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Thread: GLAMMY

  1. #251

    Re: GLAMMY

    I agree with much of what has been said in the last two posts but at some stage the hierarchy have to take responsibility. We have had three seasons under Morris and if anything things have gotten worse on the pitch although financially the club is now much more secure and Morris is rightly looking at using the ground for other income streams.
    However results on the pitch have to start improving and the club need to be able to bring some of our youngsters through.

    My concern is that the youngsters are playing in losing sides. This won't help their development. Will the likes of Donald, Carey,Morgan and Karlson go the same way as Salter who looks surplus to requirements having failed to progress.

    We also desperately need a batting coach too.

  2. #252

    Re: GLAMMY

    Yet another great start NOT

    55-5 versus Essex

  3. #253

    Re: GLAMMY

    Quote Originally Posted by Llanedeyrnblue View Post
    Yet another great start NOT

    55-5 versus Essex
    They went from 30-0 to 34-5. I was listening to the on line commentary for a while and Don Topley the former Essex seamer asked Nick Webb who Glamorgan's batting coach was - Webb had to admit that we didn't have one and said it was a subject that was brought up in a meeting Jacques Rudolph had with supporters last week!

  4. #254

    Re: GLAMMY

    Quote Originally Posted by the other bob wilson View Post
    They went from 30-0 to 34-5. I was listening to the on line commentary for a while and Don Topley the former Essex seamer asked Nick Webb who Glamorgan's batting coach was - Webb had to admit that we didn't have one and said it was a subject that was brought up in a meeting Jacques Rudolph had with supporters last week!

    At least Napier won't be there for Essex next season he's retiring, anyway Essex look like getting promoted.
    As for not having a batting coach, unbelievable

  5. #255

    Re: GLAMMY

    Quote Originally Posted by Llanedeyrnblue View Post
    Another pathetic,tame surrender looming, Macheda just threw his wkt away going for a six, we're not in a run chase
    At least he's off city's books though, so every cloud...

  6. #256

    Re: GLAMMY

    Quote Originally Posted by Rjk View Post
    At least he's off city's books though, so every cloud...
    You knew who I meant though

  7. #257

    Re: GLAMMY

    158-7 young Carlson 56 not out

  8. #258

    Re: GLAMMY

    Good recovery going on by Carlson 72 n o and Morgan 31 n o ....199-7

    The first 5 batters could only muster 34 runs between them

  9. #259

    Re: GLAMMY

    Great batting by Carlson and Morgan 100no and 50no respectively. There may be some hope for the future!

  10. #260

    Re: GLAMMY

    Kiran Carlson is just 18. He has put more senior players to shame with a brilliant century. Well done to Owen Morgan too on another mature batting performance.
    These two have so far put on 129 . Brilliant effort and shows that we have two players who are willing to fight for their wickets. Let's hope others follow their suit.

    Things have to change next season. With Ingram and Cooke playing four day cricket competition for places will be much tougher so someone like Rudolph will have to justify his place in the side. Ditto David Lloyd who has had a wretched few months and Meschede too.

  11. #261

    Re: GLAMMY

    I had a giggle when hearing about a delayed start due to the kit van getting caught in traffic, haha.

    We signed Scott Borthwick today, life is kinda rosy...

  12. #262

    Re: GLAMMY

    Quote Originally Posted by Pearcey3 View Post
    Kiran Carlson is just 18. He has put more senior players to shame with a brilliant century. Well done to Owen Morgan too on another mature batting performance.
    These two have so far put on 129 . Brilliant effort and shows that we have two players who are willing to fight for their wickets. Let's hope others follow their suit.

    Things have to change next season. With Ingram and Cooke playing four day cricket competition for places will be much tougher so someone like Rudolph will have to justify his place in the side. Ditto David Lloyd who has had a wretched few months and Meschede too.

    THIS ^^^^

    These two youngsters have put the more experienced batsmen to shame, we need a batting coach for next season to bring the youngsters on.

  13. #263

    Re: GLAMMY

    Quote Originally Posted by Alex! View Post
    I had a giggle when hearing about a delayed start due to the kit van getting caught in traffic, haha.

    We signed Scott Borthwick today, life is kinda rosy...
    That's moneybags Surrey, the team we bowled out for 93 and 110 in this season's 20/20, you're talking about there is it - perennial under achievers given their resources.

    On the Glamorgan front, what an effort by Carlson and Morgan - without these great moments from our youngsters and a decent first campaign for van der Gugten to cling on to, this season would be a disaster.

  14. #264

    Re: GLAMMY

    Quote Originally Posted by the other bob wilson View Post
    That's moneybags Surrey, the team we bowled out for 93 and 110 in this season's 20/20, you're talking about there is it - perennial under achievers given their resources.

    On the Glamorgan front, what an effort by Carlson and Morgan - without these great moments from our youngsters and a decent first campaign for van der Gugten to cling on to, this season would be a disaster.
    Its all about how you look at the team.

    Last night Steve James tweeted that this is the most promising season for Glamorgan for many a year, with young players making stand out performances, but with experienced players not performing the results have been bad.

    I personally cannot remember a year where so many of the younger players have put in performances of such a level, we have the youngest Glamorgan Centurion yesterday, and Donald equaled Maynard's record for youngest to 100 runs. That all bodes well for the future.

    With regards to the coaching issue, its difficult to call for a specialist batting coach because i don't know how the current system works, there are coaches and those coaches will take batting sessions, there will be batting drills in the nets. I remember earlier in the year Croft being quoted as saying that he wants the players to play with a care free attitude and to express themselves. In my opinion that attitude has gone too far, and needs to be reigned back in.

  15. #265

    Re: GLAMMY

    Quote Originally Posted by qccfc View Post
    Its all about how you look at the team.

    Last night Steve James tweeted that this is the most promising season for Glamorgan for many a year, with young players making stand out performances, but with experienced players not performing the results have been bad.

    I personally cannot remember a year where so many of the younger players have put in performances of such a level, we have the youngest Glamorgan Centurion yesterday, and Donald equaled Maynard's record for youngest to 100 runs. That all bodes well for the future.

    With regards to the coaching issue, its difficult to call for a specialist batting coach because i don't know how the current system works, there are coaches and those coaches will take batting sessions, there will be batting drills in the nets. I remember earlier in the year Croft being quoted as saying that he wants the players to play with a care free attitude and to express themselves. In my opinion that attitude has gone too far, and needs to be reigned back in.
    Agree completely - it's my age I suppose, but the modern philosophy seems to be that building an innings gradually is uncool somehow, better to go out and "express yourself" and then get your stumps knocked out after scoring a flashy 20 off fifteen balls.

    The longer forms of cricket had been played a certain way for well over one hundred years, but lately the thinking that this has been based on has been overtaken by the theory that sides "move the game forward quickly" or try to hit their way out of trouble when they are under pressure.

    It's the usual thing that there is a middle way between the two extremes (in this case, a typical Geoff Boycott innings and the sort of absolutely mad shot Mark Wallace played to get out yesterday) which is the right way to go, but Glamorgan have got themselves into a rut whereby they score at something like four an over, yet struggle to bat more than fifty overs.

    The batsmen who were at the crease before Carson and Morgan got together yesterday should be feeling embarrassed this morning after seeing two youngsters with about ten first class matches between them battle to retrieve the mess they had created, but, they never play as if the lessons of previous failures have been learned, so I doubt it if they will - they'll no doubt go out and "express themselves" again in the second innings when we'll be something like 80-6 off about twenty overs.
    Last edited by the other bob wilson; 13-09-16 at 08:18.

  16. #266

    Re: GLAMMY

    Quote Originally Posted by the other bob wilson View Post
    Agree completely - it's my age I suppose, but the modern philosophy seems to be that building an innings gradually is uncool somehow, better to go out and "express yourself" and then get your stumps knocked out after scoring a flashy 20 off fifteen balls.

    The longer forms of cricket had been played a certain way for well over one hundred years, but lately the thinking that this has been based on has been overtaken by the theory that sides "move the game forward quickly" or try to hit their way out of trouble when they are under pressure.

    It's the usual thing that there is a middle way between the two extremes (in this case, a typical Geoff Boycott innings and the sort of absolutely mad shot Mark Wallace played to get out to yesterday) which is the right way to go, but Glamorgan have got themselves into a rut whereby they score at something like four an over, yet struggle to bat more than fifty overs.

    The batsmen who were at the crease before Carson and Morgan got together yesterday should be feeling embarrassed after seeing two youngsters with about ten first class matches between them battle retrieve the mess they had created, but, they never play as if the lessons of previous failures have been learned, so I doubt it if they will - they'll no doubt go out and "express themselves" again in the second innings when we'll be something like 80-6 off about twenty overs.
    Yes i would agree that there needs to be an attitude change within the coaching. If you are being coached to play freely and encouraged to play your shots then that attitude will creep out onto the pitch and see the the bad performances you are seeing.

    I think we may have a case where our side is littered with 7s and not enough 1-5s. What you want from you 7 is to push the game forward when there is 300 on the board to play freely to move the game onto a point where you are in the dominant position. What we are seeing is a top order collapse and our lower order trying to score their way out of it. It may be an attitude of my best game is scoring quickly and that is the best way of us achieving a score.

    When im coaching a younger player (really low level), or a younger side i work on the base with inexperienced players of them getting scores but not overly concerned about consistency. Once they get that score (and that can be 30s at my level, or 100 at county level), they know they can do it, it gives them the base blocks to repeat it. Then over the next 3 years you then work on them getting those scores on a more regular basis. On this front it looks positive with Lloyd, Selman, Donald, Carson, Morgan all being able to get scores, and are all on the path to build on that with consistency. Again when im coaching this is my primary focus, with younger players and results will then come down the line.

    Talking again about my coaching experience, i was a proper number 11 batsman, and couldn't really bat, however i find it easier to coach batting, as i can understand the techniques, and pass that information on. Whereas where i'm a more natural bowler, i find that harder to coach because its just something i do. So on that basis i see no reason why Croft or Watkins cannot take batting coaching sessions.

    I was a fan that wanted younger players in the Gamorgan team, a year or 2 ago i was looking at the squads and scratching my head at where these young players were. The cry was i dont care about results, i want to see some development. What we are seeing now is exactly no results but lots of development. At this point im satisfied with that, i've gotten what i've asked for. I can see this side moving forward, im a bit more positive about the future.

  17. #267

    Re: GLAMMY

    Quote Originally Posted by qccfc View Post
    Yes i would agree that there needs to be an attitude change within the coaching. If you are being coached to play freely and encouraged to play your shots then that attitude will creep out onto the pitch and see the the bad performances you are seeing.

    I think we may have a case where our side is littered with 7s and not enough 1-5s. What you want from you 7 is to push the game forward when there is 300 on the board to play freely to move the game onto a point where you are in the dominant position. What we are seeing is a top order collapse and our lower order trying to score their way out of it. It may be an attitude of my best game is scoring quickly and that is the best way of us achieving a score.

    When im coaching a younger player (really low level), or a younger side i work on the base with inexperienced players of them getting scores but not overly concerned about consistency. Once they get that score (and that can be 30s at my level, or 100 at county level), they know they can do it, it gives them the base blocks to repeat it. Then over the next 3 years you then work on them getting those scores on a more regular basis. On this front it looks positive with Lloyd, Selman, Donald, Carson, Morgan all being able to get scores, and are all on the path to build on that with consistency. Again when im coaching this is my primary focus, with younger players and results will then come down the line.

    Talking again about my coaching experience, i was a proper number 11 batsman, and couldn't really bat, however i find it easier to coach batting, as i can understand the techniques, and pass that information on. Whereas where i'm a more natural bowler, i find that harder to coach because its just something i do. So on that basis i see no reason why Croft or Watkins cannot take batting coaching sessions.

    I was a fan that wanted younger players in the Gamorgan team, a year or 2 ago i was looking at the squads and scratching my head at where these young players were. The cry was i dont care about results, i want to see some development. What we are seeing now is exactly no results but lots of development. At this point im satisfied with that, i've gotten what i've asked for. I can see this side moving forward, im a bit more positive about the future.
    It's a good point you make in your last paragraph - if you had told me that there would be five Glamorgan youngsters who would score their maiden hundreds in Championship cricket this summer, I would have thought you were mad.

    I also agree with you about how a team's number seven and eights should play. By and large, I don't see the likes of Wagg, Meschede and Wallace as being the problem - over the past couple of seasons the first two named especially are well in credit as batsmen as far as I'm concerned, given the number of times they've been let down by those coming in ahead of them.

    In that conversation between Messrs Topley and Webb I referred to earlier. the latter said that Croft was the go to man when it came to batting, but he also mentioned Terry Shaw, who I seem to remember was a counter attacking type batsman who Maynard often picked in front of Colin Metson because he was the better batter. Again I agree with you though - I see no reason why Croft (who I remember playing a long defensive innings for England to help save a test against South Africa) and Watkin couldn't pass on sound batting advice - in fact, as bowlers you'd like to think that they'd ram home the importance of batting long to our batsmen because it gives the bowlers the sort of rest they need before they have to go again.

  18. #268

    Re: GLAMMY

    Quote Originally Posted by the other bob wilson View Post
    That's moneybags Surrey, the team we bowled out for 93 and 110 in this season's 20/20, you're talking about there is it - perennial under achievers given their resources.

    On the Glamorgan front, what an effort by Carlson and Morgan - without these great moments from our youngsters and a decent first campaign for van der Gugten to cling on to, this season would be a disaster.
    With regards to T20, probably yeah. Had Aaron Finch been with us earlier in the season we'd have probably rolled along a bit further. This season was all about staying in Div 1 which we've done, and even got ourselves another One Day final at Lords on the side.

  19. #269

    Re: GLAMMY

    Glam 286 all out Essex 73-4

  20. #270

    Re: GLAMMY

    Quote Originally Posted by Llanedeyrnblue View Post
    Glam 286 all out Essex 73-4
    It gives me great pleasure to report, not solely because of all the doom and gloom over the last day on the footy front, that Glamorgan's batsmen may have learnt something from their bowlers....how to bat!
    After losing Selman pretty early on, Cap'n Jacques and Bragg look like making a century partnership. Glammy currently 107 for 1 after dispatching the tail this morning pretty cheaply.

    After the Lord mayors show and all but it would be nice to p1ss on moneybags Essex's parade

  21. #271

    Re: GLAMMY

    Glam 150-4, 117 in front

    Just heard that Carlson is now the youngest Glammy player to score a first class century

  22. #272

    Re: GLAMMY

    Quote Originally Posted by MacAdder View Post
    It gives me great pleasure to report, not solely because of all the doom and gloom over the last day on the footy front, that Glamorgan's batsmen may have learnt something from their bowlers....how to bat!
    After losing Selman pretty early on, Cap'n Jacques and Bragg look like making a century partnership. Glammy currently 107 for 1 after dispatching the tail this morning pretty cheaply.

    After the Lord mayors show and all but it would be nice to p1ss on moneybags Essex's parade
    That would be nice I've never liked them

  23. #273

    Re: GLAMMY

    Quote Originally Posted by MacAdder View Post
    It gives me great pleasure to report, not solely because of all the doom and gloom over the last day on the footy front, that Glamorgan's batsmen may have learnt something from their bowlers....how to bat!
    After losing Selman pretty early on, Cap'n Jacques and Bragg look like making a century partnership. Glammy currently 107 for 1 after dispatching the tail this morning pretty cheaply.

    After the Lord mayors show and all but it would be nice to p1ss on moneybags Essex's parade
    Er, 208-7 after declining from 127-1 to 163-7.

  24. #274

    Re: GLAMMY

    You beat me to it Paul. Yet another collapse.
    I think you and others are being very kind to the batsmen. They can't just go out and play their shots. I know you haven't said that but what has been going on has been unprofessional.They should be looking to gradually build an innings rather than play high risk cricket and give their wickets away. They can play like that in T20.

    Crofty isn't a batting specialist. He can nurture our spinners but the batsmen need a former batsman to guide them. It really should be a priority.

    I do agree that the emergence of a healthy crop of youngsters has been a delight to see but it concerns me they will end up picking up the same had habits as their seniors.
    I hope Morris pays off Rudolph as he occupies a place that may deny one of our youngsters next season.

  25. #275

    Re: GLAMMY

    Quote Originally Posted by Pearcey3 View Post
    You beat me to it Paul. Yet another collapse.
    I think you and others are being very kind to the batsmen. They can't just go out and play their shots. I know you haven't said that but what has been going on has been unprofessional.They should be looking to gradually build an innings rather than play high risk cricket and give their wickets away. They can play like that in T20.

    Crofty isn't a batting specialist. He can nurture our spinners but the batsmen need a former batsman to guide them. It really should be a priority.

    I do agree that the emergence of a healthy crop of youngsters has been a delight to see but it concerns me they will end up picking up the same had habits as their seniors.
    I hope Morris pays off Rudolph as he occupies a place that may deny one of our youngsters next season.
    Why does a batsman need a former batsman to coach him.

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