Bloody Minded Innings in Cricket.

dehydration cant be included as a serious injury:(, otherwise we had to include Ashish Nehra, he bowled a :hpraisemagnificent spell in WC 2003 against England, 6/26 is wat he got. after bowling 10 staright overs:eek: he vomitted near ropes. so he is gutsy isnt he:D
 
Batting till a double ton in a test match, is not comparable to a ten over spell in a one day match. Especially taking into consideration that Deano was in very alien conditions (the heat of Chennai :noway)

Plus, reading about it, seems it was severe as even life threatening, surely he should not have been batting or batting on in that case.
 
Max Dillion, possibly the biggest idiot this forums has seen since Usy. I fail to see how Dehydration, something people can, have and continue to die of isn't serious. I also fail to see how bowling ten over straight can compare to batting for well over ten hours.
 
dehydration cant be included as a serious injury:(, otherwise we had to include Ashish Nehra, he bowled a :hpraisemagnificent spell in WC 2003 against England, 6/26 is wat he got. after bowling 10 staright overs:eek: he vomitted near ropes. so he is gutsy isnt he:D

It can be when you're throwing up and urinating all over the pitch ever couple of overs.
 
Batting till a double ton in a test match, is not comparable to a ten over spell in a one day match. Especially taking into consideration that Deano was in very alien conditions (the heat of Chennai :noway)

Plus, reading about it, seems it was severe as even life threatening, surely he should not have been batting or batting on in that case.
Deano's innings was gutsy. Yes. But him having dehydration and vomiting shows he was not fully fit. And a big LOL to alien conditions. It is not as if they had never played in such heat, and remember, Chennai heat is not a patch on Perth heat.
 
Perth is a warm place, but isn't very humid. High humidity and high temperature combined is much more oppressive than high temperature alone. In so far that it's not totally common for players to bat all day, it's not all that uncommon for players to feel the heat.

VVS Laxman was severely dehydrated after his incredible double century at Eden Gardens in 2001. Having batted for more than 10 hours, he was given IV fluids overnight and struggled to continue an already well done job the next morning.

Rahul Dravid was even worse for wear when he scored a century in Mumbai against the West Indies the next year. He was visibly cramping and retired hurt as soon as he reached the milestone, which was the rare feat of being his fourth in four matches. He had to be carried off the field and was also administered with a saline drip.
 
I think it was Sarwan in the 2003 WC against Sri Lanka. Got knocked out cold on the pitch and got carried off, then later came back and battled it out for his country.
 
Deano's innings was gutsy. Yes. But him having dehydration and vomiting shows he was not fully fit. And a big LOL to alien conditions. It is not as if they had never played in such heat, and remember, Chennai heat is not a patch on Perth heat.
Nothing to say. Just a big "LOL".
 
dehydration cant be included as a serious injury:(

Your knowledge is just insane like your posts,mate.
Dehydration is actually 10 time sever than a muscle cramp.Even in mild degree of dehydration your brain lacks of glucose and Do you have any idea what does it mean?

It is far easy to play in other injuries which you mentioned with painkillers where it is almost impossible to concentrate when your brain lacks glucose(Energy).

Damn again I am heading wrong way on cricket forum but it is just disgusting to hear that dehydration cant be included as a serious injury
 
Your knowledge is just insane like your posts,mate.
Dehydration is actually 10 time sever than a muscle cramp.Even in mild degree of dehydration your brain lacks of glucose and Do you have any idea what does it mean?

It is far easy to play in other injuries which you mentioned with painkillers where it is almost impossible to concentrate when your brain lacks glucose(Energy).

Damn again I am heading wrong way on cricket forum but it is just disgusting to hear that dehydration cant be included as a serious injury
There you have it. The Doc's opinion.:)
 
i had experienced dehydration while playing, but when u are in the zone you really dont feel it,its only after the match u feel its effect. i played 3 concecutive 20 over matches in the heat of june in Delhi. and i am an allrounder so in between 2nd match or 3rd match i got dehydrated regularly and yet keep on playing just coz i was playing well,though the day i got out early or batsmen were hammering me i feel it more. so i know it is threatning but when u are dteremined it doesnt affect as much as broken toe, nose or bruised elbows. it affect body more after the match is finished. okay,i am not taking anything away from Dean jones innings, coz u gotta have balls to play in heat after dehydration

max_dillon2007 added 5 Minutes and 29 Seconds later...

It is far easy to play in other injuries which you mentioned with painkillers where it is almost impossible to concentrate when your brain lacks glucose(Energy).

well what painkiller would stop the hallucination in vision caused by a broken nose or a spinal injury(sachin 1999). even if you give painkiller the slightest facial movement causes blurry vision when you got a broken nose. i never played cricket with a helmet in my life so i have my own fair share of broken nose experiences. as far as snila injury is concerned,well a player might not feel the pain after painkillers but still wont be able to run properly and cannot play sweep shots and would use only backfoot shots. maybe i shud remind you, sachin was never the sachin of old after that broken back injury
 
So not only are you a buffoon but you're also an ugly bugger. Fair share of broken nose experiences, you're an idiot. I'm sure you're annoying the hell out of everyone. Bring Ben back, at least he contributed useful posts to the forum, alongside the odd bit of idiocy.
 
well what painkiller would stop the hallucination in vision caused by a broken nose or a spinal injury(sachin 1999).

I was not answering any of your particular injury case and anyway I don't think player can play,if they are experiencing visual hallucination.

Boy,you can't see the ball if you have visual hallucination.
Learn the term first.

vaibhav mehta added 4 Minutes and 27 Seconds later...

so in between 2nd match or 3rd match i got dehydrated regularly and yet keep on playing just coz i was playing well,though the day i got out early or batsmen were hammering me i feel it more.

And you have diagnosed yourself that you were dehydrated!!
There is a huge difference between feeling thirsty and getting dehydrated.
 

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