The guy is much more reliable in batting than gilly and his keeping hasnt gone done like gillys in past years.

we smashed sri lanka, we have retained the trophy against india in the first two tests and, should win it overall 2-1. what more do yous want?

thanks for the memories gill.
 

Stefan

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something tells me the next decade is gonna be boring with a lot of slow test matches with 200 runs a day matches etc.

i dont think 20/20 will really increase batsmen strike rates in test matches.

i also dont see any express quick fast bowlers coming through.

If you want express fast bowlers have a look at Dale Steyn and Morne Morkel. Really exited about them. Looking forward to what they will do on the England and Aus tours latter this year.

You beat India Helal but you didn't dominate like you have done in the past with Warne and McGrath. The spinners you employed this summer have looked poor. When Hayden was out your batting also looked vulnerable.

Not saying Aus won't be number one any more but it will be a lot closer.

But I don't actually believe it's good for cricket. I would prefer the other sides getting better and catching Aus that way than Aus getting weaker and the others staying the same.
 

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They are the best team in the world, I dont see anyone getting closer than what India did. Sorry, Stef. :D

Australia need more players like Gilly actually, he is the best captain they never had. True to his heart, passionate and a winner.
 

Durai

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before you get onto this, better for world cricket shit.. try to admire the bloke who gave us so much and changed world cricket keeping.

course we all admire him but we also wanna see a balance in cricket.
 

Durai

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If you want express fast bowlers have a look at Dale Steyn and Morne Morkel. Really exited about them. Looking forward to what they will do on the England and Aus tours latter this year.

i have seen them plenty of times they arent express quick like shoaib and lee.

they are 80-90mph bowlers = fast medium

im talking about 90-100mph = fast
 

Stefan

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i have seen them plenty of times they arent express quick like shoaib and lee.

they are 80-90mph bowlers = fast medium

im talking about 90-100mph = fast

You haven't seen them recently then. this summer they have been between 145 -150 kph consistently. That's fast bowling.
 

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You haven't seen them recently then. this summer they have been between 145 -150 kph consistently. That's fast bowling.

yeah at the begining of their spells and the first few overs of the day they hit 90+mph.

then they drop to late 70s early 80s.

but i didnt see them consistently bowling at 90+ throughout the day even during days when it was cloudy and conditions suiting the bowlers.
 

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yeah at the begining of their spells and the first few overs of the day they hit 90+mph.

then they drop to late 70s early 80s.

but i didnt see them consistently bowling at 90+ throughout the day even during days when it was cloudy and conditions suiting the bowlers.

Shoaib doesn't bowl consistently fast either. His second and third spells are much slower than his first. Lee also had this problem early on in his career.

And When it's cloudy the bolwers focus on control rather than bowling fast that's why their pace is slower in those conditions.
 

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I have been watching cricket since the time of Ian Healy. I saw Gilchrist play his first one day, and I saw Gilchrist play his first test. And now he is retiring. I feel really old. :p . But the first test I saw Gilchrist play, was really painful. 1999, we had Australia completely on the back foot, and were going to win our first test in Aussie land for quite some time
. Austrlia need 350 or something to win, we had them at 126-5, then Gilchirst came scored a century, and that was that.

Truly one of the greatest and fastest batsmen in the world out there. Added a new meaning to the term wikcet-keeper batsmen.

Its really sad, cricket is losing so many of its star. The generation with who I have been watching cricket with, is sadly coming to an end.
In the last year, McGrath, Jaysuria, Lara, Inzamam, Pollock and now Gilly have retired.

I am sad that Pollock has also retired. I admired Pollock's bowling a lot, but I have never been a big fan of Pollock. Reason being, he and Donald had a thing for getting Saeed Anwar (my favourite cricket player ever), out pretty cheaply. Thats why his stats suck so much against S.Africa. Pollock was a true gentlemen of the game, hardly stirred up in useless controversies. He picked S.Africa up, after the team was left shattered by Cronje's match fixing scandal. Pollock really deserved to win a World Cup.
Sadly though, one thing Pollock is really gonna be remembered for is lack of Mathematics knwoledge that knocked S.Africa out of WC 2003.
 

Stefan

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Shaz that's a bit unfair Polly wasn't batting when they stuffed that up. He send out the paper to Boucher. Not his fault Boucher couldn't read.

Polly's math's ain't too bad. The only one in the current side who actually has a university degree. He has a degree in commerce. So he needed some maths to pass stat's.

But yeah it's sad to see all the star's I watched growing up going at the same time. Especially since so far I haven't seen any really great youngster taking their places.
 

Durai

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I have been watching cricket since the time of Ian Healy. I saw Gilchrist play his first one day, and I saw Gilchrist play his first test. And now he is retiring. I feel really old. :p . But the first test I saw Gilchrist play, was really painful. 1999, we had Australia completely on the back foot, and were going to win our first test in Aussie land for quite some time
. Austrlia need 350 or something to win, we had them at 126-5, then Gilchirst came scored a century, and that was that.

Truly one of the greatest and fastest batsmen in the world out there. Added a new meaning to the term wikcet-keeper batsmen.

Its really sad, cricket is losing so many of its star. The generation with who I have been watching cricket with, is sadly coming to an end.
In the last year, McGrath, Jaysuria, Lara, Inzamam, Pollock and now Gilly have retired.

I am sad that Pollock has also retired. I admired Pollock's bowling a lot, but I have never been a big fan of Pollock. Reason being, he and Donald had a thing for getting Saeed Anwar (my favourite cricket player ever), out pretty cheaply. Thats why his stats suck so much against S.Africa. Pollock was a true gentlemen of the game, hardly stirred up in useless controversies. He picked S.Africa up, after the team was left shattered by Cronje's match fixing scandal. Pollock really deserved to win a World Cup.
Sadly though, one thing Pollock is really gonna be remembered for is lack of Mathematics knwoledge that knocked S.Africa out of WC 2003.

yep soemthing tells me next decade will be boring.:(

hardly any good batsmen have taken over those guys that have retired.:(
 
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