Ikki
Hall of Fame Member
2% more chance is what you're arguing over. So a team like Aus has 2% more chance to get to the tail than a team like SL. That difference is, like, nothing. And if several bowlers are going for that 2%, whereas the lone-wolf is by himself, it's probably more beneficial seeing the tail 2% less, but having no competition for when you do get there. In essence, that point isn't in favour of a lone-wolf. Cheap wickets or not.Tail end wickets are cheap, whether you accept it or not. And 30% of wickets do fall in to that category whether you like it or not.
It doesn't matter if a strong attack gets to the tail quickly, unless the bowler in the strong attack in question has gotten most of those wickets. For if they are being shared, it has hindered the bowler in the strong attack from getting more wickets. It would be more beneficial to get to the tail slowly, as you say you would in a lone-wolf attack, yet have a bigger share of those wickets.Still has not grasped the idea. Strong attacks will get to the tail enders quickly. Lone rangers get to them on their own very rarely. Strong attacks will have that 30% of wickets available to them more times, say 80% of times, and that'll give each bowler 6% chance to grab one (0.3 * 0.8 = 0.24). For a lone ranger to get 6% he has to get 7 wickets or more once in every 16 innings, which is very difficult. Of course if the attack had three good bowlers the percentage will be 8%, and two, 12%
Australia had 2 all-time greats, a very good bowler and a good bowler. Sri Lanka had an all-time great, a very good bowler and 2 decent bowlers at best. Anyway, I used your own example for reference.Don't try to compare ttwo sides. Aussies had three good bowlers competing for it, SL had two. Murali was not exactly a lone ranger.
I just pointed out to you; the difference between a lone-wolf bowler and one in a pack is simply a handful of overs more per match. Hadlee bowled 3 more overs than McGrath for example. Warne bowled about 9 less overs than Murali for example. It's not exactly a mountain to overcome. The point is not could Warne bowl as much as Murali - for the sake of argument let's say he couldn't - it's if he bowled more (let's say even 4 overs) per match would that help him take more wickets with less competition?BS, even during a single innings bowling more means tiring more. When you tire more you tend to give more loose balls. inuries will keep him out of the side for lengths of times, and it will take time to recover and during recovery bowling will not be the best and their stats will suffer.
And anyway, I showed you: even if Hadlee and McGrath (for example) bowled the same amount of overs in a match, Hadlee clearly took many more big hauls and this can only be explained through a lack of support since Hadlee played some 40 tests less yet took all those hauls.
So, it's not just simply having an advantage by bowling more, when in a lone-wolf attack, it is also that your teammates don't pick off other wickets, even if you were bowling the same amount.
By all means, do so. I've already addressed this though: these all-time greats are more likely to be on good form and take loads of wickets than suffer their "barren" hauls which would negate their advantage.So what about their average and SR? Can we compare the "barren" hauls too?
In fact, one can argue that they maximise their good form when they have so little competition by taking as many wickets as possible. And yet even when they are on bad form they're still likely to take some wickets. Only in the absolute worst moments of form: when they are bowling a lot, with no help, and taking no wickets, would it really hinder them. I'd argue those moments weren't that many in comparison.
Well, that's the point. It may hinder them playing longer (hence taking less aggregate wickets - although that is debatable in that they might be taking more wickets in less matches anyway) but it's not likely to hurt their ratios in the matches.Doing it for 15 years match after match is a big deal. Yes, it makes a difference.
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