The Baconator
International Vice-Captain
Ouch for the Aussies. Never nice when a top player is out, and for the WC as a whole.
ODIs 150 7729 6048 267 5/22 5/22 22.65 4.69 28.94 11 6 0You'd have to very much doubt it.
I can't see him being up to much at 34, personally - he's not the sort of bowler who strikes me as being much good beyond 31-32... not that he's ever been that good anyway...
4.69... what a fabulous economy-rate...ODIs 150 7729 6048 267 5/22 5/22 22.65 4.69 28.94 11 6 0
Yeah, this Brett Lee is one mediocre guy. Can't believe he's still playing ODI cricket.
Yeah,it's really awful...4.69... what a fabulous economy-rate...
You think?.I'd hardly call 4.69 economy awful?.Anything between 5.5-6 an over is awful.IMO 4.69 is reseanobly respectable in the modern game.It is, indeed.
Dude...4.69... what a fabulous economy-rate...
No serious ODI bowler (Ajit Agarkar isn't a serious ODI bowler) has ever had an ER over 5. Anything over 5 is a complete and utter joke. Between 4.5 and 5 is poor enough. You won't last too long in that bracket unless your one-day cricket is seriously, seriously piss-poor.You think?.I'd hardly call 4.69 economy awful?.Anything between 5.5-6 an over is awful.IMO 4.69 is reseanobly respectable in the modern game.
How exactly can you prove any of this?And as for all the wickets - come on! Not that many have been taken with good bowling. Most have been the combination of inevitable cashing-in on substandard teams (remove Kenya, Bangladesh, etc. and his SR and ave aren't quite so good), getting gimme wickets at the end of the innings and rubbish deliveries taking wickets.
. Anything over 5 is a complete and utter joke. Between 4.5 and 5 is poor enough.QUOTE]
Seriously harsh considering the introduction of smaller boundaries,heavier bats etc.
Urgh.Come on, then? How many stars are there who've got such poor economy-rates?
Anything over 4.5-an-over is poor, simple as. There are a lot of poor bowlers around at the moment, yes.
Waqar certainly didn't - his ER went up dramatically as his skills declined in the latter 2 or 3 years of his career.Urgh.
So according to you, the following are dreadful bowlers, since they all have econ rate above or around 4.5 (+-0.1):
Waqar Younis
Shoaib Akhtar
Zaheer Khan
Nathan Bracken
James Anderson
Makhaya Ntini
Jacques Kallis
Monty Panesar
Umar Gul
Lasith Malinga
Far as I know, Waqar Younis lasted plenty long with a bowling econ rate above 4.5, don't you think?
I guess the top 8 are pretty much out of the WC, considering most of these are their strike bowlers...
Funny that despite all that the top bowlers who played in the mid-1990s have all maintained their economy-rates.Seriously harsh considering the introduction of smaller boundaries,heavier bats etc.
Well I can conclusively prove on this forum only one part - the remove-substandard-teams part:How exactly can you prove any of this?
Waqar Younis was always an effective strike bowler though, in that his average never went over 24. Brett Lee's role in the Australian attack is as a strike bowler, because that's what he's most capable of being. When you're as potent a wicket-taker as Brett Lee, an economy of less than 4.70 is good.Waqar certainly didn't - his ER went up dramatically as his skills declined in the latter 2 or 3 years of his career.
And that's terrible for a strike bowler.Lee against ODI-standard teams: 1156.4, 5547, 237. That's an economy-rate of 4.8-an-over and an average of 23.41.
If they had someone who could bowl economically, they'd not be in any trouble. But Tait, Johnson, Watson, Hogg et al can't. Nor can they take wickets.Waqar Younis was always an effective strike bowler though, in that his average never went over 24. Brett Lee's role in the Australian attack is as a strike bowler, because that's what he's most capable of being. When you're as potent a wicket-taker as Brett Lee, an economy of less than 4.70 is good.
The problem with the Australian attack of late has been lack of a wicket-taking option as much as, if not more than, the lack of an economical bowler.