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Worst decisions in Cricket history


Was it arrogant? Yes made a great game but at the same time it’s probably because we lost.
It’s also why we had a chance to win.

Fine margins but the extra time and overs we had at them because of the declaration gave us a better chance to win.

I agree declaring gave us more chance of losing, but also gave us more chance of winning.

Tbf to McCullum he has always said he will risk losing to have a better chance of winning, which is exactly what happened in this test match
 
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We lost on no balls, dropped catches and missed stumpings… in my humble one.
Realistically it was a mixture of:

- Poor keeping
- Missing Leach
- Rash declaration
- Duckett and Crawley being forced to play when the conditions were awful
- Lyon turning into prime Bradman for an hour
 
20/20 hindsight is a wonderful thing It was the right decision at the time for a team that prefers to try to win, rather than try not to lose.
 
Bazball.

It's turned a load of fans into whinging fannies who can't understand the whole ethos is high risk, high reward.

I
I think that the positive / aggressive batting approach has been great and I’m all for it. It got us into a position of strength at 180 odd for 1. However, when the opposition change tack and put 4 or 5 men on the leg side boundary and bowl everything short, then surely common sense must prevail? The Aussies limited themselves to only one mode of dismissal, and for some reason we did exactly what they wanted. IMO that crazy hour turned the test. You’ve gotta be able to adapt to in-game situations but seemed to me that ego took over. Fearless cricket is one thing, brainless another.
 
20/20 hindsight is a wonderful thing It was the right decision at the time for a team that prefers to try to win, rather than try not to lose.
It isn't hindsight when 50% of fans were saying it was a dodgy decision at the time but were being told to shut up and stop whingeing by the other 50%.
 
It isn't hindsight when 50% of fans were saying it was a dodgy decision at the time but were being told to shut up and stop whingeing by the other 50%.
And we were proven to be right. A draw was sacrificed for a loss. I am all for an aggressive approach, but I’m not on board with disregarding draws which can be valuable in a 5 test series.
 
I think that the positive / aggressive batting approach has been great and I’m all for it. It got us into a position of strength at 180 odd for 1. However, when the opposition change tack and put 4 or 5 men on the leg side boundary and bowl everything short, then surely common sense must prevail? The Aussies limited themselves to only one mode of dismissal, and for some reason we did exactly what they wanted. IMO that crazy hour turned the test. You’ve gotta be able to adapt to in-game situations but seemed to me that ego took over. Fearless cricket is one thing, brainless another.
Completely agree. The stubbornness is a big problem.
With the field the way it was it went from high risk:high reward, to stupidly high risk with the reward being either a single or a 6. The mental side of the aussies is far far stronger.
 
I think that the positive / aggressive batting approach has been great and I’m all for it. It got us into a position of strength at 180 odd for 1. However, when the opposition change tack and put 4 or 5 men on the leg side boundary and bowl everything short, then surely common sense must prevail? The Aussies limited themselves to only one mode of dismissal, and for some reason we did exactly what they wanted. IMO that crazy hour turned the test. You’ve gotta be able to adapt to in-game situations but seemed to me that ego took over. Fearless cricket is one thing, brainless another.

The 'bazball' approach is great - the execution not so much.
And we were proven to be right. A draw was sacrificed for a loss. I am all for an aggressive approach, but I’m not on board with disregarding draws which can be valuable in a 5 test series.

I'm not commenting on whether the declaration was the right call or not, but you don't play for a draw on the first day of the first test.
 
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