NUFAN
Y no Afghanistan flag
Yeah because playing for your country and doing the best you can is pointless.No one player can bring anything to the current Zimbabwe side. Being a good player in such a side is next to pointless.
Yeah because playing for your country and doing the best you can is pointless.No one player can bring anything to the current Zimbabwe side. Being a good player in such a side is next to pointless.
I am inclined to agree with Richard on this one. In the current era of flat batting tracks, ODI cricket is about stifling the RR because invariably this results in wickets. Few tracks offer enough to bowlers for them to actually take wickets by bowling wicket taking deliveries and as such anyone who is purely a 'wicket taker' is almost invariably going to have more poor games than good ones.Wickets also pretty well invariably fall in the second-innings, because of the economy-rate.
A team that loses by failing to chase yet bats 50 overs is rare. Wickets are thrown away because the economy-rate of the bowlers has been better than the run-rate required by the batting side.
Wickets come because of economical bowling. The importance of wicket-taking deliveries at certain times (ie, the start and sometimes in the middle of the innings) is not in dispute, but I'd hazard a guess that far, far more wickets than not in ODIs come because batsmen a) feel they're not scoring quickly enough in a first-innings (this can often be interpreted as not hitting every ball for four in the last 5-6 overs) or b) know they're not scoring quickly enough in a second-innings. And only a minor percentage from batsmen being genuinely defeated by the sort of bowling that would be expected to take wickets in Test cricket.
This is another example Kumar Dharmasena.For people who value E/R over wickets, what is the opinion of Prosper Utseya, who has a good ODI economy rate but a poor average.
Much underrated guy. Teamed up with Murali for SL's success in the mid to late 90s. He did add more value to the SL team than his stats say. Would slow down the RR in the middle overs and bottle up the pressure and Murali would take wickets at the other end.This is another example Kumar Dharmasena.
But he fitted very well to SL bowling unit. Current English or SAF team will die for a spinner like him, who averages 22.6 with the bat too.
Harbhajan is doing somewhat that kind of a job in ODIs for a while now. And that has added to his value despite his average taking a hit.Yeah Dharmasena was a very fine ODI bowler. TBH, I was considering mentioning him in that Utseya post, as he was the first person to come to mind when I first came accross Utseya, as a comparison.
Dharmasena-Murali was one of the best ODI spinning combinations you'll see. Maybe the best. One who bowled relentlessly fast, flat and at the same spot; the other who bowled slowly, turned the ball miles and still hit excellent areas.
Kumble-Joshi must've been pretty good for a time as well. But Kumble ceased to be that good at ODIs after WC99.
Dharmasena, though, proves that a bowler of that type (fast, flat economical spinner) can indeed be a highly useful addition to a good side.
One notable absentee in that list. Jayasuriya deserves a mention. Obviously better than Croft. And I would think Upul Chandana was also way better than Croft and Dharmasena. Bradd Hogg later became a force, but he was finding his feet in spin bowling in the 90s. Venkathapathy Raju, Rajesh Chauhan, Sunil Joshi, Ruwan Kalpage were also good.Since the turn of the 1990s and the start of the modern era of ODIs, there have been precious few spinners who've made particularly good ODI bowlers: Warne, Murali, Mushtaq Ahmed, Dharmasena, Kumble (up to WC99 and not thereafter), Saqlain, Harbhajan, Croft and Vettori,
Not a patch on Andre Botha's 2/5 off 8 against PakistanJoshi's 5/6 in 10 overs against South Africa was probably the most awesome ODI bowling performance I've witnessed by an Indian...
The attack as a whole needs to be economical. In order to achieve this, the attack needs above all to have someone who can take crucial wickets. And Waqar at his peak could do that in a way which almost no-one in the history of cricket has been able to come close to.No good ODI attack, IMO, can be built around a bowler who regularly concedes plenty of runs. A really economical bowler - whether he takes wickets of not, and obviously the best do both - is the most vital part of any ODI attack.
People mock you for the high regard in which you hold Ealham, but in fairness you're quite right. He was indeed a fine bowler, in fact a fine all-rounder. However Waqar was an all-time great and Ealham wasn't. And I feel you under-rate Waqar as an ODI bowler. For me, he was a great ODI bowler who could bowl with the new ball, bowl in the middle overs or bowl (as he very often did, while retaining a fine average and economy rate) at the death.As I've said before, I think you sometimes fail to differ between ODIs and Tests enough. Because Waqar was so enormously better than Ealham in Tests the notion that both are in their different ways excellent at ODIs is outrageous to you.
Well for the most part I don't think the Pakistan attack was every successfully built around Waqar (or Akhtar who is similar). It was built around Wasim Akram which allowed Waqar to exceed runs, as it were, and also be incredibly lethal with his wicket-taking. Wasim, on the other hand, provided the economy (under 4 RPO). I imagine in the days of Imran and Wasim, Imran played the tidy role and Wasim played the wicket-taker's role although I can't say that with any confidence.The attack as a whole needs to be economical. In order to achieve this, the attack needs above all to have someone who can take crucial wickets. And Waqar at his peak could do that in a way which almost no-one in the history of cricket has been able to come close to.
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So I will build my team around Waqar and if I lose I will grin and bear it.
I agree entirely that you need bowling partnerships and you need a bowling attack comprising a number of bowlers with different skills. But what Waqar had was an element (sheer wicket taking ability) which to my mind is worth a thousand Gavin Larsens or Peter Taylors.Well for the most part I don't think the Pakistan attack was every successfully built around Waqar (or Akhtar who is similar). It was built around Wasim Akram which allowed Waqar to exceed runs, as it were, and also be incredibly lethal with his wicket-taking. Wasim, on the other hand, provided the economy (under 4 RPO).
And give me a blend of the two - whichever the names may be - over one similar-grouped set any day as well.Give me Lee, Shoaib, Waqar and Malinga over Ealham, Larsen, Utseya and Collymore everyday of the week.
Not only would they be more successful but far more entertaining and far less dull.