Haha this.If batsmen are suffering, I'm down.
Sabina Park in March '04 was before your time presumably? - still can't believe that actually happened actually - I'll away to youtube to checkI don't think I've ever seen a pacer dominate a lineup to the extent Warne or Murali did, though that is probably due to the fact that they could bowl longer spells.
I am not sure about this.I don't think I've ever seen a pacer dominate a lineup to the extent Warne or Murali did, though that is probably due to the fact that they could bowl longer spells.
Regardless, there was a feeling of utter helplessness and despair when Warne/Murali at their best ran through your team. Like they were totally unstoppable.
Alternatively, if it's the other side doing it, you grow to hate the style that is ruining you. Although I appreciate Murali, I hate watching him bowl to the BCs because we just couldn't figure him out.One thing though, if it is your side doing it you don't care which bowler it is and what they bowl as long as you win.
Yep, Waqar seemed to defy physics with the lateness of his swing. As often as not it was a hapless Englishman whose furniture was rearranged, but it was very hard not to admire the man's bravura talents. Utterly thrilling to behold.Loved to see Warne bamboozling the opposition, but the greatest sight in cricket ever has to be Waqar destroying the stumps with his in-ducker.
Only two spinners mainly. Many more fast bowlersThe spinners probably did it more often though.
Wasn't before my time, but I never saw that spell. There are exceptions I guess.Sabina Park in March '04 was before your time presumably? - still can't believe that actually happened actually - I'll away to youtube to check
gun postYep, Waqar seemed to defy physics with the lateness of his swing. As often as not it was a hapless Englishman whose furniture was rearranged, but it was very hard not to admire the man's bravura talents. Utterly thrilling to behold.
As much as I like to see a great spinner in action, for sheer visceral excitement I'd take a quick as a personal preference. For largely the same reasons as I enjoy boxing more than tennis. One admires the artistry of the latter, but the possibility of blood on the canvass appeals at a more primal level; facing up to a quick genuinely tests a batsman's mettle. With the protective equipment they wear nowadays batsmen aren't likely to get seriously hurt (thankfully) but (as Kallis bouncing the rabbitish Fernando in the first test showed, after he'd first been discomforted by a bumper from the latter) a quick can still make a batsman hop about & it isn't much fun to face.
Can't wait for this GIFYep. The lasting memory of 2011 for me.