Combine that with the weakness of county cricket and you sure have a problem.fivepointer wrote:Good summary here - https://www.espncricinfo.com/story/eng- ... ty-1266250
"It's the hubris that's most grating with England. The hubris that thinks they can compete - and sell tickets, of course - with one of the best Test teams in the world while resting players having prioritised limited-overs cricket. The hubris that talks of their scouting system as if every eventuality has been considered and then picks a keeper who looks faintly astonished each time he manages to cling on to the ball. The hubris of a coaching system that, these days, allows batters to "work it out for themselves" and has resulted in some of the most technically deficient players to ever bat together in an England team.
There's a touch of hubris about having a coach for every discipline, too. That includes a spin-bowling coach for a side without a spinner and a fielding coach for a side that can hardly catch the bus. Statistics shown by Sky midway through the afternoon session showed that no Test team has a lower percentage of chances taken in the slips over the last three years. Given that England's keeper and fine leg fielder also dropped chances on Saturday and a picture emerges of a side that has been consistently poor in this regard"
It is the worst batting line up we have had in my memory- bar maybe Packer time; Simon Doull was incredulous when the raw comparison was done of the batting averages of the two sides- even without Williamson, NZ were way 'ahead'. Even if you chucked Stokes and Buttler and even Bairstow back in, we'd still look poor, with only one batsman (Root) averaging over 40. All of Burns, Sibley, Crawley and Pope have had plenty of games, too. Bit of a mess in the batting.
As you say though, no excuse for such poor catching- there are some good catchers there, they are just choking imo. We need Root's batting more than his captaincy, and no matter what anyone says, the captaincy has dropped his average by c 5, and that's significant.