foreignfield wrote:
Btw, this discussion is about altogether different things: being intellectually smart does not mean that you will maximise your sporting potential. Making the same mistakes over and over does not mean that you are stupid: it's not that you have ten minutes to figure out how to play a ball at 135 kph and then tick the wrong box. For most sports you only need an average amount of intelligence, a sound understandig of your sport (this is where good coaching comes in), but you need a strong work ethic, and even more you need mental toughness: that's what the "90 % is played between the ears" argument is all about.
Well said FF.
I'm not arguing that Kobe and Lebron should be professors at Harvard. But to suggest that they are only playing basketball because of their physicality is grossly ignorant. They understand the game of basketball better than anyone else. Do they make mistakes? Surely they do. All the time. But they don't repeat the same mistake year after year. And they have a lot of success that precedes each mistake they make.
Tendulkar probably threw his wicket away in 80% of the innings in which he batted. But the difference between him and Hamilton or Williams is that Tendy scores an average of 50 runs before he makes that fatal mistake. Hammy and Willy will only rarely cross 50.
A lot of it has to come from the culture. From what I understand most of the black players in ZIM learn the game at a much later age, and its just difficult to catch up to most of the rest of the Test playing nations where kids are playing from a very early age and grow up in a culture of cricket. For most of Zimbabwe's players, they are in the game mostly for the money. One feels the passion, committment, and in depth understanding of the game is lacking.
The above is just my theory as to one of the reasons why cricket in Zimbabwe is stagnant. Of course the corruption of the ZC is an issue as well, but apart from that, thats my thought.
Besides, cricket was destined to be dominated at least in the 21st century and beyond by just England, Australia, and India. All other teams are just making up the numbers. Realistically speaking, 90% of the championships in Tests, ODI, or T20 cricket will be won by 1 of the big 3. And the smaller countries have little chance of ever even making it as far as the quarterfinals, etc.