SJS
Hall of Fame Member
Actions of HALL and SOBERS in Testthe First ever tied
Wow that's something...Didn't know about it I must admit...And here is what Trueman calls, rightly I think, the greatest piece of fast bowling in the entire history of the game.
Holding destroys England single handedly at the Oval 1976
Its very important to understand how much of a batsman's wicket - a featherbed as Trueman called it - this wicket was. Here is what the other pace and medium pace bowlers from the two sides did in this Test match.
- 1122 runs were scored when England and West Indies finished one innings each fand all wickets had not fallen in these!
- Two double centuries were scored , one by either side, in the first innings!
- West Indies scored another 187 without loss before declaring their second innings closed.
- Now 1304 runs had been scored in the match and yet 20 wicket had not fallen.
- The bowling analysis on both sides made pathetic reading with one exception Mike Holding whose 8 first innings wickets had come at 11.5 runs each.
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- 28 wickets fell in this match.
- Half of them fell to bowlersthat included the likes of Andy Roberts, Bob Willis, Mike Selvey, Derek Underwood, Vanburn Holder, Tony Greig, Wayne Daniell. - that is 14 wickets for a combined total of 1254 runs at about 90 runs each
and the other 14 fell to Mike Holding at 10.6 each !!
Whats more,Wow that's something...Didn't know about it I must admit...
How good is Viv's back foot drive off Lillee, at 2:10?Here's some 74-75 footage of Thommo & Lillee to chill any Englaishman to the bones
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6oPGYasddQ&feature=related
At about 2.25 you can see Marsh standing near Lillee's marker. I recall a doco on Lillee fort eh 70s called "25 steps", being the length of his paced-out run up.
This may give us a better indication of how far back Marsh et al were standing with Thommo at full tilt.
Fabulous !How good is Viv's back foot drive off Lillee, at 2:10?
Undoubtedly the best bowling display in a match that I've ever seen or heard happening in a test match (Not sure I've heard all of them though)...Whats more,
- 9 of those 14 batsmen he got were clean bowled.
- another three were lbw
- only for two he needed to use the slips or the keeper to help!
Well Trueman bowled in his first Test in 1952 with Bedser at the other end, he went on to become the first man to take 300 test wickets and was still watching the game till very recently (corrected). In almost 60 years of playing the game and watching it he thinks it is the finest he has ever seen so I would say that is very significat too.Undoubtedly the best bowling display in a match that I've ever seen or heard happening in a test match (Not sure I've heard all of them though)...
I like to think it is KortrightThere was an entertaining interview with Jeff Thomson on cricinfo earlier this year (14 Jan).
As you would expect he was keen to assert that he, Dennis Lillee and their contemporaries were much faster than today's fast bowlers. His explanation for the quoting of similar figures for speeds of the two generations is that he and his contemporaries were measured from the speed when the ball reached the batsman rather than, as today, the speed when the ball leaves the bowler's hand which at least sounds sensible although whether it is correct I know not.
Personally I would like to think the fastest bowler of all time was Harold Larwood (and my romantic leanings will mean that whatever the answer is to who is the fastest he is the answer to the "who is the best" question) but as all athletic records have been beaten by some distance since the Thirties I suspect he can't have been - that being said of course there has also been a change in the no-ball law meaning that in the old days the bowler could effectively steal a couple of yards on present day bowlers so perhaps he could be.
What does occur to me however, and the reason for this post, is that I know there must be some serious techies on this forum, who will be able to express a knowledgable view on what I, as a mere layman would think is obvious, being that today's technology and the amount of film available of all the great fast bowlers since the First World War must surely mean that an accurate assessment and consequent comparison of their speeds must be possible and that the “who is the fastest” argument ought to be capable of being settled once and for all.
Or am i being naive and over simplifying the issue?
Alan Ward was possibly the fastest England bowler of all time, unfortunately he was always injured and couldn't bowl straight to save his granny, but he was quick.I like to think it is Kortright
On the subject of relative nobodies ..........................Always thought it'd be fascinating to know for sure how fast some of these relative nobodies like Ward were.
If pushed I think I would have to concede Shoaib is the quickest I have seen though sadly only from the comfort of my armchairshoaib's colombo spell against the aussies (5-16) is the fastest i've been privileged to see
Today 07:31 PM
Perhaps the only man in the game's history to be responsible for what would today count as six byes.I like to think it is Kortright