THIS is what sustained short pitched bowling by fast bowlers can do.
The opening batsman as the second innings score card shows below was that master at leaving the ball - The original little master.
Code:
[B]India (2nd Innings) R [/B]
[B]S M Gavaskar c Julien b Holding 2[/B]
D B Vengsarkar lbw b Jumadeen 21
M Amarnath st Murray b Jumadeen 60
S Madan Lal b Holding 8
S Venkat b Holding 0
Kirmani (k) not out 0
B S Bedi (c) [COLOR="DarkRed"][B]absent hurt[/B][/COLOR]
B S Chandra [COLOR="DarkRed"][B]absent hurt[/B][/COLOR]
B P Patel [B][COLOR="DarkRed"]absent hurt[/COLOR][/B]
G R Viswanath [COLOR="DarkRed"][B]absent hurt[/B][/COLOR]
A D Gaekwad [COLOR="DarkRed"][B]absent hurt[/B][/COLOR]
Extras (nb 6) 6
[B]Total All Out 97 [/B]
26.2 overs @ 3.68 rpo
and this was without the HUGE, and later deemed unfair, advantage that this field would have given.
and this is what the valiant' Indians thought of it.
A Test traumatisingly surrendered by India inside four days. With a plaster-cast from forearm to finger ended up G.R. Visvanath here. An even more frightening casualty look wore Aunshuman Gaekwad - ear-struck and thunderstruck. Brijesh Patel had three Kingston stitches in his stiff upper lip to show for his audacity in having matched super centurion Visvanath stroke for stroke while hitting India to 6-wicket win in the preceding third (Port of Spain) Test.
"The West Indies' tactics in this (Sabina Park) Test were not part of the game. They were a deliberate effort to subdue us. When I lost the toss and we were put in on a lively wicket, I knew we had little hope. Still Sunil, Aunshuman and Mohinder displayed great courage on the first day. None of them flinched from the fast bowling. But there is a limit to courage when you are facing bowling at 90 mph. A lot of human beings would have conked out. I gave the umpires (Ralph Gosein and Douglas Sang Hue) a piece of my mind. It became so painful to watch that I had to make the disgusting gesture of declaring in a six-day Test."
- Bishen Bedi the Indian captain who ended India's innings twice in that test when trailing far behind Windies.
It was against such a backdrop that I asked Sunil, once he was back in India: "That head-hunting beamer we saw you barely manage to evade at Sabina Park in DD's Samachar highlights, how did it feel to measure up to it from Holding?" "Which beamer?" Sunil slyly sought to know, his tone making it obvious that beamers made no one beam. "There were so many of them bowled at us. Both Holding and Daniel bowled them regularly. Their technique was simple - mix a beamer with two-three bouncers in an over. Then, having shaken the batsman's confidence, produce a fast straight yorker to go through his defence. I did ask wicket-keeper Deryck Murray why they were still after me when they had virtually won that Sabina Park decider with three of our key men injured. Deryck said he had spoken to Clive about it, but they had simply been asked to turn their eyes away if they did not want to look!"
- Gavaskar when interviewed on return to India
"Holding especially was a frightening proposition, bowling at great pace and persistently threatening the batsman's life and limb with disconcerting lift. He removed Mohinder Amarnath (39) off his fifth delivery with the second new ball. It flew from no more than three yards in front of the batsman, straight at his throat. All Mohinder could do was involuntarily to put up the bat as a means of self-protection and Julien at backward short-leg held the catch. Visvanath filled the breach and was greeted with one of the wickedest bouncers of the series. It reared almost vertically at great speed and brushed his glove as he took evasive action, crashing into the boundary before wicket-keeper Murray could get close to it. Encouraged by the response he was getting, Holding repeatedly dug the ball in and it consistently rose chest high or more, three and four times an over. If the batsmen were not bobbing and weaving to avoid the ball, they were standing up on their toes to keep it down. Very rarely could they come forward. Eleven runs after Amarnath's departure, Visvanath (8) went in identical fashion. Holding hit the offending area of the (Sabina Park) pitch, the ball flew and Visvanath, scrambling to protect his rib-cage, fended it off to Julien. Gaekwad, battling through with great courage, suffered at least three blows on the fingers and, at other times, just narrowly avoided being struck. Yet he kept going until he received one from which there was no escape. It landed against his left ear. Throughout his career, Gaekwad (81 - retired hurt) will shudder every time he recalls how close he came to being hit on the temple."
- Tony Cozier in his despatch of the match
With all due respect, that is an entirely different situation
Having experimented unsuccessfully with a spin attack for the previous 2 tests, the WI selected 4 pacemen and doctored the pitch for the decider
Descriptions such as:
"It flew from no more than three yards in front of the batsman, straight at his throat."
and
"It reared almost vertically at great speed and brushed his glove as he took evasive action"
are evidence of the horrible nature of the pitch
As there is no evidence that the wickets used for the bodyline series were other than flat, the bowlers would have to pitch it short to get it up to, say, chest height.
That sort of attack was absolute meat and drink to Richards
Also, have a look at the photo in this article
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bodyline
There are 8 fieldsman (at least) and the wk in this shot
That field would be next to useless for Richards as he rarely fended at short balls
In fact, Richards routinely destroyed bowlers every bit as quick as Larwood on quick wickets during the 70s with 3 men on the fence (2 behind, one in front). Basically, every fast bowler knew that bowling short to him would be a licence to score runs unless used as a surprise tactic.
IMO, Richards would've had far more problems with a Bedser type bowler on a green track than anything served up by bodyline