• the venkatapathy raju archive

  • the cricket sadists’ quarterly

    2nd issue out now. Now, go, buy, read, love.
  • ashes 2009 when freddie became jesus

  • listen to jrod on

    Allow 10 seconds for buffering
  • jrod bats with

    Hawk Bespoke Bats

  • CWB on twitter

    Powered by Twitter Tools

  • wanna use the balls?


    cricketwithballs.com by Jrod
    is licensed
    Creative Commons License
    Creative Commons
  • the compulsive ball polisher

    ©hinaman of

    Logo - The Silly Point

  • cricket without boundaries

  • online

  • admin

Unless you saw it you wouldn’t believe it, M Hussey (the King Probot) back in form again.

It wasn’t a magical innings, but he doesn’t really play magical innings.

He was efficient, selective, calm, measured and frustratingly solid (© M Hussey) .

It wasn’t free flowing, but it was a long way from his stoic crease occupation mode as well.

It has been a long time since he made a hundred in any form of cricket, 9 months to be exact, so the fact this was only a warm up on a good pitch and he got dropped didn’t seem to matter as much as him getting his “groove” back did.

As someone who has watched him for 18 months trudge around the crease like a lone born again Christian at the Sydney Mardi Gras, I can honestly say this was way better.

The bowling was good too, Onions and Harmy were on their game, and Bresnan was very respectable.

There was no demons in the pitch, but Hussey has been bringing his own demons for 18 months, a lesser probot would have been crushed by now, but fuck me if Hussey isn’t the little mainframe that could.

In the media there will be a lot of talk of how Australia are struggling with the bat, but the one man they have been waiting on for longer than consecutive pregnancies finally looks like himself again, so this first innings must be regarded as some sort of success.

Some people, you dirty cynical fuckers, might say that any batsmen would come good if he was given 18 months to find his form again, but that kind of talk is disgusting, even if it is correct.

Michael Hussey did do one other great thing today, he held the Australian batting together, which meant it was harder for the English scribes to stick the boot in, especially as Australia out scored England against a way (Rikki Clarke got English wickets) better attack.

Retweet

Tagged as: , ,

5 Comments

  1. Leg Break  •  Jul 2, 2009 @03:22

    Are you sure the small mainframe hasn’t got a bug in the wiring somewhere??

    Just seems a bit strange that he should score so heavily in a match that’s not going to do anything for his average.

  2. Dhananjay Mhatre  •  Jul 2, 2009 @04:10

    Ain’t it a concern that apart from Katich-Hussey and Hussey – Johnson, the other top order partnerships contributed only 50 runs? Australian batting is depending on two main batters and 1 Johnson to bail them out all the time. Not good, especially in a 5 match series.

  3. batting in ned kelly's helmet  •  Jul 2, 2009 @04:13

    LB, it is a first class match. Note that the first game wasn’t first class and what happened to Hussey? Got a bit of a start on and then thought he’d be better off having a little rest.

  4. Leg Break  •  Jul 2, 2009 @04:16

    I can see what you’re saying Ned, but when people talk about the absurdity of Hussey’s averages they don’t talk about his 1st class average. Still seems like a waste of a statistic to me.

    I think the disks on his raid array probably need reseating.

  5. jamie64  •  Jul 3, 2009 @00:38

    Tradesman like innings.

    Australia needs a tradesman.