If, as is often said of , a good side is one which manages to avoid defeat while not playing to its full potential, then should be considered a success.
and forced to cling on for dear life in Centurion and Cape Town, future statisticians will pore over with wonder.
While five of South Africa's batsmen averaged between 39 and 61, four of England's averaged in the twenties. And while England's top wicket-taker Graeme Swann took 21 scalps at 31.38, five Proteas bowlers took their wickets more cheaply.
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Boxers don't take kindly to being given advice by non-boxers. Non-boxers, according to boxers, know nothing of boxing. And most of the time they're right.
When it comes to retirement, boxers are particularly sensitive to counselling from outside their tribe. "Everyone's become an expert about me," said Ricky Hatton after his devastating defeat to Manny Pacquiao in May, "but it's my decision." Yet when it comes to retirement, boxers so often get it wrong.
, wilfully ignoring the stacks of evidence to the contrary. didn't know when to quit. didn't know when to quit. , , , - none of them knew when to quit.
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While 2009 will largely be remembered in British boxing circles as and , it was also a year of rebirth for the sport in this country.
Calzaghe's retirement in February left Carl Froch as Britain's only world champion, down from a peak of seven in 2007, but green shoots soon forced their way through what some doom-mongers were claiming was infertile soil.
In April, , and while his first fight in the innovative super-middleweight was a stinker, he lived to fight another day.
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