Cricketdude
Chairman of Selectors
Dravid 300... hmmm.
Textbook technique is about getting your head over the ball and playing straight, with a view to being protected against mistiming the ball and still being able to work the ball off the pads for runs. The trick to one day cricket is that good players often don't score many more boundaries than they would in an unlimited number of overs, instead they double the number of singles they pick up, so a nice technique is handy.Surprisingly, his lack of footwork and overall lack of technique has hampered him alot in ODI cricket, but he remains one of the most dominant test match openers to ever play for India. Almost like a reverse effect.
Thank God god for players like Sehwag, He brings people into the stadiums. I'd rather watch Sehwag bat than Dravid, despite the obvious gap in technical efficiency. Its like watching Brazil play football as compared to Italy. Attacking flair all the way.
Get a ball going away, cramp him for room, and bowl at that length and you will get smashed for 50 off like 30, but always will have that chance. Sehwag is so good because he simply doesn't care where the ball is, if he thinks he can get a boundary he'll go for it.
You think that never, in the many years of his international career that this weakness has been known publicly, that he has tried to iron it out by setting up a bowling machine to bowl a certain length to him? With Sachin as his mentor, I think that is highly, highly improbable.I'm interested in seeing Sehwag against a bowling machine which can bowl the same ball over and over again at that "length"
Well, I haven't seen it with my own eyesYou think that never, in the many years of his international career that this weakness has been known publicly, that he has tried to iron it out by setting up a bowling machine to bowl a certain length to him? With Sachin as his mentor, I think that is highly, highly improbable.