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Adios Vaughan

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Michael Vaughan would be remembered for following :
  1. Being the 1st English captain in ages to have looked good to win Ashes in 2005 and to form a team which looked best English team of many many decades from 2003-06.
  2. His silken form with the bat in 2002-03 against India and Australia — two of best test playing teams.
  3. He formed careers of many Englishmen today like Harmison, Fred, KP, Strauss, Geraint Jones, Simon Jones, Hoggie and Bell.
  4. He did a Ganguly to England, he removed the inferiority complex of English teams after mediocre 90s famous for sudden comic collapses. English teams went to similar mould after he got injured in 2006 and never recovered the silken touch in batting and captaincy since 2007 India series.

His innings of 124 in Nottingham against India before he played on Zaheer Khan was his last innings of substance in Tests.

He would surely be clubbed amongst the best English captains of all times and one of the best captains of this decade along side Steve Waugh, Saurav Ganguly, Stephen Fleming and to an extent Ricky Ponting.

Written by chandler23

June 30, 2009 at 4:50 pm

Michael Vaughan to retire per cricinfo ?

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Having lost out on a place in the pre-Ashes squad, Michael Vaughan is expected to announce his retirement from international cricket next week, according to reports in the English media. In January, Vaughan withdrew from the IPL auction to concentrate on getting back into the Test side in time for the Ashes.

Vaughan, 34, who led England to regain the Ashes in 2005, has made only 159 runs at 19.88 for Yorkshire this season. He hasn’t played international cricket since stepping down from captaincy during the home series against South Africa last year. The last time he scored a century in a competitive match was for Yorkshire in a 50-over game against Surrey in Abu Dhabi this March. He has also struggled with injuries to his knee which had kept him out of cricket for over a year between November 2005 and May 2007.

Written by chandler23

June 28, 2009 at 6:57 am

Vaughan can stem in England rot ?

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Perhaps tahis time England need Vaughan and may be he as a batsman can stem the rot England are fast sliding to. Now its their 3rd consecutive series loss (almost) and the batsmen aint performing especially Ali Cook and Ian Bell. Vaughan can be inspirational provided he is back in runs and may be his presence could boost the spirits as he is a bit like Saurav Ganguly to England as he built the team brick by brick post Nasser Hussein in 2004 – 2006. But the big question is will the selectors bet on him ? Or is he still on ?

Written by chandler23

February 11, 2009 at 3:58 am

Nasser Hussein turns the tide

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Usually the English media and the cricketers have been critical and wary of Indian playing conditions and many times they have skipped the tour to the country. For example in 1987 World Cup, there were no Ian Botham and David Gower in the side that went on to the final losing to Australia by 7 runs. Darren Gough and Andy Caddick – the 2 leading English fast bowlers of early 2000s for England skipped the 2001 tour to India . Their 2006 tour to the country was marred by injuries and suspicious virus that finally turned to a depression for Marcus Treskothick confirmed the doubts in Indian minds that England don’t pay the required dignity and respect to the Indian cricket, it deserves. May be the fact that India uprooted England as the ICC powerhouse or may be the fact that England now cannot have its own way in ICC or may be the fact that the English media and players yet take India to be a country full of pied pipers and snake charmers. May be they also think that conditions in India are very hot and humid, the pitches are slow and low and the crowd is bad mannered. Quite of it could have been true until late 90s, but then now the things have changed. Many players in the ill fated tour of 1993 suffered from stomach disorders (how much that’s related to Indian spicy food is a subject of debate).

England have toured the country for a Test series 2 times in this decade and just 2 times in 1980s and 1990s. Contrast that to a England tour to West Indies or South Africa. The upcoming series would be the quickest home series India plays against England in long memory (that I have). And we almost see a strong England side (as they believe and the players that make to XV) touring India subject to the condition that none of the selected player falls to injuries or pulls out of due to varied reasons. Lack of England’s top players in IPL was another example of how England sees India. But then not all the players see India in the same light. One such player is Nasser Hussein who has been a prolific England captain who actually transformed the England side from worst Test playing country (those days in late 90s, BD were not a Test playing country) to one of the most competitive team in Tests. Michael Vaughan built on the legacy of Hussein and the results were visible in the streak from 2003 – 2005 when England won almost everything they played.

Hussein in 2001 tour captained his weak side to a series loss of 0-1 with actually his side holding upper hand in drawn Tests in Bangalore and Ahmedabad. He got Tendulkar stumped for the only time in his Test career to Giles by bowling a constant nagging leg side line round the wicket. It was negative tactics, but then Hussein always believed in keeping the runs flow in check and he constantly lays stress on keeping the run flow in check to score points over opposition. The point I am trying to drive across is that the same man has now said some minty sweet and cool words about the tour to India which should act as an eye opener to the prejudiced English media and players.

Here it goes :


India is a fantastic tour, one I’ve never had a problem with. Everything about it is just great: you realize how lucky you are as a cricketer; they love the game; you are the centre of attention; the hotels are great; the food is great; the crowds are great – it’s just a wonderful tour to be on.

You don’t get specifically ill anymore and you are looked after very well. But the cricket is tough and one of the pieces of advice I would pass on to Kevin Pietersen, as captain, which I learned on my tour there, is to try and stay in control of the run rate out on the field.

You have to try and control the emotion of the crowd, keep them subdued when the likes of Rahul Dravid, Virender Sehwag, MS Dhoni and of course, Sachin Tendulkar are batting. If you can do that and quieten the crowd then you’re on top of the game, but if you just go in without any plans and start getting smacked around, then things can easily slip away from you and suddenly you find yourself batting last on a turning pitch.

England need to put the pressure back on the Indians and that first Test in Ahmedabad is even more important than usual because if they can get to Mumbai still in with a chance of winning the series, you’ll be amazed how much the Indian public gets on their own players’ backs.

And then his views on Fab four and the seniors :


Those players have a really important series coming up against Australia which will go a long way to deciding what England are actually facing on the field. If they go well in that, you can expect a very confident India side. There has been a little bit of a shift in their selection and the senior players – the Dravids, the Gangulys, the Tendulkars, VVS Laxman – because they haven’t performed for a while. Youngsters are starting to knock on the door more and more, but the one thing we all know is that you can never write off India’s star players.

Michael Vaughan was dropped off the touring party for lack of form and fitness (mental more than physical). But then didn’t he already clarify that he is not in right state of mind to tour India. He would utilize the time to regain the fitness to be back for West Indies tour in Mar – Apr 2009 (before Ashes). Another prejudice towards India. England doesn’t have any more domestic cricket and he is misfit for international cricket for time being. So how is he going to ensure he is back to scoring runs again ? Playing in domestic cricket in South Africa or Australia ? If yes, then why not India ?

Written by chandler23

September 30, 2008 at 6:41 am

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