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***Official*** India in Australia 2011/12

Spikey

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yeah but you have to run don't you? you can just say "oh that's a good pitch in an area that will be called a strike if I leave it, i'll just tap it back to the pitcher and wait for the bad pitch" can you
 

adub

International Captain
Yes but you can't do that repeatedly until you get a ball you want to have a crack at like in cricket.
Different argument. They are clearly very different games. Concentrating for 10 hours to score a big double/triple ton is something as foreign to baseball as back to back mountain stages of Le Tour is to sprint track cycling.

The argument is whether or not it is easier to hit a baseball pitch or a cricket delivery. You've added in the qualifier of 'meaningful' and I accept that is reasonable even though plenty of edges in cricket will run away for runs. Essentially the question as I see it is which is the harder discipline to 'middle' a shot.

Baseballers have the disadvantage of a considerably smaller 'middle', but that is balanced against a much smaller 'target zone' for where the pitches are going. Four balls outside the strikezone, you get a walk, take one on the body, you get a walk. They also only face the variables of pace, swing and drop from the pitcher. The distance from pitcher's plate to home plate is a little longer than popping crease to popping crease, but obviously the pitcher's release reduces that a few feet so reaction times are comparable. Along with reduced area of 'good' balls, they have the advantage of a very limited shot repertoire. You have a much larger scope for premeditation in baseball than cricket because you are not looking to play shots through 360deg or to a large range of areas. I'm certainly not trying to denigrate the skill of baseball pitchers or hitters because it is considerable. But I don't think the smaller bat is such an enormous disadvantage to getting a good 'middled' hit away considering the other factors of the game.

Adding in the deviations and variety that comes from bouncing the ball on the pitch, and the ability of a cricket ball to swing further than a baseball, not to mention the fact that each ball could be coming at you anywhere between your toes and your head, directed at the body, at the stumps, or outside the line means on each individual ball a batsman has much more to worry about than in baseball. Obviously a pie chucker on a road isn't much of a challenge, but equally straight pitches at 120k are pretty simple to get a piece of. At the pinnacle of the game I'd consider it much harder for a cricketer than a baseballer to get a shot away on any given ball. Having a bigger bat doesn't prevent the very best batsmen playing and missing good bowling. It's the nature of the game.

If you say put up a cricketer with an eye like a dead fish (say Warner) against a top MLB pitcher, and a top MLB hitter against say Steyn on a greentop (or even just a pitch with a little for the bowler) I know who'd adapt the quickest and would be making the most regular solid connections. Just trying to adjust to length would be a nightmare for the baseballer so long as Dale mixed it up a bit and gave him a bit of chin music. Add a bit of late swing or seam and the poor guy wouldn't know what to think. I don't doubt he'd send a few over the long on boundary, but he'd pick up some nasty bruises on the way. On the other hand Davey might take a while to pick the change ups, but he'd be making plenty of good hits pretty soon.

The discussion came out of that US show which in no way replicated the real world conditions of top cricket. My test would be a much fairer demonstration of the difficulties of just middling a top class bowler no matter how good your eye and swing.
 

benchmark00

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There's no way I'm reading that post.

But you're crazy if you think it's harder to hit a cricket ball than a baseball. It might be harder to succeed at cricket than baseball, but that's totally different to simply hitting it.
 

Daemon

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If you say put up a cricketer with an eye like a dead fish (say Warner) against a top MLB pitcher, and a top MLB hitter against say Steyn on a greentop (or even just a pitch with a little for the bowler) I know who'd adapt the quickest and would be making the most regular solid connections. Just trying to adjust to length would be a nightmare for the baseballer so long as Dale mixed it up a bit and gave him a bit of chin music. Add a bit of late swing or seam and the poor guy wouldn't know what to think. I don't doubt he'd send a few over the long on boundary, but he'd pick up some nasty bruises on the way. On the other hand Davey might take a while to pick the change ups, but he'd be making plenty of good hits pretty soon.
I think Warner would get struck out a lot more times than the MLB bat would get bowled tbh. A baseball is a lot harder to hit than a cricket ball, you just need to play both games to know.
 

Debris

International 12th Man
I think Warner would get struck out a lot more times than the MLB bat would get bowled tbh. A baseball is a lot harder to hit than a cricket ball, you just need to play both games to know.
The question was which would make a better go of the switch, though. You have to hit the ball a lot less often in baseball to be a success. I think it would be easier to go from cricket to baseball than from baseball to cricket.
 

adharcric

International Coach
Can't believe there's actually a discussion about this, it's far more difficult to make contact in baseball than in cricket (not that it's a meaningful comparison). Cricket's probably more difficult to learn/master, but technique can make up for lack of athleticism (including hand-eye coordination, etc.) to a greater extent than in baseball. One more thing, comparing how professionals in different sports would fare when switched around doesn't mean much.
 

weldone

Hall of Fame Member
It's easier to hit a cricket ball than a baseball. But cricket is far more about concentration than everything "clicking" in one big moment. Cricket is an accumulation of small moments interspersed with large, important moments. In baseball, every moment is almost equally as important but the luck factor is a lot higher.

Baseball centres around how well the pitchers pitch and the fielding side fields. Cricket centres around how well the batsmen bat (the last decade has largely been the exception to the rule, where the bowlers tend to decide most games, in the past and even in recent times, it's the better batting side that wins).
I don't necessarily disagree, but in cricket 'hitting' a ball is not of much importance. Bowl a good-length outswinger outside off-stump - Tendulkar might play a superb cover drive with good timing and placing perfectly between 2 fielders, Dravid might leave the ball completely, and Dhoni may 'hit' it directly to give the gully fielder a chance. How will the baseball spectator differentiate between the three shots? Do they even realise how many different shots can be played to the same delivery?

I don't know if I have been able to drive across the point perfectly. I remember two US baseball spectators describing the WC semi-final between India and Pakistan (somewhere in CW, there was a thread created about it) - they realised this point (because they saw the whole match) and presented in a much better way the difference between the two.

In essence, after the bowler/pitcher bowls/throws a delivery, a batsman has many more decisions to take before he hits the ball than a batter.
 
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uvelocity

International Coach
:laugh:

This thread in the last couple of days: Ashes debate, omg I hate coaching young kids, personal experiences of people dropping catches, baseball vs cricket.
I chat about cricket on a non cricket board a bit too, yesterday we had beer talk :)

Not much point talking about the cricket, given that india suck so hard :ph34r:
 

uvelocity

International Coach
righto cricket talk. What does Warner mean by this, I don't get it:

Davey Warner said:
"In my mind there is probably only one player, and that's Sachin Tendulkar, who looks like he's using a sight screen when he comes out to bat.
 

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