World cup review

Participate in discussion with your fellow Zimbabwe cricket fans!
Post Reply
User avatar
Dr_Situ(ZimFanatic)
Posts: 2431
Joined: Fri Nov 30, 2007 2:14 pm
Supports: Matabeleland Tuskers
Location: India
Contact:

World cup review

Post by Dr_Situ(ZimFanatic) »

World Cup 2011
Zimbabwe flatter to deceive

The most important lesson for Zimbabwe to take away from a disappointing campaign is the sheer amount of work still needed if they are to avoid embarrassing themselves when they return to Test cricket later this year
Liam Brickhill, CricInfo, March 21, 2011
World Cup performance
To the casual observer, it may well have appeared that there were two World Cups happening during the group stage. The contrast between the feisty performances of Group B's minnows and the limp-wristed capitulations of those in Group A could not have been starker, and Zimbabwe must take some of the blame for that.

For their first fifty overs of the tournament they held their own against Australia but it quickly became apparent that, as a unit, their batsmen were simply not yet up to the task of consistently scoring runs against world-class bowling attacks. The Charles Coventry opening experiment, while admirable in its aims, proved an unmitigated disaster and one can only hope that a batsman of his undeniable potential will be given the chance to redeem himself in the lower middle order, where he belongs.

There was also a certain tactical naivety to Zimbabwe's approach. They talked themselves into a corner with brash statements about "targeting" New Zealand when it may have been wiser to maintain a quiet confidence and let the opposition stew in the uncertainties that were no doubt raised after their beating at the hands of Australia. The decision to bat first in that game then heaped pressure onto an already brittle batting line-up, and yet again an otherwise impressive group of spinners was rendered toothless by the inability of the batsmen to build a total against all but the weakest opponents.

The train-wreck collapse to Tillakaratne Dilshan's previously unheralded straight-breaks, after Brendan Taylor had single-handedly raised his team into a winning position, made for particularly excruciating viewing, while Elton Chigumbura's bizarre decision to bat first on a seaming track under leaden-grey skies against Pakistan unchained a marauding Umar Gul and back-fired spectacularly. The ease of Zimbabwe's wins over Canada and Kenya provided precious little succour against the backdrop of such spineless surrenders, but amid the gloom there remain glimmers of hope.

High

Zimbabwe must have entertained thoughts of an Ireland-style giant-killing act in the course of Taylor and Regis Chakabva's record opening-stand against Sri Lanka. Taylor in particular defied the reputations of the bowlers and the tricky conditions to set his team up for a serious challenge on Sri Lanka's mountainous 327 for 6, and Zimbabwe stormed past 100 in just the 17th over.

Low

Sadly, when Chakabva was removed by Muttiah Muralitharan that spell was quickly broken. The meek submission to Sri Lanka was a low made all the more dispiriting by the height from which Zimbabwe fell. From 117 for 0 they subsided for a meagre 188, and Tillakaratne Dilshan was gifted 4 for 4 - and very nearly a hat-trick - to go with his century.

Strengths

It's no secret that spin was to be Zimbabwe's weapon at the tournament, and while any threat the spinners might have posed was nullified by a series of sub-par totals on generally benign batting surfaces, the bowling was mostly of a high standard. The spin quartet of Ray Price, Prosper Utseya, Graeme Cremer and Greg Lamb performed as well as they could have expected. Price stood out with nine wickets at just 18.77 and an economy rate of 3.44 an over, while Chris Mpofu's progress under the tutelage of bowling coach Heath Streak was evident in his returns of seven wickets at 22.71 apiece.

Weaknesses

Zimbabwe's batting had more than one moment of startling incompetency, and with a Test return now months away, their weaknesses against the short ball are particularly worrying. Craig Ervine managed 231 runs at 38.50 in the tournament, although he was helped by fifties against the pop-gun Canadians and Kenyans, while Taylor showcased his talent against New Zealand and Sri Lanka and unfurled a trademark upper-cut that left a lasting impression. Against the top teams, there was precious little from the rest of the batting order.

Prospects

The depth of Zimbabwe's batting failures demands a complete overhaul, but it would not help to purge the current squad of non-performers, firstly because their inadequacies are mental, rather than technical, and secondly because there is no-one to replace them with. The Coventry debacle and the mysterious non-selection of the experienced Hamilton Masakadza aside, selectorial decisions cannot be blamed for the shoddy performance as, barring the absent Masakadza, Zimbabwe's best one-day cricketers were picked for the tournament. The most important lesson for Zimbabwe to take away from a disappointing campaign is the sheer amount of work still needed if they are to avoid embarrassing themselves when they return to Test cricket later this year.
Fair article
Zim Rules
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dr Satendra Singh, Delhi, India
Twitter: @drsitu

User avatar
eugene
Posts: 7879
Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 11:31 pm
Supports: Matabeleland Tuskers

Re: World cup review

Post by eugene »

"The depth of Zimbabwe's batting failures demands a complete overhaul, but it would not help to purge the current squad of non-performers, firstly because their inadequacies are mental, rather than technical, and secondly because there is no-one to replace them with. The Coventry debacle and the mysterious non-selection of the experienced Hamilton Masakadza aside, selectorial decisions cannot be blamed for the shoddy performance as, barring the absent Masakadza, Zimbabwe's best one-day cricketers were picked for the tournament. The most important lesson for Zimbabwe to take away from a disappointing campaign is the sheer amount of work still needed if they are to avoid embarrassing themselves when they return to Test cricket later this year."

I couldn't agree with this statement more.
Neil Johnson, Alistair Campbell, Murray Goodwin, Andy Flower (w), Grant Flower, Dave Houghton, Guy Whittall, Heath Streak (c), Andy Blignaut, Ray Price, Eddo Brandes

User avatar
Dr_Situ(ZimFanatic)
Posts: 2431
Joined: Fri Nov 30, 2007 2:14 pm
Supports: Matabeleland Tuskers
Location: India
Contact:

Re: World cup review

Post by Dr_Situ(ZimFanatic) »

Ignore World Cup disappointment as players more suited to test cricket, says Zimbabwe minister
By Enock Muchinjo (CP) – 12 hours ago The Canadian Press

Zimbabwe Sports Minister David Coltart has defended the decision for the national team to return to test cricket this year amid criticism over its performance at the World Cup.
Zimbabwe lost to Australia, New Zealand, Pakistan and Sri Lanka to crash out of the World Cup in the group stage.
The African team convincingly beat Associate sides Canada and Kenya, but had been hoping for at least one upset in the other Group A matches in order to progress to the knockout stage.
Zimbabwe will return to the five-day format in a one-off test against Bangladesh in August at a date to be confirmed. The team will then host other one-off tests, against Pakistan in September and New Zealand in October or November.
Asked how Zimbabwe could reasonably expect to compete in test cricket, Coltart said the players' abilities aren't particularly conducive to doing well in limited-overs matches.
"There is a difference between test cricket and one-day cricket," he told The Associated Press. "There is no doubt that some of our players are perhaps better suited to test cricket. We have a variety of spin bowlers who can keep things tight at test level.
"We have had a good start to our preparations for a test return. In 2004 and 2005 when we stopped playing tests, we did not play a lot of four-day cricket. We now do. We must be under no illusion — it will take quite an adjustment."

Coltart nominated Sean Ervine, who was called up into the World Cup squad before having to withdraw due to a fractured thumb, as one player better suited to test cricket.
"Sean Ervine is a good Test cricketer. I don't want to disrespect him, but he is better suited to tests than ODI cricket," Coltart said. "Before he withdrew, there were question marks about him being good enough in the first place.
"We need people like that back. One weakness we have is that we have a lot of young players who are hotheaded. In tests you need to be coolheaded."
Zimbabwe finished fifth in its group with a run-rate of +0.030 to be the only team not to qualify for the quarterfinals that had a positive scoring rate, a fact pointed out by Coltart.
"We were never thrashed," Coltart said. "While the team didn't perform to our expectations, the other teams never had a complete success against us. No team was able to score rapidly against our spinners.
"What I observed was a psychological weakness against the big teams when batting. We psyched ourselves out of these games. I think we were overpowered by the big teams. Against Kenya and Canada we were relaxed and played to our potential. In essence, we will only do well when we start to be a bit more positive in our thinking. "
Copyright © 2011 The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.
Zim Rules
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dr Satendra Singh, Delhi, India
Twitter: @drsitu

Conant
Posts: 1528
Joined: Tue Feb 03, 2009 9:46 am
Supports: Matabeleland Tuskers
Location: Benoni, South Africa
Contact:

Re: World cup review

Post by Conant »

Dr_Situ(ZimFanatic) wrote:Ignore World Cup disappointment as players more suited to test cricket, says Zimbabwe minister
By Enock Muchinjo (CP) – 12 hours ago The Canadian Press

Zimbabwe Sports Minister David Coltart has defended the decision for the national team to return to test cricket this year amid criticism over its performance at the World Cup.
Zimbabwe lost to Australia, New Zealand, Pakistan and Sri Lanka to crash out of the World Cup in the group stage.
The African team convincingly beat Associate sides Canada and Kenya, but had been hoping for at least one upset in the other Group A matches in order to progress to the knockout stage.
Zimbabwe will return to the five-day format in a one-off test against Bangladesh in August at a date to be confirmed. The team will then host other one-off tests, against Pakistan in September and New Zealand in October or November.
Asked how Zimbabwe could reasonably expect to compete in test cricket, Coltart said the players' abilities aren't particularly conducive to doing well in limited-overs matches.
"There is a difference between test cricket and one-day cricket," he told The Associated Press. "There is no doubt that some of our players are perhaps better suited to test cricket. We have a variety of spin bowlers who can keep things tight at test level.
"We have had a good start to our preparations for a test return. In 2004 and 2005 when we stopped playing tests, we did not play a lot of four-day cricket. We now do. We must be under no illusion — it will take quite an adjustment."

Coltart nominated Sean Ervine, who was called up into the World Cup squad before having to withdraw due to a fractured thumb, as one player better suited to test cricket.
"Sean Ervine is a good Test cricketer. I don't want to disrespect him, but he is better suited to tests than ODI cricket," Coltart said. "Before he withdrew, there were question marks about him being good enough in the first place.
"We need people like that back. One weakness we have is that we have a lot of young players who are hotheaded. In tests you need to be coolheaded."
Zimbabwe finished fifth in its group with a run-rate of +0.030 to be the only team not to qualify for the quarterfinals that had a positive scoring rate, a fact pointed out by Coltart.
"We were never thrashed," Coltart said. "While the team didn't perform to our expectations, the other teams never had a complete success against us. No team was able to score rapidly against our spinners.
"What I observed was a psychological weakness against the big teams when batting. We psyched ourselves out of these games. I think we were overpowered by the big teams. Against Kenya and Canada we were relaxed and played to our potential. In essence, we will only do well when we start to be a bit more positive in our thinking. "
Copyright © 2011 The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.
The good Minister beat me to it, but this is a post I had prepared yesterday before I decided I had posted enough, and shelved it for another day:
This may sound rather ambitious but I think we may turn out into a better test than one day team. We have the players for it, who are better suited to that format; Ervine, Williams, maybe Duffin, and Taibu will always play every format.

Hammy is gonna be key because he will fill any position from one to four (he’s a terrific average coming in at first fall) and hopefully Vusi can step it up against major nations. I’m sure we gonna find out soon enough if Chatara is the real deal. I have a feeling we not gonna be disappointed. Shingi is fast and can improve. Remember he started late. The spinners we’ve got and that means we’ll as only ne missing one batsman at most (which should have been filled by Sean Ervine, damn him!).

Maybe an all-rounder as well, but if Chibhabha’s bowling can come right, who knows?

User avatar
clikcspeed
Posts: 269
Joined: Sun Aug 16, 2009 8:17 pm
Supports: Mountaineers

Re: World cup review

Post by clikcspeed »

I think the reason why we are all on this forum is that we believe. It is important that we keep believing.

Because cricket is a bat and ball game, our world cup campaign was, to a greater extent, disappointing because of inconsistencies with the former. As highlighted by Liam and everyone else before the World Cup, the problems faced in the team are largely "mental" - it will take a of time to overcome those.

For me, one of the key "mental" problems is the leadership (I know you know). If you look at the top sides in international cricket, 1 thing they share in common is a leader who performs consistently and has a very predefined role when the team takes the field, Sangakarra, Dhoni, Smith, Strauss - is it by accident that these guys do not bowl at all, and that if this captain is not the wicket keeper he is fielding in the slips or he is at mid-off? It is not surprising that one of these teams will win the world cup not because their squads have depth but because of the quality of the captain. Chigumbura is a great player (I, personally am a big fan) but this captaincy thing is not working, for him or for the country. ZC should realise this by now and going forward, this should be the first aspect that they should revise.

Post Reply