SJS
Hall of Fame Member
First of all, wicket conditions, in a particular era and the law of the game at that time at that point in time have a lot to do with strike rates (and other statistics) but here lets talk of the style of bowling.
The strike rate has a lot to do with the propensity of the batsman to make a mistake against certain type of bowling. Leg spin does present a bigger problem for batsmen than off spin. Hence leg spinners will induce more mistakes in batsmen than off spinners, generally. (This does not discount the better skills and craftiness of a greater bowler) Here are the economy rates of the great leg spin and off spin bowlers in the game. I may have left out a favourite of yours but thats not intentional, trust me
For the sake of better debate I have not put actual rates but clubbed them in groups. Its possible to look up exact rates or I can post them if needed.
OFF SPINNERS
LEG SPINNERS
Amongst the leg spinners, those that were the early purveyors of the googly and made it their main weapon (the South Africans) and those from India who bowled more googlies than the conventional leg spinner (Chandra and Kumble) too seem to have lower strike rates while the conventional bowlers like Gupte, Benaud, Grimmett and O'rielly (irrespective of the last named's speed) have suffered by contrast.
Doug Wright was a very unusual legspinner again - very fast and high proportion of googlies
Warne, I would like to believe overcomes this by he completely different line of attack. This has both to do with his prodigious spin and the fact that for most of his career he did not have an effective googly. Thus he did not bowl on or around the off stump as his predecessors did but attacked the leg stump which meant that Warne, probably, made the batsman play at more of his deliveries than the traditionalists. This could account for his higher strike rate.
Murali too has the gift of a HUGE spin but his second difference from his fellow off-spinnners was the presence rather than the absence of the doosra. Where Warne made the absence of the googly a reason to develop a different line of attack and other variations, Murali used the presence of the doosra in his armoury to increase the area (linewise) where he could pitch the ball - from wide outside the off stump to middle and leg. This is very different from the traditional off spinners who again pitched on and around the off stump, relying on accuracy and flight to go through the batsman's defence while he was driving or defending on or around the off stump.
But why MacGill ????
I would suggest that he gains a lot from playing against Bangladesh. Take away tests against them and the ICC World X! jamboree and his rate goes up from 53 to a more mortal 60. This moves him from the highest category to number three with Kumble Chandra and Vogler.
Its important to remember that the more accurate bowlers, generally have higher strike rates than the inaccurate ones. The former are played with circumspection and care while the latter, in between bad balls will bowl a good one and get their man. Fans of a big eared Indian new ball bowler named 'Bombay Duck' will know what I am talking about.
The strike rate has a lot to do with the propensity of the batsman to make a mistake against certain type of bowling. Leg spin does present a bigger problem for batsmen than off spin. Hence leg spinners will induce more mistakes in batsmen than off spinners, generally. (This does not discount the better skills and craftiness of a greater bowler) Here are the economy rates of the great leg spin and off spin bowlers in the game. I may have left out a favourite of yours but thats not intentional, trust me
For the sake of better debate I have not put actual rates but clubbed them in groups. Its possible to look up exact rates or I can post them if needed.
OFF SPINNERS
Code:
Muralitharan 50-55
Laker Jim 55-60
Trumble Hugh 60-65
Tayfield 65-70
Harbhajan 65-70
Mallett Ashley 65-70
Saqlain 65-70
Prasanna 70+
Gibbs Lance 70+
Code:
[B]Faulkner 50-55[/B]
MacGill 50-55
[B]Schwarz 50-55[/B]
Warne 55-60
[B]Chandra 60-65[/B]
Wright 60-65
[B]Vogler 60-65[/B]
[B]Kumble 60-65[/B]
Benaud 65-70
O'Reilly 65-70
Grimmett 65-70
Mushtaq 65-70
Kaneria 65-70
Gupte 70+
Doug Wright was a very unusual legspinner again - very fast and high proportion of googlies
- unusually fast bowler for a leg-spinner, almost a genuine medium-pacer
- "running in from over 15 yards, hopping and skipping as he went, and whipping over a wristy and finger-spun ball that would dip, bounce and deviate crazily off the pitch, to expect long-term accuracy was to display a dismal ignorance of physics."
with the result he took his 107 wickets for England (the most for any leg spinner) at almost 40 each ! - "running in from over 15 yards, hopping and skipping as he went, and whipping over a wristy and finger-spun ball that would dip, bounce and deviate crazily off the pitch, to expect long-term accuracy was to display a dismal ignorance of physics."
Warne, I would like to believe overcomes this by he completely different line of attack. This has both to do with his prodigious spin and the fact that for most of his career he did not have an effective googly. Thus he did not bowl on or around the off stump as his predecessors did but attacked the leg stump which meant that Warne, probably, made the batsman play at more of his deliveries than the traditionalists. This could account for his higher strike rate.
Murali too has the gift of a HUGE spin but his second difference from his fellow off-spinnners was the presence rather than the absence of the doosra. Where Warne made the absence of the googly a reason to develop a different line of attack and other variations, Murali used the presence of the doosra in his armoury to increase the area (linewise) where he could pitch the ball - from wide outside the off stump to middle and leg. This is very different from the traditional off spinners who again pitched on and around the off stump, relying on accuracy and flight to go through the batsman's defence while he was driving or defending on or around the off stump.
But why MacGill ????
I would suggest that he gains a lot from playing against Bangladesh. Take away tests against them and the ICC World X! jamboree and his rate goes up from 53 to a more mortal 60. This moves him from the highest category to number three with Kumble Chandra and Vogler.
Its important to remember that the more accurate bowlers, generally have higher strike rates than the inaccurate ones. The former are played with circumspection and care while the latter, in between bad balls will bowl a good one and get their man. Fans of a big eared Indian new ball bowler named 'Bombay Duck' will know what I am talking about.
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