IndusCreed wrote:Not sure why Clarke was ever named pup... I wonder if the label on him is as a label tightly stitched on underwear
IndusCreed wrote:Not sure why Clarke was ever named pup... I wonder if the label on him is as a label tightly stitched on underwear
Aidan11 wrote:I was told it was because he was picked for the Aussie team at such a young age.
HarryPotter wrote:Aidan11 wrote:I was told it was because he was picked for the Aussie team at such a young age.
Thats will be the nice story. There will be a nastier real one.
Like Atherton was called FEC.
People said it was because he was 'Future England Captain'.
The reality came out that when he started at Lancs someone stuck a note on his locker, that simply said:
'F%^king Educated C^*t'
HarryPotter wrote:haha
I like Athers. Wish he had made more of his talent though.
HarryPotter wrote:Aidan11 wrote:I was told it was because he was picked for the Aussie team at such a young age.
Thats will be the nice story. There will be a nastier real one.
Like Atherton was called FEC.
People said it was because he was 'Future England Captain'.
The reality came out that when he started at Lancs someone stuck a note on his locker, that simply said:
'F%^king Educated C^*t'
If his unbeaten 329 at the SCG wasn't enough of a statement, his 210 at Adelaide Oval confirmed that Clarke has stood up in the most emphatic way since taking on the captaincy. The only skipper in Test history to score a triple-century and a double-hundred in the same series, Clarke also led his men well in the field, changing his bowlers at the right times, and the difference between him and his Indian counterpart MS Dhoni was stark.
Stroller95 wrote:Clarke seems to be benefitting from the captaincy in the same way that Strauss did.
cricketfan90 wrote:i really like Michael clarke's captaincy. To some people captaincy comes natural to them, and i think clarke is one of them.
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