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Deception, making the batsman play where he doesn't want to, etc. are what make a good bowler. Swing, cut, seam, length, etc., all just tools to achieve this aim. Sure swing might make a good length a better ball but swing can also make it a worse ball depending on the circumstances. For example, if I notice a batsman is having trouble when I bowl a ball that doesn't swing that he's able to actually hit but he's letting hooping out-swingers sail away to the 'keeper untouched, why on Earth would I keep bowling the out-swinger at him? Similarly, if a batsman is comfortably keeping out my hooping in-swinger but is getting beaten by my cross-seam straight ball, again, why would I bother with the in-swinger against them?On the other hand, I've yet to see batsmen not troubled by bowlers who can make the ball swing. I might be a bowler of far lesser calibre than yourself, and you may have far more experience of batsmen being troubled by certain things when you are involved than I have, but I do believe my watching experience sufficient to spot required patterns.
Seriously, when was the last time we saw someone a genuine swing bowler at the top of the ICC rankings? Have a look at them;
http://content-aus.cricinfo.com/rankings/content/page/211270.html
Only, perhaps, two bowlers with swing as their main weapon in the top 10. Most of them have the capability to swing the ball, sure. But there are a bunch of bowlers in world cricket who swing the ball. Any bowler who relies on sideways movement alone doesn't succeed and quite a few swing bowlers get belted because they don't know how to use it or when to use it at Test level. The top 10 have gotten wickets because they've been smart about bowling with variation but most importantly, they've been consistent in the lines and lengths, with or without movement.
Just because Harmi bowled without a lot of movement doesn't mean that he also didn't bowl well or that the batsmen just played poor shots to get out and no credit should be given to him because there's so very much more to good quality pace bowling than sideways movement. I mean, haven't you heard of a bowler bowling a tight line to any given batsman and then throwing one wide to tempt the batsman into a rash shot? Because it was a crap shot, does it then follow that the bowler deserves no credit for the wicket? No.
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