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Are specialist captains an asset in Twenty20s?

NUFAN

Y no Afghanistan flag
Australian cricketers who go for less runs per over than McKay in T20 cricket:

Mitchell Starc
Shane Watson
Pat Cummins
Ryan Harris
Ben Hilfenhaus
Brad Hogg
Mitchell Johnson
Doug Bollinger
Nathan Hauritz
Steve O'Keefe
John Wayne Hastings
Xavier Doherty
James Pattinson
Peter Siddle
Dan Christian
Glenn Maxwell
Dirk Nannes
Dave Hussey
Steve Smith
Ben Laughlin
Mitch Marsh
James Faulkner
Mike Hussey
Chris Swan
Jayde Herrick
Luke Doran
Aaron O'Brien
Chris Lynn
Michael Beer
Nathan Lyon
Aaron Heal
Josh Hazelwood
Kane Richardson
Alister McDermott
Michael Hogan
Matt Johnston
Nathan Rimmington
Dom Thornely
Jason Krejza


And probably a stack more; I got bored eventually. I'm not saying they're all better T20 bowlers than him, but the sheer volume of the list (which isn't even finished in all likelihood) tends to suggest that McKay keeping it tight in T20 cricket is a myth. He bowls length pies; if there's one good thing T20 cricket has brought to the world, it's an environment in which that sort of bowling gets punished.
:laugh: Taste it NUFAN.

Still maintain that in SL conditions McKay would have been a very good option.
 

Cabinet96

Global Moderator
Particularly harsh on McKay with Mussey bowling 1 over in his career for 5, having a better economy.
 

MrPrez

Well-known member
I deny that Bailey is a specialist captain. Name one middle order batsman more qualified than him (and by that I don't mean top-4-pushed-down-the-order ala Dave Hussey, I mean a legitimate 5 or 6 batsman).

His T20i record has him averaging 25+ at a SR >130, which is similar to his domestic record. He is a pretty good short-form batsman, we just perceive him as too slow because we want an order involving 6 reincarnations of Shane Watson.
I'm not sold. Would you really take Bailey over, for example, Shane Watson as a no 5/6 batsman?

Guys who turn the strike over do have their place in T20s, but I wouldn't select one over a big hitter purely on principle ie I'd take 6 big hitters if the 5th and 6th ones were "better" than the accumulators.

Now obviously "better" would be hard to quantify given that they perform different roles. It all comes down to the selector, I guess. A Dave Hussey sort of player is definitely an option for the #5/6 role though, regardless of him being a "specialist top 4 batsman."

(I hope I haven't paraphrased Cribb here, but from what I read he seemed to be disagreeing for another reason).
 
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