subshakerz
Hall of Fame Member
Frankly, I'm tired of this whole adjusting for different eras business. The main difference between the 2000s and the 80s/90s was that in the latter you simply had many more worldclass fast bowlers. Once these fast bowlers retired by 2003, batsmen had a field day. Flatter pitches are a minor factor and have been exaggerated to such an extent given that lower quality pace bowling tends to make any pitch look flatter. Look at how the pitch mysteriously changed when India came to bat in this recent series, for example. Pretty certain that the pitches in the subcontinent are probably as result-oriented as they have been in the previous decades. Drawn tests are much less frequent now, are they not?
The 2000s were not much harder to bowl in, they were rather much easier to bat in. There is a big difference. McGrath was pretty much the only worldclass pacer who consistently played most of the decade. Yet some posters are pointing to the fact that there was so much crappier bowling in the 2000s as somehow proof that bowlers in the 80s had it easy. Rubbish.
The 2000s were not much harder to bowl in, they were rather much easier to bat in. There is a big difference. McGrath was pretty much the only worldclass pacer who consistently played most of the decade. Yet some posters are pointing to the fact that there was so much crappier bowling in the 2000s as somehow proof that bowlers in the 80s had it easy. Rubbish.