I think you will find that he was held back a fair bit this match. As Jayawardene asked him to concentrate on line and line over pace. This is probably the most economical I have ever seen him bowl and his who career. I doubt we will see him bowl anywhere near his full pace until the OD series when he was more confidence.If he can't bowl at 90+mph without breaking down, he simply cannot be considered a 90+mph bowler. He was being hailed as quicker than Taylor, and while Taylor hasn't had a very quick match thus far, Mirando doesn't look anywhere near as quick. This considering that Taylor can bowl at 90mph without breaking down.
Mirando is not a fast bowler. Fast-medium at best.
Well when you had the injuries Thushara had throughout his career. This is about the first season in three seasons that he hasn't had an injury and only 2nd season since his Test debut. Your always going to bowl within yourself, even if you feel you feel close to full fitness.This is something I never understand. If a bowler is being apparently asked to slow down and slow down, then surely an effort ball will come out at full pace, but he hasn't appeared to go above 83mph, in the few overs I have seen him bowl in.
When you put it like that, it does make some sense. Perhaps another factor is that the muscles are still weak after injury so they cannot push him so far. It is just unusual to see the effort ball ("blwah") at just 83mph for someone who used to push 90mph, though. When Brett Lee comes back from injury, he is usually just 5kph (on average) away from the speed he will reach at full fitness, whereas Thushara seems to be about 10-15kph below that. I guess only time will tell to see if he will realise his pace again.Your always going to bowl within yourself, even if you feel you feel close to full fitness.
I'm certainly not judging him, just making an observation interspliced with a questionI'm not too worried at all if doesn't hit mid 140s, this series. It is all about confidence right now and he will probably get more out of this series by learning how to bowl effectively at this level without pace. Cus he has the confidence to start bowling at his optimium pace he will gain more from this. Really it is bit harsh to judge someones pace after his 2nd Test, when you take into account the journey he had to get here.
I think its gonna come right after tea.What do you think - declare with about 15 overs to go tonight? Should have a lead of 400+ by then. Unless of course WI really pull off something great before then.
Yeah, Sri Lanka needs at least an hour tonight min. Wicket is still ridiculously flat, new ball hasn’t done anything all game and the turn whilst appreciable at times has been so slow that the batsman have had all the time in the world to adjust. Really has been a terrible test surface that's only been given life due to the West Indies incompetence with the bat.What do you think - declare with about 15 overs to go tonight? Should have a lead of 400+ by then. Unless of course WI really pull off something great before then.
Yes, he bowled the last over, in fact. It's a bit early for nightwatchman, no? Twenty overs left - plus Bravo is hardly a true nightwatchman. He averages 32, so he is a useful bat in his own right.Night watchman as opener? Was Gayle out in the field before SL declared?