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Left-arm spinners

WindieWeathers

International Regular
Apart from Vettori has there been many great left-arm spinners at test level? and if not whats the reason for it? are leftys at a disadvantage when it comes to spin? Monty Panesar made a big impact for a while but he seems to have been figured out now.
 

Migara

International Coach
Is Vettori succesful bowler in test cricket? Yes. Is he a great bowler - No. Shakib > Vettori as a test bowler, but not by much.

ATM there are no great left arm spinners. And the next great one most probably will come from Pakistan
 

andyc

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
There seems to be a fair few kicking around at the moment actually; SA (Harris), NZ (Vettori), WI (Benn) and Bangladesh (everyone) all have SLAs as first choice spin bowlers. But yeah, they're not all exactly amazing Test bowlers. I think it's not so much that it's left armers have a distinct disadvantage TBH, more just that finger spinners in general do, given the greater turn that a wristie can get. If anything, left armers should be more successful than right arm off break (redundant, I know) bowlers since they're actually turning the ball away from the right hander rather than into him. And I think Monty's fall was due more to his own shortcomings more so than his bowling style.

Edit: Just realised you were talking about left arm spinners in general, not SLAs. My bad. Why there have been no great left arm wrist spinners is a question I'd be very interested to know the answer to.
 

WindieWeathers

International Regular
Derek Underwood | Cricket Players and Officials | Cricinfo.com

In fact, I suspect most of the 'successful' in average terms left-arm spinners would pre date covered wickets.
That's impressive stats there, i'm asking the question because i don't see many around today, we've got a lefty coming through called Kavesh Kantasingh who had a very impressive domestic season recently, came 3rd in the most wickets charts, bowls very tight which brings a lot of maidens but he's also very attacking and has a habit of clean bowling batters too, he'll probably be playing for our A-team shortly but with the lack of quality leftys around i'm just wondering if it's tougher for leftys to succeed at the top level these days.
 

King Pietersen

International Captain
Apart from Vettori has there been many great left-arm spinners at test level? and if not whats the reason for it? are leftys at a disadvantage when it comes to spin? Monty Panesar made a big impact for a while but he seems to have been figured out now.
Bishan Bedi
Wilfred Rhodes
Headley Verity
Johnny Briggs
Alf Valentine
Johnny Wardle
Iqbal Qasim
Charlie Blythe
Bobby Peel

There have been quite a few fine performers at Test level, especially the Top 4. Whether or not left-arm orthodox bowlers are effective now is another matter though. With this era of flat pitches it's very hard for finger-spin bowlers to have much success, unless they have the doosra, or great control of line/length and flight. Swann, Vettori, Harbhajan and Shakib have had success though, so I don't see why left-armers couldn't have success in the modern era if they're good enough.
 
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fredfertang

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Edit: Just realised you were talking about left arm spinners in general, not SLAs. My bad. Why there have been no great left arm wrist spinners is a question I'd be very interested to know the answer to.
I think the main reason is that spinners want to turn the ball away from the RHB which the SLA bowlers stock ball does anyway so SLC bowlers are less valuable than LBG - Johnny Wardle bowled his wrist spin with great success in South Africa once - I don't think Sobers ever had a great deal of success with it - his stock in trade as a slow bowler was the orthodox stuff -

Another factor is that the pre 1935 LBW law did nothing to encourage SLC bowlers so there was even less reason to bowl it in pre war days
 

Howsie

International Captain
Is Vettori succesful bowler in test cricket? Yes. Is he a great bowler - No. Shakib > Vettori as a test bowler, but not by much.

ATM there are no great left arm spinners. And the next great one most probably will come from Pakistan
Nah, New Zealand. Nick Beard :cool:
 

GotSpin

Hall of Fame Member
I think its simple really. There have only been a handful of really good spinners. And there are only a small percentage of bowlers who are left handed. So its clear that there will always be a lack of left handed spinning options. Even when I was playing cricket for school and club, there was only two other left handed spinners, plus myself, that I saw.
 

WindieWeathers

International Regular
All i'm wondering is are the left arm spinners bowling action a disadvantage at the top level? judging from a few of the responses it seems like it might be, would Swann be the man he is today if he was a lefty? i have my doubts to be honest, Benn has done alright for us lately, his 5-fer against the Aussies was great to see of course but i wouldn't put him in Swann's class at all.
 

BoyBrumby

Englishman
Edit: Just realised you were talking about left arm spinners in general, not SLAs. My bad. Why there have been no great left arm wrist spinners is a question I'd be very interested to know the answer to.
I think the main reason is that spinners want to turn the ball away from the RHB which the SLA bowlers stock ball does anyway so SLC bowlers are less valuable than LBG - Johnny Wardle bowled his wrist spin with great success in South Africa once - I don't think Sobers ever had a great deal of success with it - his stock in trade as a slow bowler was the orthodox stuff -

Another factor is that the pre 1935 LBW law did nothing to encourage SLC bowlers so there was even less reason to bowl it in pre war days
Was going to make the same point as fred, if in a somewhat less erudite way, however I will say that with the seemingly ever increasing numbers of cack handers in test teams top orders (England having only Cook in our top 7 today seems almost noteworthy) I wouldn't be too surprised if we saw a decent chinaman bowler emerge soon.
 
All i'm wondering is are the left arm spinners bowling action a disadvantage at the top level? judging from a few of the responses it seems like it might be, would Swann be the man he is today if he was a lefty? i have my doubts to be honest, Benn has done alright for us lately, his 5-fer against the Aussies was great to see of course but i wouldn't put him in Swann's class at all.
Benn has a test average well over 40 and cant be classed as a successful bowler.
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
Of course, Sir Garry Sobers could bowl orthodox or chinaman lefties. He wasn't too shabby.
He was a not-terribly-good spinner, from all I've heard; only started to become a bowler who was taken seriously when he started bowling seam-up.

Either way, the question of "have there ever been any great left-arm spinners apart from Vettori?" is one of the more odd ones I've heard posed recently. There have been many left-arm fingerspinners who've enjoyed miles more success than Vettori has. The days of fingerspinners, left- or right-arm, being able to dominate all over the globe are gone, however, and went a long time ago. It is no longer possible for a fingerspinner to have sustained success in England or New Zealand, it hasn't been in Australia or South Africa for a very long time indeed, it virtually never was in Pakistan (except briefly in the days of Iqbal Qasim and Tauseef Ahmed then later Saqlain Mushtaq), and at the present time even the original spin-haven of India produces less spin-friendly Test tracks than used to be the case. Only Sri Lanka really remains the proper spin-haven it should be.

All of the great English fingerspinners - most of whom were left-armers (Peate, Peel, Rhodes, White, Verity, Wardle, Lock, Underwood) - date from the days when wickets in this country were uncovered. In the days since wickets in England have been covered, only subcontinental fingerspinners (Bedi, Prasanna, Kumble, Harbhajan Singh, the aforementioned Iqbal and Saqlain) have ever enjoyed much sustained succes. There hasn't been a genuinely successful Australian fingerspinner for many decades, and there's only ever been one from South Africa (Tayfield) and one from West Indies (Gibbs), both of whom are also a long time ago now.

In modern times the only bowlers who've enjoyed widespread success Worldwide have been wristspinners - Muttiah Muralitharan and Shane Warne. And if anyone thinks there's likely to be another one of those two any time soon they're asking rather a lot.
 
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Furball

Evil Scotsman
Edit: Just realised you were talking about left arm spinners in general, not SLAs. My bad. Why there have been no great left arm wrist spinners is a question I'd be very interested to know the answer to.
There haven't been enough great wrist spinners for this to be a statistical oddity.
 

BoyBrumby

Englishman
There haven't been enough great wrist spinners for this to be a statistical oddity.
I'd argue there's possibly been as many great wrist spinners as finger spinners, especially if you include Murali in the former camp. The difference is that none of the great unorthodox bowlers have been lefties.
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
There haven't been enough great wrist spinners for this to be a statistical oddity.
There will never be more than a tiny handful of great wristspinners. Wristspin is and always has been incredibly difficult to bowl to a terribly high standard - you can count the number of those who've bowled it to Test standard on two hands at worst, one at best.
 

andyc

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Was going to make the same point as fred, if in a somewhat less erudite way, however I will say that with the seemingly ever increasing numbers of cack handers in test teams top orders (England having only Cook in our top 7 today seems almost noteworthy) I wouldn't be too surprised if we saw a decent chinaman bowler emerge soon.
I understand the whole spinning it back into the right handers disadvantage, but it hasn't stopped countless offies having decent Test careers. Obviously there's just a smaller percentage of bowlers who are left armers, and then an even smaller amount that can bowl wrist spin decently, but it's just odd (to me at least) that that aspect of bowling is so under-represented at the upper levels.
 

King Pietersen

International Captain
Yeah, you're probably right Richard.

Shane Warne
Muttiah Muralitharan
Clarrie Grimmett
Bhagwath Chandrasekhar
Subhash Gupte
Bill O'Reilly
Aubrey Faulkner
Anil Kumble

There's 8, and after that you're struggling. Would you consider Abdul Qadir and Richie Benaud in that same league?
 

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