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15 Feb 2016 07:05 #292012
by DownUnda
What if the best XIs from the northern and southern hemispheres faced off in an intergalactic Test match? We crunched the numbers
As the best basketball players in the world squared off in the annual East versus West All-Star exhibition match in Toronto on Monday, Australian time, it's hard not to ponder what a cricket version would look like. All-Star matches have been tried in the past, between domestic and international outfits, but nothing that compares to the glitz and glamour of our North American cousins. Almost 40 years ago, during the revolutionary World Series Cricket days, Australia and the West Indies faced a Rest of the World team comprised of the players from South Africa, Pakistan and England. In January 2005, Australia hosted the Tsunami Appeal one-day match between the ICC World XI and Asia XI to help raise funds for the victims of the 2004 Boxing Day tsunami that devastated, among other nations, Sri Lanka. Later that year, following a decade of global dominance, Australia went up against a World XI in three one-day internationals and a six-day Test at the SCG, though the hype of the series was lessened by England's historic Ashes win only a month earlier. And while the Indian Premier League and domestic Twenty20 competitions around the world have mixed together international stars with local players, there is no cricket equivalent to an American All-Star match like those in the NBA, NFL and NHL. In an attempt to fill that void, cricket.com.au has commissioned a fictional Test match between the Northern Hemisphere and Southern Hemisphere, to be played on Mars, where the pitch conditions remain unknown but the chance of rain impeding play is unlikely. Only players currently fit and eligible to play for their country have been considered, meaning suspended Pakistan spinner Yasir Shah is ruled out, as is injured Australian quick Mitchell Starc. Performances in the past 12 months only are taken into consideration, hence the absence of India Test captain Virat Kohli (447 runs at 34) and Proteas pace ace Dale Steyn (10 wickets in four Tests).
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15 Feb 2016 07:12 - 15 Feb 2016 07:20 #292013
by DownUnda
Northern Hemisphere XI
England captain Alastair Cook (1,541 runs at 49.70) and India's Shikhar Dhawan (485 at 53.88) form an all-left-handed opening partnership. Cook's calm composure complements Dhawan's destructive demeanour, and the pair can cover seam, swing or spin at the top of the order.
Pakistan veteran Younus Khan (789 at 60.69) takes his place at first-drop in a middle order packed with right-handers. England's Joe Root – officially the world's No.2-ranked Test batsman – enters at No.4, ahead of Sri Lanka captain Angelo Mathews (822 at 45.66) and allrounder Ben Stokes of England, whose abilities with both bat (1,104 at 36.80) and ball (35 wickets at 41.31) warrant his inclusion. Standing behind the stumps is Pakistan gloveman Sarfraz Ahmed, who in eight Tests poached 33 dismissals including 10 stumpings. The bowling attack is well-rounded with two spinners and two speedsters. England's most successful new-ball partnership – Stuart Broad (69 at 23.92) and James Anderson (53 at 25.33) – will lead the NH XI.
Assuming the Mars strip takes spin, India off-spinner Ravi Ashwin (57 at 14.38) and Sri Lanka left-arm orthodox Rangana Herath (36 at 32.11) will make the most of any turn on offer.
Last edit: 15 Feb 2016 07:20 by
DownUnda.
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15 Feb 2016 07:18 #292014
by DownUnda
Southern Hemisphere XI
Opening the batting for the SH XI is Australian duo David Warner (1,339 at 58.21) and Usman Khawaja (644 at 128.80). While Khawaja is batting out of position, he can often face the new ball early at his customary No.3, as he did, with aplomb, in the recently concluded first Test in Wellington.
The middle-order is star-studded. In at No.3 is New Zealand champion Kane Williamson (899 at 64.21), alongside the world's No.1 Test batsman Steve Smith (1,357 at 71.42) and South Africa's Hashim Amla (601 at 40.06). It was a tight call between Amla and compatriot AB de Villiers, but his 201 against England won him the position. At No.6 it's Adam Voges (1,267 runs) and his ridiculous average of 97.46. Voges's outstanding form has kept an allrounder out of the XI, with Williamson and Smith to combine for some part-time overs of spin if necessary.
Australia's Peter Nevill will keep wickets after taking 42 dismissals from 11 matches since debuting in the second Ashes Test at Lord's in July. The bowling attack is pace heavy with Australia seamer Josh Hazlewood (55 at 22.94) the spearhead. Black Caps left-armer Trent Boult (34 at 32.47) and Proteas young gun Kagiso Rabada (24 at 24.70) adding some raw pace to the three-prong speed attack. Rabada has burst onto the international scene, taking three five-wicket hauls and one match haul of 10 wickets or more in his first six Tests.
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15 Feb 2016 11:56 #292067
by timmyj51
Stuff the Stars!! :

This NBA "All Stars" game is a
farce. :'( Nuthin but a
lazy, playground, shoot around. ::dead::
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15 Feb 2016 12:12 #292074
by ketchim
Very good inter galaxy game
Mars is a bit on the dry side .
22 yard strip will crumble.
Batsmen will have a problem with the pull from Gravity
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15 Feb 2016 13:24 #292096
by Observer
I would support a tournament of that nature. However, why not break it down into something like, West Indies/North America, Zimbabwe and South Africa, vs Britain and Australia and New Zealand, vs the Asian countries. I believe that would be a very interesting set-up.
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15 Feb 2016 13:46 #292102
by DownUnda
how bout WI/NA+Zim,SA&ENG vs Aus/NZ&Asian nations, that's a more exciting AllStars match
cause WI/NA would get slaughtered
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15 Feb 2016 14:03 #292108
by ketchim
How about Black teams versus White teams versus Brown teams
played on Mars !
My bet is the spaced out brown team will Win !
unless Gayle have a bob marley size Reefer ! ::LOL::
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15 Feb 2016 14:13 #292117
by timmyj51
All Star "Game" as inspired
by NBA farce: 1) only full tosses and long hops allowed
2) all fielders must be in 20m circlet throughout
the match
3) batsmen allowed to use 12" wide bats.
4) ball hit in upper deck: 8 runs
5) ball hit out of park: 10 runs
final score: Team A: 543-1 (declared after 10.2 overs)
Team B 544-2 (10.3 overs)
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A cricket All-Stars game could be a "SpaceJam"
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