Why do that though, in the last 2 years England have only played The Ashes home and away and SA away, whereas someone like Steyn for example has played 9 out of the 12 you've listed at home.just thought that those figure gave quite an accurate reflection of their respective bowling abilities.
btw-
Bowling records | Test matches | Cricinfo Statsguru | ESPN Cricinfo
Included only the top batting line-ups. (nz, pak, wi have relatively poor line-ups)
Top 3 bowlers from each side-
Steyn - avg 23, sr 43
Morkel - avg 30, sr 57
Harris - avg 40, sr 88, econ 2.76
Anderson - avg 32, sr 61
Broad - avg 36, sr 70
Swann- avg 36, sr 70
Zaheer - avg 28, sr 49
Harbi- avg 38, sr 75
Ohja - avg 43, sr 89
Siddle - avg 27, sr 54
Johnson- avg 31, sr 54
Hilfy- avg 39, sr 78
From who exactly?Haha, The overconfidence is amusing tstl. Will be a fun series, won't India in England.
Do you want me to include stats from 2008? Swann had only just started then.Why do that though, in the last 2 years England have only played The Ashes home and away and SA away, whereas someone like Steyn for example has played 9 out of the 12 you've listed at home.
Considering Sharma-Sree-Harby is on par with Bangladesh is overconfidence IMO. Twas partly in jest anyway.From who exactly?
Ick, such dodgy stat manipulation going on here, cutting and changing and omitting. Whilst I don't disagree that Steyn/Morkel > Anderson/Swann as a pair, the gap isn't big and the bowlers beyond that are dramatically superior for England.Do you want me to include stats from 2008? Swann had only just started then.
Bowling records | Test matches | Cricinfo Statsguru | ESPN Cricinfo
It just makes it worse for england tbh.
Ick, such dodgy stat manipulation going on here, cutting and changing and omitting. Whilst I don't disagree that Steyn/Morkel > Anderson/Swann as a pair, the gap isn't big and the bowlers beyond that are dramatically superior for England.
Yeah but the thing is when you do that the statistics become seriously distorted because the sample size becomes way too small to be accurate.
I mean I'm almost certain that's Swann figures are badly inflated by the fact he played 5 tests down here, and 1. visiting offies never do well here, ever 2. he was basically surplus to requirements apart from one situation where the pitch was turning, and he delivered there.
Well we'll have to wait till the end of the english summer then. 3 tests against SL, and 4 tests against india.Including 2009, it becomes what I expected - all of Anderson, Broad and Swann's Tests in that metric are against us or against SA and most of them are away. Nah, sorry, can't take that seriously at all.
So? 2008 is not relevant, IMO, to a Test taking place today. All the players have changed too much. Swann's two poor series come in India in 2008 (and it's India!) and in Australia where averaging 40 is about the expectation for a visiting offspinner.tbf Harris, Harbi toured aus too in that time period, 3 and 4 tests respectively.
All-round records | Test matches | Cricinfo Statsguru | ESPN Cricinfo
Take a look at his country by country record.
Actually I never said it wasn't. I rated it only slightly behind SA's attack.So? 2008 is not relevant, IMO, to a Test taking place today. All the players have changed too much. Swann's two poor series come in India in 2008 (and it's India!) and in Australia where averaging 40 is about the expectation for a visiting offspinner.
In the end this kind of stat manipulation goes nowhere. Having watched most of Anderson/Swann/Broad/Tremlett's bowling at Test level in the last year and much of SA/India's attack, I'm pretty confident in my assessment that the England attack is not far off world-leading.
bowling attack ratings-
1. SA 9/10
2. Eng 8.5/10
3. Aus 7/10
4. Ind 6.5/10 (without zaheer it's 5/10)
5. Pak 6/10
6. NZ 5.5/10
7. WI 4/10
8. SL 3.5/10 (the current one)
9. Bang 3/10
IMO
Eng probably have the best attack in the world at presentSo? 2008 is not relevant, IMO, to a Test taking place today. All the players have changed too much. Swann's two poor series come in India in 2008 (and it's India!) and in Australia where averaging 40 is about the expectation for a visiting offspinner.
In the end this kind of stat manipulation goes nowhere. Having watched most of Anderson/Swann/Broad/Tremlett's bowling at Test level in the last year and much of SA/India's attack, I'm pretty confident in my assessment that the England attack is not far off world-leading.
+1.England have better depth and variety in their attack, but SA's attack is the more accomplished (and lethal) and proven for longer and in a wider variety of conditions IMO. TBF, most of that is down to Steyn being the best bowler in the world comfortably right now.