#1

ECB said, Youve not realised your potential. Go away.

in Allgemein 19.01.2019 02:53
von riluowanying123 • 2.943 Beiträge

CORVALLIS, Ore. -- Kat Tudor sank five 3-pointers and finished with a career-high 17 points to lead No. 24 Oregon State to a 75-38 win over Southern Utah on Saturday night.It was the largest margin of victory for the Beavers this season and marked the second time since November theyve held an opponent to just 38 points.Breanna Brown and Sydney Wiese added 12 points apiece for Oregon State (6-1), which darted to an 18-3 lead at the end of the first quarter and never trailed. Marie Gulich hauled in 10 rebounds for Beavers, who controlled the boards 50-37.Southern Utah (3-5) opened the second quarter with a 10-0 burst capped by Rebecca Cardenas 3-pointer to trim the deficit to 18-13 with 6:36 left before the break. The Thunderbirds again closed to within five less than two minutes later before Oregon State broke away for good.Cardenas led Southern Utah with 10 points. Air Max 720 Cheap Online .Y. -- Leading 3-0 with only 11:25 left, the Colorado Avalanche committed a seemingly meaningless penalty to give the New York Islanders a power play. Air Max 720 Cheap Sale . Zvonareva, who won the tournament in 2009 and 10, couldnt handle her opponents big groundstrokes in only her third event back after 17 months out with a shoulder injury. Zvonareva made her comeback in January in Shenzhen and played in the Australian Open but lost her first matches at both tournaments. http://www.discountairmax720.com/ . Its sharpness matched my mind. This was no night to go to sleep. Air Max 720 Cheap . The 19-year-old Olsen played 34 games with the Kelowna Rockets of the WHL this season. In that time, hes recorded 17 goals and 17 assists with 36 penalty minutes. Cheap Air Max 720 Free Shipping . After slipping from the summit during the week, the Gunners overcame struggling Crystal Palace 2-0 on Sunday thanks to Alex Oxlade-Chamberlains second-half brace. With winter tours to Bangladesh and India on the horizon for England and lingering doubts over Moeen Ali and Adil Rashid, there has been much debate about the system for producing young spinners, and the introduction of a rule change to the toss in county cricket with a view to providing more spinner-friendly surfaces. Amid the gloom, however, there have been promising signs in the emergence of a clutch of young legspinners, with Josh Poysden of Warwickshire, and teenagers Mason Crane of Hampshire and Matt Parkinson of Lancashire all performing creditably in Division One, the latter two picking up five-fors. Parkinsons coach at Lancashire, Ashley Giles, describes his own development as a spinner and offers his thoughts on English crickets development of the next generation of young spinners. You started life as a seamer then converted to spin. How did that happen? I was about 15 when I started having back problems. I couldnt bowl seam, so ended up bowling spin in the nets one day. They came out all right, so I ended up dropping down from the 1st XI at Guildford CC and bowling them for the third team. I got 21 wickets in four weeks, went up to seconds as a spinner/batter, and when I was fully fit, I went back to seamers and fully converted at 18.You were recognised as a slightly unusual over-the-wicket bowler, a style that worked well enough to play 54 Tests. Did being a converted seamer help you develop your own, relatively unconventional, method? People talk about me as an over-the-wicket bowler, but I did do both. I think almost exactly half of my Test wickets were over and round. As a seamer I was very accurate and I think that was one of my strengths - having a really strong base: my bowling action - and I think I carried that into spin.What do you look for in teenage spinners? Good solid basics: a strong action thats repeatable under pressure. You see a lot of schoolboy spinners, bowling a schoolboy pace - its quite loopy and slow, with quite a jumpy action - but someone like Monty [Panesar] always had a really strong, powerful base to work from, and under pressure you need to fall back on that. Youve also got to spin it - thats your job. But your control is very important. You dont get away with bowling much shit, because you dont stay on. As a lone spinner its a pretty lonely world at times and theres a lot of burden on you to deliver. You can have four seamers in a team, but as soon as one [pitch] spins, everyones looking at you to get seven- or eight-for. So the other element is mental strength. You want guys whove got a bit about them, wholl deal with that, who are resilient, because its a tough world.Theres obviously a fairly long list of young spinners who suddenly get the yips and make the opposite conversion, to seamers. Is that something that can be assuaged by good management and captaincy? I dont understand the yips. I dont know where it comes from. I never suffered from it, although there were times when I didnt know where it was going. But I never bowled balls into the roof of the net or the side of the net, or double bouncers. But again, if youve got good basics to fall back on - I talk about schoolboy actions, generally very short strides and non-rhythmical run-up, and its all a bit jerky - theres less to go wrong.What about good captaincy during that transitional period - the bodys growing, trying to hit the same length might feel totally different because youre four inches taller all of a sudden? Shane Warnes advice for young spinners is, attack with the ball, defend with the field, which takes a bit of the pressure off the 16-year-old starlet to hit his length since he doesnt have to worry about injury to close catchers. Do you go along with that approach? I do. I think youre better off going out to in, rather than in to out. So start with a defensive field. Warnies spoken a lot about getting some overs under your belt, getting into the game. Try and bowl some dots, and later you can play with your field and build pressure that way. But for young spinners it is tough. Generally wickets in this country are more conducive to seam bowling, so they need time. Spinners cant really come on and bowl five-over spells, generally.If a young spinner is turning it square but bowling a couple of boundary balls an over, what do you do? Theyve got to find a way. Theres pressure on captains and coaches at whatever level to win games of cricket. When they play, spinners have just got to try and let go and concentrate on performing in the match. Even if you do spin it, youre not going to survive in first-class cricket bowling two four-balls an over, let alone international cricket.What about setting their own fields? Is that something youd encourage in young spinners? Have them be able to answer the question: how are you trying to get the guy out? Certainly regarding the setting of fields, its hugely important that spinners captain themselves. I know that Michael Vaughan had most confidence in me when I was confident. Hed go, Right, what do you want? And Id go, Bang, bang, bang rather than I dont know. What do you think? You set the field. I dont think thats very healthy. Its often a lone role [in England] and you have to be responsible for that part of the team. But another important aspect for the captain is doing it less by the textbook: one over before lunch; 30 overs with new ball, now lets get the spinner on.Get them into the game early. You can always bring them out of the game. But the responsibility works both ways. Spinners cant have it all their own way. Theyve still got to give the team and the captain some control.If there are seamers that keep a lid on the run rate then spinners economy rates become less significant than their strike rates. That was my role in [the Ashes in] 2005. It was to hold an end. We had the best seam attack in the world at the time.What about the next phase: 18 to 21, 22 years old? If youve given such a cricketer a three-year deal, how much of that is investing in the future and how much is investing in something now? Can you keep waiting for tangible returns until theyre 24, 25? I think you can. Spinners do develop late. Graeme Swann was a generational spinner - to take over 200 Test wickets, not many English spinners have done that. And he came into the side pretty late [28 years old]. I was signed at 19 and I started playing at 22, 23. But that period leading into that was very rocky. I was still finding my way, a way, and some sort of method and consistency in my action and performance. Second XI cricket can be challenging: three-day games, club grounds, generally seamer-friendly. When do you get on?I think one of the best things I did was go away in the winter. I spent four winters in South Africa. The first one was incredibly tough, 19 years old, almost got laughed at a little bit. I didnt perform very well, but for some reason they asked me back. The next year I didnt do very well with the ball but I averaged 100 with the bat. I started to stand on my own two feet a bit.The game nowadays is full of coaches, advice, support. The focus is psychological as well as physiological, and were accountable for what players do to a degree, but we also need to make the players accountable. We shouldnt be trying to produce clones. We can help and pass on advice, but its also up to them to create their own destiny.Theres always a temptation for coaches to justify their presence through intervening in a players development rather than standing back and letting them find their own destiny. Intervention is like a snipers rifle. It can be really useful, in that its pinpoint and direct. It gets the job done and helps in certain situations. It can be just plain lethal in the wrong hands. If you pick the wrong time with a player, it can take you weeks to come back from that.One of the ways Ive changed as a coach is that Ive tried to be less there [in the foreground]. One of things we say to players is, Find a way. Most of the stuff I do with bowlers and batters is about good basics: good balance, good alignment, good rhythm, direction of energy. You get that stuff going well, youve got a chance. I wouldnt dream of telling Matt Parkinson how to bowl a googly. Ive never bowled one. At 19, hes been doing it for years. I might tell him when to bowl a googly.What about putting young spinners in the team? How big a decision is that for you as a coach/selector? Obviously, they have to be ready. But whatever you think, theres no guarantee. You have to be fairly sure, because its a pretty harsh environment to chuck a young spinner into. But it comes back to their lone role. If they are a seamer, and there are two or three experienced guys around them, you can take more of a gamble.You put Parkinson in for his debut against Ian Bell and Jonathan Trott, so you must have been fairly confident. Absolutely. If theyre good enough, get em in. Age shouldnt be a barrier. I see no reason to hold people back just because theyre 18, 19 or whatever. Sometimes people surprise. For example, Liam Livingstone this year with the bat - we werent sure, because some of the stuff we saw we didnt like, and thought they might be indicators that he might not be ready. But actually, lifting him a level has transformed his game. Hes risen with that challenge. Theres no reason spinners cant do the same. What have you made of the pitches following the change in the toss rule, insofar as they are helping England producing spinners? The pitches have been better this year, certainly in the first part of the season, although that might change down the home stretch as teams chase results. So the games being longer has brought more spin into the game. At least thats how it appears. I think wickets in general have offered a bit more of late, although they dont all rag. Its my view that at the Test grounds, because of the drainage, more moisture has been pulled out from the block. That, with the toss, has helped spinners. Last year some wickets resembled shag-pile carpets.What about two-divisional cricket? How does that affect blooding youngsters, and spinners in particular? I think divisional cricket has been really good and made it very competitive. There are some really good sides in Division One. The problem were facing now is that its creating a bit of a must stay up culture at some of the big clubs, including ours. That can lead you away from a development and playing-young-players approach to quick-fix what can we get in?, whether that be overseas, Kolpaks, etc. Form is cyclical and you should be able to go back to come forward again. Thats part of the process were in. Parkinson, Haseeb Hameed, Saqib Mahmood… Livingstone is 21, [Alexander] Davies - to give those guys a good run at it, you need to be sure you can compete as well. Thats why Id favour going into a conference system, with playoffs at the end.So that there wasnt the threat of the trapdoor all the time? Yeah, its a threat to us coaches. The world of being a coach [in one job] for 20 years is gone.If you had a talented young spinner but the role was nailed down by a senior spinner, how would you handle him from the point of view of helping Englands overall production of spinners: advise him to go on loan? Yeah, could do. Theres also 2nd XI cricket, and some of our guys are linked to Minor Counties. Youve got to get overs uunder your belt, including practising.dddddddddddd Were in a pretty lucky position in that weve got Parky, Simon Kerrigan, then Stephen Parry and Adam Lilley, who are probably more one-day focused. Its quite challenging managing their expectations, particularly when you dont play on a lot of spinning wickets. Ultimately its down to them. We can offer them a form of security which is a longer contract, 12 months of the year, but with that theres no guarantee of playing. I do think the market will become much more open and movement will become much more free, certainly the loan market. If a gaps developing between the two divisions in red-ball cricket, I think it would be quite healthy to loan, the only issue being perception towards coaches. Arent they doing their jobs properly? Why arent their players performing?Do you think T20 is making it harder for young spinners these days, and its harder to switch between the two while still getting overs under your belt, while learning the game? I think itll be better next year, but I never had a problem with it [switching between formats]. I used to bowl a lot at the death in 40- or 50-over cricket. I think T20s given some spinners a new lease of life, because of the importance of the role in T20. It doesnt promote the repetition and honing of good skill, because those that do tend to go out of the park because batsmen know whats coming. There are guys who, going back to red ball from T20, have found it challenging.Would you then consider keeping a young spinner away from white-ball cricket until their early twenties, so they could get those basics? Thats all good in principle, but theres also winning games of cricket. Again, were a bit blessed with four really good operators. But that brings its own problems, because they all want to play everything. I think there are some spinners - and I dont mean this disrespectfully - whove had success in T20 because theyre not particularly consistent or accurate. In red-ball cricket, they get mashed, because people sit on you and wait. You even find that between T20 and 50-over cricket. Natural variation in T20s is useful because batsmen never know whats coming. They could decide to run at a ball that turns out to be your drag-down and end up getting stumped.There are two legspinners in county cricket - Will Beer at Sussex and Max Waller at Somerset - who are around 28 years old, have played 20 first-class matches between them and yet are still full-time cricketers. Clearly, T20 specialisation is a legitimate way for a young spinner to see their future. Whose choice would that path be: the young spinner or the county? It has to be theirs, ultimately. Those two bowlers might be examples of what I was talking about with natural variation. When you want men around the bat, in red-ball cricket, that isnt particularly helpful. So it might be a case that theyre not getting picked. But T20 has changed the game and its now a career choice - even for quick blokes, with someone like Tymal Mills, whos got a new lease of life just by bowling four overs a game, which is fantastic for him. But with pushing spinners into T20 specialisation, it comes back to seeing enough potential in someone [for red-ball cricket], players who might not be the finished article but are worth investing in.But then different clubs have different focuses. For me, the County Championship is the pinnacle and Id like the majority of my staff to have the ability to play this form of the game. If they cant play red-ball cricket then Im not sure Ive got the right man.What would you do with someone like Scott Borthwick, who Graeme Swann was really talking up as a bowler a few years ago, who played an Ashes Test, since when hes morphed into a batsman. Is it in the best interests of England that he plays his cricket up in Durham on a pitch that traditionally favours their strong seam attack? Shouldnt he be encouraged to go and play on wickets where he might bowl a bit more? I cant comment on someone elses career like that, because Im a director of cricket at an opposing club, but that all comes down to what Scott wants. He got a bit frustrated when [Ian] Blackwell was up there, but he bowled a fair bit against us when we were up there, and I thought his control was much better.What do you think of the National Performance Centre at Loughboroughs role in producing young spinners? I think Loughborough does a lot of good stuff. In the past its had some bad raps. They offer an incredible amount of support for the best players in the country, and even the levels below that - opportunities to train there, scholarships to go abroad. The work they do on innovation - things like spin counters, biomechanics, what the perfect spinner looks like around the world, replicating that in bowling machines - is really good. But the bottom line is, the raw material comes from us. They cant do anything unless we, and the club system below us, produce good raw materials. What they can do then is try to take that player to the next level.Would they ever knock on your door and make suggestions? Not to tell you how to use a spinner, but just whether they perceive guys as future international players and how they see their development. Absolutely. Suchy [Peter Such, ECB Lead Spin Coach] will talk to us and ask what we think is best for Matt Parkinson this winter. Theyll say: Is it going to play abroad? Is it spending more time with the programme [ECB Elite Player Pathway]? Is it going to Loughborough? Is it staying with you? That sort of support has come a really long way and I dont think we should be fearful of that intervention. Youve got to be careful at what stage that comes and at what level, because you dont want any player getting the wrong idea of where they are in the scheme of things. We have to be very careful not to raise their expectations too high too soon, or their perception of where they are. As long as its clear that this is a mechanism to help you go further in the game - because we believe you do have that potential - then great.You think about the spinning geniuses who learned on Indian Ocean beaches or rooftops in Lahore. Is there not a way for the ECB machinery, with its vast resources, to sort of back away and let spinners be for longer, let them be idiosyncratic, stand totally back from any coaching at all? I go back to my time at Warwickshire. I was lucky in that I joined just as Bob Woolmer was coach. Dermot Reeve was a really innovative and supportive captain. It was an environment where you were encouraged just to try things, provided youd worked hard at it in practice. I had a quick, swinging arm ball from my days as a seamer, so if it was swinging, Dermot often used to get me on early to see if I could hit the pads.I also bowled at the death in one-day cricket, which was quite new for a spinner, because I could hit the hole. Thats how I started bowling over the wicket. I had time to develop there, but its a harsh existence, bowling spin. You have to support them, nurture them, give them opportunities. But they have their end of the bargain too.When I was at Warwickshire the expectation wasnt that Id come into the side at 21. I had time. Nowadays the pressure for us as directors of cricket is that its all well and good, just sending them away, letting them go. I could say, Go off to Australia, Parky, go stand on your own two feet, but if he gets it wrong, or if he changes his action, or someone else tells him to change his action, or if he pisses it up the wall, hes not someone I can afford to say, Dont worry about it, because hes not playing yet. A lot of our big assets are now 19, 20, 21 years old. You become a little more protective, and all-year-round contracts have bred that as well. But if youre sure about the timing, let them go, whether it be to the subcontinent or Australia. I remember Matt Hayden went to the subcontinent for a winter to learn how to play spin, and Jesus, he could play. I remember playing against him the next year, a spinning wicket at Edgbaston, and he just kept sweeping the shit out of me. For a player to take that on rather than saying, Where shall I go: Sydney or Chennai? Most of them will say Sydney, because Bondis quite nice.Do counties have the same connections to Asia as potential clubs for the winter? We could. There are plenty of programmes now where we could pay or link. And thats something the ECB support: placing guys in different countries and picking up the cost of that, which is great. It is a question of balancing support against letting them grow. Sometimes they just go, click, and just get it. I got stuck in a rut playing for the Second team, then suddenly I got back in the first team and clicked. So its not a formula. And theres no way you can just manufacture spinners from nowhere.I guess its important to have a second string - batting at No. 8 in your case, or being a dynamic fielder - in that it can buy you time. Adil Rashid has stayed central to Yorkshires plans through some tough times because he also offered a lot with the bat. Does it show the value in nurturing spinners and sticking with them? Its a tricky one. Rash went right through the programmes. Hed been given all the support, all this information. The ECB said, Youve not realised your potential. Go away. There has to be a cut-off point. It has to be up to the individual. Its a combination of taking in all this information, thinking about things for himself, and now hes older and wiser. It does take time with spin. Clearly he had the potential. Its just trying to realise that. Some people never do.Ian Bell suggested to Moeen a couple of years ago that he needed to bowl a couple of miles quicker to challenge top international players. Do you feel that in his early career Rashid bowled it too slowly? And is this something that all spinners have to come to terms with now, with the bat technology and gym bunnies, that this has pushed the basic average speed up, of necessity? Yeah, I think you have to bowl a certain pace, against good players particularly. If you bowl too slow against the better players, theyll just use their feet and mince you. But that depends on your own development and how much intervention is needed. But its as much about energy on the ball as pace. That sounds a bit contradictory, but if theres energy on the ball it spins, it drops, it drifts. If you havent got masses of spin, both ways, then those are your variations. The bats have improved, but thats whats in front of you and you have to adapt. In India, with small boundaries for T20, spinners are often the best bowlers. The short forms have seen a resurgence in legspin, and that can maybe feed back into red-ball cricket.What qualities should a good international spinner have, and what traits would England be looking for in the next generation that comes through? Someone who can attack and hold at the same time. They need to have control. The spinner generally needs to bat a bit too. A good temperament. But where we are now has been the effect of not just one thing: its divisional cricket, green wickets, both of which have had a bit of a lag effect. Hopefully, with some of these young spinners that are around, were fighting back. China NFL Jerseys Cheap Nike NFL Jerseys NFL Jerseys Cheap Wholesale NFL Jerseys Cheap Basketball Jerseys Online Stitched Hockey Jerseys Wholesale Baseball Jerseys Football Jerseys Outlet College Jerseys For Sale Cheap MLB Jerseys Wholesale Soccer Jerseys Wholesale Jerseys For Sale Wholesale NFL Jerseys ' ' '

nach oben springen


Besucher
0 Mitglieder und 6 Gäste sind Online

Wir begrüßen unser neuestes Mitglied: SantaMedical
Forum Statistiken
Das Forum hat 8413 Themen und 8420 Beiträge.

Xobor Einfach ein eigenes Xobor Forum erstellen