Uppercut
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There's a repeated assumption when it comes to bowlers of around 80mph or less that, even if they've taken bucketloads of wickets in first-class cricket, they're not good enough for tests. It's applied pretty heavily by selectors, even when- as in the case of Stuart Clark- the player in question has already taken boatloads of cheap test wickets. And by fans, hence Darren Sammy's place is constantly being whined about despite him having the most successful start to a West Indian test career since the 90s. The Sri Lankan selectors believed it so strongly that they selected Suranga Lakmal ahead of Nuwan Kulasekara for the test series in England. It's a dogma so strong that it was used to justify a bowler with an enormously successful first-class and ODI career (and a decent start to his test career) being left out in favour of someone who's never had any remote success at any level.
So I'm questioning that assumption. Where did it even come from, and why is it applied to such a serious extent? What makes test batsmen so notably better at playing medium-fast bowling in comparison to first-class batsmen relative to their ability to play fast-medium or fast bowling? I haven't seen anywhere near enough evidence for this idea to justify the extent to which the hypothesis is accepted by the cricketing community.
So I'm questioning that assumption. Where did it even come from, and why is it applied to such a serious extent? What makes test batsmen so notably better at playing medium-fast bowling in comparison to first-class batsmen relative to their ability to play fast-medium or fast bowling? I haven't seen anywhere near enough evidence for this idea to justify the extent to which the hypothesis is accepted by the cricketing community.
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