This is only 8 matches.I'd say after the SL in England series, once he'd fully recovered from his injuries and stopped enforcing.
BTW, may I do a massive flip on Broad? I used to say that I didn't think he had it in him to be a good Test bowler. I now believe that, if injuries does not compromise his speed, he will be an extremely good Test bowler. His bowling action, height and accuracy is just conducive to good Test bowling.I don't think he ever really bowled MJ-esque filth. At worst he had what T_C previously termed "Watto syndrome", where fast, accurate deliveries look totally harmless. And he infuriatingly continued bowling a yard too short for years after every player, pundit and granny in the country had figured out that pitching it up would get him far more wickets.
No; your opinion must stay the same as it was forevermore.BTW, may I do a massive flip on Broad?
****, erm...let's hope he gets injured then, I guess...No; your opinion must stay the same as it was forevermore.
You and your partial moderationNo; your opinion must stay the same as it was forevermore.
That. And it's the "Mike Hendrick" syndrome. Fast, accurate, well-pitched up deliveries would never be completely innocuous, ITBT.And he infuriatingly continued bowling a yard too short for years after every player, pundit and granny in the country had figured out that pitching it up would get him far more wickets.
To quote this again, it may be that he is struggling to pitch the ball up. Like, sometimes bowlers do not have full control over their length and the stock ball comes out a bit short. But yes, pitching it up can transform a bowler...heck, just look at Shane Watson!I don't think he ever really bowled MJ-esque filth. At worst he had what T_C previously termed "Watto syndrome", where fast, accurate deliveries look totally harmless. And he infuriatingly continued bowling a yard too short for years after every player, pundit and granny in the country had figured out that pitching it up would get him far more wickets.
Slower decks making a difference too, IMO. Esp. in Australia, anyway.I wondered that at the time but he's since made comments that suggest it was just a matter of strategy.
I think back-of-a-length bowling is still quite overrated, I don't expect to see another Ambrose for some time. It used to give bowlers a better margin of error than full deliveries but batsmen play the cut shot so well now that you can't drift outside off stump at all on a shortish length. Even the more successful short-length bowlers like Morkel or Flintoff are at their most effective when they pitch it a yard fuller, invite the drive and bring the stumps into play. Lateral movement on a full-ish length is the way to get wickets these days.
Yeah, I've encountered similar problems.To quote this again, it may be that he is struggling to pitch the ball up. Like, sometimes bowlers do not have full control over their length and the stock ball comes out a bit short. But yes, pitching it up can transform a bowler...heck, just look at Shane Watson!
Yeah, wetter summers seem to have made it easier to find swing down there too.Slower decks making a difference too, IMO. Esp. in Australia, anyway.
You know CA asked for it?Yeah, I was shocked by the amount of grass on some of the Australian wickets in the last Ashes. Although I know that was a conscious decision by Cricket Australia to do so.
Yes, I don't think the pitches were anything extraordinary compared to previous years, like you say a couple were a little greener due to the wet summer. I thought they were actually more greener this past Aussie summer than the previous tbh.You know CA asked for it?
Maybe there was some pressure after the Brisbane test, which was the flattest I'd seen it in some time, but it was really only Melbourne and, especially, Sydney that had more grass coverage than normal. And you can put it down to the fact that we had some of the wettest summers that I've ever experienced.