Alright, spam removed. The air feels cleaner already.
I went to take a nap and the dude’s blocked. What on earth did he do in a couple of hours?!
Alright, spam removed. The air feels cleaner already.
Replied to my post with just a dot ".", then started swearing at me when I deleted itI went to take a nap and the dude’s blocked. What on earth did he do in a couple of hours?!
Replied to my post with just a dot ".", then started swearing at me when I deleted it
This luxury isn't available to every country's players, sadly.Starc: 'Tests always far above the white-ball cricket'
"I don't think playing three formats is something I can [continue] for a long period of time moving forward"www.espncricinfo.com
Need more players like him!
This luxury isn't available to every country's players, sadly.
I don't think so. He lives in Australia, and will retire there. Compare that to a country like Pakistan or Sri Lanka. Why would players from economically bankrupt countries not want to maximise their earnings and have some financial security, instead of romanticising a 5-day format which pays them peanuts in comparison to T20 franchises?Available to most players in the nations that play test cricket I would think.
I get that. Though money shouldnt be everything. In the end its up to the player to make the decision. I dont mean a young cricketer give up on opportunities to earn some money in the fast food leagues, initially.I don't think so. He lives in Australia, and will retire there. Compare that to a country like Pakistan or Sri Lanka. Why would players from economically bankrupt countries not want to maximise their earnings and have some financial security, instead of romanticising a 5-day format which pays them peanuts in comparison to T20 franchises?
Again, calling Starc a "real cricketer" is just unfair to cricketers who don't have the luxury of having a rich board and security after retirement.I get that. Though money shouldnt be everything. In the end its up to the player to make the decision. I dont mean a young cricketer give up on opportunities to earn some money in the fast food leagues, initially.
Many guys over the years made a considerable fortune playing in the global fast food leagues and yet they never decided to call it quits and focus on red ball cricket. Primarily because theyre lazy to play test matches, you start a diet on fried chicken and pizza and its difficult to return to eating healthy. Starc is now 32 and have got what? Probably 5 more years most to play, he made his fortune in the IPL and BBL and is settling down playing the hardest format of the game, that is a cricketer!
I get that. Though money shouldnt be everything. In the end its up to the player to make the decision. I dont mean a young cricketer give up on opportunities to earn some money in the fast food leagues, initially.
Many guys over the years made a considerable fortune playing in the global fast food leagues and yet they never decided to call it quits and focus on red ball cricket. Primarily because theyre lazy to play test matches, you start a diet on fried chicken and pizza and its difficult to return to eating healthy. Starc is now 32 and have got what? Probably 5 more years most to play, he made his fortune in the IPL and BBL and is settling down playing the hardest format of the game, that is a cricketer!
Youre aware that the first international league started circa 2008? Before that guys played cricket professionally from Aus, SA,NZ, WI, Pak, India,SL. By your logic the guys outside of Australia wouldve live an unsecured life after playing, with zero to nothing to show? Is that what you are saying?Again, calling Starc a "real cricketer" is just unfair to cricketers who don't have the luxury of having a rich board and security after retirement.
Again, calling Starc a "real cricketer" is just unfair to cricketers who don't have the luxury of having a rich board and security after retirement.
Did you read the article at all? He didnt decided to this today, he last featured in a fast food league like 7 or so years ago.Believing that someone could have made a fortune playing in the BBL back then says all that you know of the league.
Also calling Starc someone who is settling down to play test cricket when he has
a)more tests than T20Is
b)made his test debut before his T20I debut
again shows how much you know of him or cricket in general.
For most of the guys outside of India its somewhat true though.I find it hilarious when white ball specialists are shoehorned into a mythical mercenaries label that simply is untrue.
Youre aware that the first international league started circa 2008? Before that guys played cricket professionally from Aus, SA,NZ, WI, Pak, India,SL. By your logic the guys outside of Australia wouldve live an unsecured life after playing, with zero to nothing to show? Is that what you are saying?
The WI guys like Narine, Pollard and Gayle they never quit IPL and decided to play red ball cricket only, and surely they made a fortune before they turned 30yrs. AB villers turned his back on his country to make money for RCB!
Did you read the article at all? He didnt decided to this today, he last featured in a fast food league like 7 or so years ago.
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For most of the guys outside of India its somewhat true though.