So we're both working on presumptions, then.I'm little better clued-up either TBH, we tend to get about 3 domestic (First-Class) games per season on TV here, and I don't recall seeing a Sussex game amongst the 2 or 3 I've seen since 2003. I've just tended to presume a bowler who's getting such mad numbers of wickets, at a very good average, over a long time now (5 seasons) must be bowling pretty damn well regardless of how skilled the batsmen he's bowling at are.
That depends really...you are indeed very astute. That being said, for precisely how long have you been watching Test cricket?Well, nothing that could have official status, no, but I could give you one based on my own interpretation, which you could accept or reject according to how much you trusted me to assess a pitch.
Some of those SCG pitches were 'bunsen burners', admittedly. Still, losing 11 wickets to a fellow like Border, who took a mere 39 wickets, is embarrassing. Not only that, but it indicates a real inability on the part of the West Indies to play the turning ball - and they were the best side in the world back then! You cannot deny that India (or most other teams for that matter) would, in all likelihood, have not conceeded that many wickets to him.Border's and MSP's exploits were completely different TBH - that famous Border 11-for game was on a notoriously poor SCG track which spun sideways for even a relative "roller" like Border.
UPDATE: Hmm...the Wisden Almanack tells me that many of AB's wickets came from long hops. That, though, seems to lend weight to my theory that they couldn't play spin properly (a part-timer may get one or two wickets in that manner, but they should never ever get four that way).
I don't ever remember referring to the Lord's match. Although, now that I look at it, my suspicions are confirmed...he did use arm balls to ensare the batsmen (although there was a lack of turn).MSP, of course, was the opposite - straight balls. Nor, really, do I think it was credit to the bowler - the wicket balls were all standard Leg-Breaks (right-hander, left-armer) which simply didn't turn, not arm-balls. The batsmen were playing for turn they were wrongly expecting the surface to afford. MSP barely turned a ball throughout that Lord's match.
That being said, I was wrong about him using the arm ball as a major wicket-taking weapon throughout the series. My memory failed me, once again . Still, like I said, the West Indian's ineptitude at playing spin should not mean that he receives no credit for his pickings against them.
I realised this...which is why I felt that we had to stop speaking in vague terms like 'non-turning surface'. It creates ambiguity, under which circumstances any well-formed, rational argument can appear as valid as another.Obviously, amount of receptiveness to spin in a surface is not something that moves along descrete points, it's a continuum, so the phrases "turning" and "non-turning" aren't really ones that hold any linguistic water.
That'd be 80-88 km/h. I do agree that, if the SLA-bowler pitches it on a good length, with the same amount of control, pace and flight, I'd take the 45 degree turn. For, under an equal set of circumstances (in practice, this is unlikely), a bowler is always gonna be much more threatening on a pitch which offers more to him.ever, let's say a fingerspinner is putting maximum revs that he can manage on the ball; one surface allows him to turn this ball 45 degrees, another 20. I don't really think 20 degrees of turn is going to cause great problems, most batsmen can adjust to this at 50-55mph (sorry, can't do that in ks). If he can get it to go 45, though, he's obviously going to pose lots of problems.
However, if he pitches it fuller, 20-degree turn may be enough to take the edge, whereas 45 degree turn will merely go past it. If the SLA-bowler gets lots of turn, yet drags it down, the batsmen is gonna put him away much more easily, unless he generates the kind of rip that Stuart MacGill get (which isn't gonna happen, given that MacGill is a wrist-spinner).
I'll give you this - 5 to 10 degrees counts for little.And some will only allow him to turn it 5 or 10 degrees, which is barely noticeable.
No. You are certainly right. I was just hoping that we would come to a decent definition, to stop us from speaking in generalities which blur the validity of similar arguments. I still reserve the right to dislike those terms, though, for reasons that I stated earlier.The long-and-short upshot is that you can't offer any waterproof definition, because not only is the maximum rev different (if sometimes only slightly) for every bowler, but you can't put a number of degrees on when a surface goes from "turner" to "non-turner".
BTW, did you notice how I tended to use the terms 'favourable pitch' and 'unfavourable pitch', where I could? (If I used 'turner', or 'non-turner', I was being lazy and sloppy. I apologise for that.)
Whether I would want you to do this depends on your experience watching cricket. If it is no longer than mine (4-and-a-bit years), then I'd be pretty skeptical. Besides, when are you going to upload those Ashley Giles clips?One day, when a camera and TV production is developed that gives you exact degree-of-turn readouts and exact revs-per-second readouts (the former already available though not in public use) for every ball, we will be able to. Right now, though, you just have to look at it and form a subjective opinion. I could give you a list of Giles' and MSP's Tests played so far and offer you my assessment of whether I classified the pitch "turner" or "non-turner" (or occasionally changing as the match progressed) if you liked.
I can't deny this. Look at Derek Underwood.Yeah - the only thing is there's no way to say how many turning surfaces one "should" get in their career. And the unfortunate nature of things is that certain bowlers will get more (sometimes far more) than others - on a maxi scale you can compare those who played on uncovered wickets and those who played on covered, there's a collossal difference and it's very obviously reflected in averages.
No, I don't either. It's just not the English thing to do, really...produce a turner, I mean.On a smaller scale, MSP has, to my mind, had far more turning surfaces early in his career than Giles had in the middle. As a general rule, though, I don't really expect any of the English Test grounds to produce a turning surface very often.
What were these matches, precisely? (Giles' 9-fer against WI, aside)Yet Giles got 3 in 2004, and MSP got perhaps 2-and-a-half (given that Headingley started with none and ended with plenty) in 2006. And on all occasions, the bowler produced the goods.
Yes...though you're barely contradicting my arguement, really. 40 over 50 is still noteworthy and would, should they get the same amount of favourable pitches, still lead to Monty having a noticably more successful career - which I believe was the point of our arguement. Correct me if I'm wrong.No, I'm not. I honestly don't expect, as I say, MSP to be vastly more successful - to be notably successful where Giles was not - on pitches which could broadly be classified as "non-turning". I'd reckon he'll probably average about 40 on such surfaces, where I guess Giles averaged about 50. Only time will tell.