It usually does, but the coaches at Essex and Surrey seem to have their heads screwed on. It's not the same for every county, but those 2 have great youth systems and don't rush players through unless their confident they can make the grade.
Glad to hear that, and I know it's not the same at all counties, but as I say - it's so rare to see really good handling of an up-and-coming player that I rarely hold-out much hope.
I don't think it will be too long before we see Meaker in the Surrey XI. Chambers and Westfield bowled against the West Indies XI (though many first teamers out obviously. Only Chanderpaul of the big 3 played). They shared 7 wickets.
Jordan is the one who may not make the grade.
As I say, I'll be surprised if any of Jordan, Westfield or Chambers make the grade; Meaker I'm more ambivalent about as he's not done anything much anywhere yet, but I still think people who've got him in their minds as a certain England prospect have gone hopelessly premature.
As far as I know, the ECB hold speed tests every year to check on fast bowling development. It's probably because someone clocked a ridiculous speed that it has been mentioned.
It only ever seems to have been mentioned in unofficial capacity though. Is there any firm evidence anywhere of just when and how it happened? I'd love to know.
I didn't mean 90mph dead on, but 88mph upwards.
Fast-Medium and Medium-Fast to top batsmen is still pretty easy pace unless the ball is doing something.
I can't think of many bowlers who aren't/weren't considered great who have had long successful test careers.
85mph or below bowlers generally have to be top notch to take a lot of wickets.
I think you're barking up several wrong trees. You
always have to be top-notch to take a lot of wickets, 90mph+ or 85mph-. And fast is every bit as easy for top-class batsmen as fast-medium and medium-fast, when the ball isn't doing anything. Any bowler who doesn't move the ball sideways (or extract uneven bounce) has next to no hope of any sustained success at any remotely serious level. Higher pace merely accentuates any weapons a bowler has - it isn't a weapon in itself.
I don't get the point.
McGrath was a great bowler regardless of pace, he was an example of someone who was a great bowler even bowling as low as 80mph.
I wasn't making that comment in relation to how good and how quick a bowler is - merely stating how things were with McGrath. For more of his career than not, he was no more than fast-medium.
I disagree. I've seen many a bowler who was poor or average but beat the batsman for pace cos they were bowling 90mph+. I've seen a lot of bowlers 85mph- get spanked.
I've seen the opposite (lots of 90mph+ bowlers get spanked and lots of 85mph- get good figures). And no, top-class batsmen are not beaten for speed purely by a ball of 91-92 mph - it needs to be 97-98 mph for that. The sort of speed only the odd bowler in history has ever been able to manage - and even then only in isolated bursts. If you're seeking to beat batsmen purely for pace, you've next to no hope. As I say above, pace is only something which increases the effectiveness of weapons - it isn't a weapon in itself.
Great batsmen have no trouble exerting power on a ball of 85mph-. It's more difficult to time a 90mph+ delivery.
It's also less important to time a 90mph+ delivery, because the pace is already on the ball. All you need is a slight deflection, and bam - once you've beaten the fielders, it races away. Obviously, at lower pace you have more time to get the right timing, but nonetheless, the margin-for-error is higher at 80mph than 90mph.
Well he definitely wont do that. In 4 years' time he may get in the team but will probably emulate Stuart Broad and be nothing really special to start with.
Harris is already a class above Broad, so thus I hope he can mature at a slightly younger age.
Nonetheless, 24-25 is a reasonable starting age for a Test-class seam bowler (and the truly exceptional like Marshall, Donald etc. can do it at a younger age). Waiting until 27-28 wouldn't make much sense.