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26th December 2011, 22:44 #1
Ed Cowan announces his retirement from all forms of professional cricket [Update Post #28]
Makes his test debut for Australia at the age of 29 against India
A gritty innings of 68 before he was given out wrongly caught behind by Ian Gould off Ashwin.
Didn't watch the entire innings, but of what I saw he looked solid getting behind the line of the ball and letting the ones a little outside off go through to the keeper.
Your thoughts?
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26th December 2011, 22:56 #2
Local Club Star
- Debut
- Nov 2011
- Runs
- 1,707
- Mentioned
- 0 Post(s)
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He plays worse than Misbah/Trott.
Almost fell asleep watching him yesterday.
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26th December 2011, 23:12 #3
He was very nervous before lunch and looked a walking wicket but after lunch this guy showed some superb temprement along with some nice solid strokeplay. He looked a lot better than Phil Hughes.
Lions don't lose sleep over the opinions of Sheep
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27th December 2011, 00:30 #4
Decent technique. bores the **** out of the opposition but effective and in form. india is lucky to get him on 68. could have had a 100.
is he the next chanderpaul for india?
2 possibilities exist: Either we are alone in the Universe or we are not. Both are terrifying.
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27th December 2011, 00:32 #5
Misbahism spreading
It is either a heartache or a headache ..Argh relationships.
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27th December 2011, 00:33 #6
lets not forget the original misbah :chanderpaul. misbah atleast is watchable when playing his shots.
2 possibilities exist: Either we are alone in the Universe or we are not. Both are terrifying.
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27th December 2011, 00:36 #7
T20I Captain
- Debut
- Oct 2010
- Runs
- 44,701
- Mentioned
- 407 Post(s)
- Tagged
- 9 Thread(s)
How was he a walking wicket? He wasn't really nervous at all. It's just the Indians bowled well to him. Anything outside off-stump he will leave all day. He's a good solid test opener.
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27th December 2011, 00:43 #8
against seamers, he looked more secured than the over-hyped
Ashwin really troubled him thou
Hammad Azam - Remember the name !
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27th December 2011, 00:45 #9
Lions don't lose sleep over the opinions of Sheep
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27th December 2011, 00:53 #10
One thing Aus can use is a batsman who can leave balls outside off stump and he seems to be able to do that.
"If this happens I will swim across the Charles River! In winter!" -- OZGOD on NZ batting 6 sessions
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27th December 2011, 01:12 #11
Apparently he is known as one of the best leavers of the ball in Aussie cricket.
His Holiness Geoffrey would adore him!
It's not the failures, the heartbreak or the losses that hurt. It's the hope.
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27th December 2011, 02:26 #12
With Watson returning soon and Warner looking solid looks like Khwaja and Hughes will have a tough time getting back in the team
If winning isn't everything, why do they keep score?
Vince Lombardi
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27th December 2011, 04:24 #13
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27th December 2011, 04:31 #14
First Class Star
- Debut
- Jul 2011
- Runs
- 3,804
- Mentioned
- 0 Post(s)
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I agree, I really really like him.
The good shots shocked me though, out of nowhere he pulled out some beauties.
And being compared to Trott, Misbah and Cook isn't bad. I'm a bowler myself and would rather watch my team bowling rather than batting. And I will admit there are many times when I've stopped watching when Cook is on. But he is still one of my favorite batsmen because he does what the team needs him to do, even if it isn't pretty.
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27th December 2011, 05:15 #15
Tape Ball Star
- Debut
- Dec 2010
- Runs
- 899
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He is a clasic player i think having 1 or 2 defensive players in a test side can't be bad for them
3 kinds of people; some make things happen, some watch it happen and others who say what happened?
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13th July 2013, 20:12 #16
T20I Captain
- Debut
- Oct 2010
- Runs
- 44,701
- Mentioned
- 407 Post(s)
- Tagged
- 9 Thread(s)
Really really poor batsman. Can't rotate strike to save his life.
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13th July 2013, 20:14 #17
Ed Cowan
An extremely mediocre player.
Wouldn't even watch him if I'm paid for it.
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13th July 2013, 20:17 #18
Never rated him since his debut. Khwaja is better than him IMO.
#1 FAN AND DIE HARD SUPPORTER OF SHAHZAIB HASSAN
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13th July 2013, 20:28 #19
David Warner miles better than his hack. Even hack is a way too generous word for a batsman like Cowan.
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13th July 2013, 20:55 #20
T20I Captain
- Debut
- Oct 2010
- Runs
- 44,701
- Mentioned
- 407 Post(s)
- Tagged
- 9 Thread(s)
Hopefully they bring in Khawaja or Warner for the nextgam
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13th July 2013, 21:07 #21
I dislike him more for the fact he talks too much. To be honest though kawaja while more gifted is far more mentally fragile
"Last time Uganda toured Canada, half their team ran away to start a new life" - cricfan967
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13th July 2013, 21:24 #22
First Class Star
- Debut
- Feb 2012
- Runs
- 4,057
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- 32 Post(s)
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- 1 Thread(s)
I think Ed is clearly out of his depth.
I'm not a huge fan of either Warner or Kwahaja et but both would still be better options than Cowan. I expect Ed will get one more test though.
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13th July 2013, 21:30 #23
Pretty sure this is Ed cowan's last test match... Get Khawaja or even Faulkner/ Wade instead of him....
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13th July 2013, 21:33 #24
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14th July 2013, 12:31 #25
ed cowan is absolutely crap....doesnt look like international standard to me
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14th July 2013, 12:34 #26
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14th July 2013, 12:44 #27
Tape Ball Star
- Debut
- Mar 2011
- Runs
- 661
- Mentioned
- 0 Post(s)
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Ed Cowan
Rogers and Cowan one after the other does not make sense. He was much better than most of his teammates in India. He just needs an attacking batsman at the other end to be effective. No 3 is the wrong slot.
Saachinnn Sachin
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7th March 2018, 09:36 #28
Cricket Australia has today congratulated Ed Cowan, following the batsman’s announcement that he has retired from professional cricket.
Cowan represented his country in 18 Tests, debuting in the 2011 Boxing Day Test against India and playing his last Test during Australia’s 2013 Ashes tour of England.
He scored 1001 Test runs across this period including a high score of 136 runs against South Africa in 2012, partnering with then-captain Michael Clarke for a stunning 259-run fourth-wicket stand during the first Test of the series in Brisbane.
Cricket Australia CEO James Sutherland said:
“Ed has made a great contribution to Australian cricket over the course of his career, at an international and domestic level, and we congratulate him on his achievements.
“Best remembered as a patient and considered opening batsman, the numbers accumulated by Ed during his career reveal the rewards of his perseverance and underscore the reason he is held in high regard by those who he has played with and against.
“We wish Ed all the best in his retirement from cricket and for his future endeavours.”
In addition to representing his country, Cowan enjoyed a successful domestic career in Australia for New South Wales and Tasmania, as well as in England.
In a first-class career that spanned 143 matches, beginning in 2003, Cowan scored more than 10,000 runs at an average of 41.89.
He also played 98 List A matches and 16 Twenty20s during his career.
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