Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
What categories? Yeah there are different means which seamers achieve their success but there are different ways batsmen do as well. Personally I just group the best seamers as the best seamers regardless of whether they're hit-the-deck back-of-length seam-and-cut bowlers or pitch-it-up kiss-the-deck swing\reverse-swing bowlers.I'm not saying that M.Marshall/Donald/Lillee and so on are better than Pollock/McGrath/Asif because they are quicker but they go about their work in different ways and to me I put fast bowlers into different categories. If I had combine them McGrath and Pollock would easily get into my top 7 or 8 fast bowlers in the last 20 years.
Also you mention pace - well pace changes over a career, and all the very best bowlers have shown that pace is only a minor ingredient in success by continuing to achieve as much (sometimes even more) success after their pace has slowed. How fast you bowl is irrelevant to how good you are if you're truly top-notch.
Steyn is an all-out attack bowler and while he bowls fewer bad deliveries at the present time than in say 2006 he still bowls plenty enough of them and with his low-slung action will always have a small margin-for-error. Yes he does indeed have the ability to think and to use a wide range of attacking tools but he is and in my book would do best to always remain a bowler who just attacks and doesn't worry about conceding runs.I agree with your comments on Hadlee v Steyn but I also agree with what they are saying. In recent times Steyn has become more shrewd like Hadlee and he also does't bowl as many bad balls as he used to. He now bowls that channel and sets up batsman as he thinks more on his feet now...with an outty, outty and then a inny. Also their smooth load up before release is similar.
Hadlee bowled from a much greater height and was also far more pinpoint after 1977.
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