Because you're all cheats, obviously.why the example has to be about PAKISTAN??????????????????
i hate it when someone starts ******* agianst pakistan, if i'm not mistaken GOUGHY is from england, so before calling pakistani bowlers cheaters, he should call English team cheaters also, they won 2005 ashes cuz of cheating then
& what ICC should do is to ban everything Pakistan does for reverse swing & allow everything others do
still Pakistani bowlers reverse the ball more
why the example has to be about PAKISTAN??????????????????
Obviously said completely seriously.!!! you might want to discreetly edit that away, Matt.
I think the joke may be lost on one particular poster...Obviously said completely seriously.
Can someone ban this cretin please?why the example has to be about PAKISTAN??????????????????
Roast peported.Because you're all cheats, obviously.
Apart from the terrorists
Funnily enough, my last ball in first-class cricket clean-bowled Garry Sobers, against South Australia. It was off an Irish - reverse-swing. It hit him on the knee, going on to hit middle and leg.
I'm not sure that's 'reverse swing'...it would be if it actually went towards the shiny side. But it's unlikely without you doing something else to the ball first.Scruff a Ball one side and Keep it shiny on the other side + you have to make sure when releasing the ball that the shiny side is facing the side you want the ball to swing to
Yeah, I was taught something similar years ago buy a guy that played at our club. Funnily enough, I never really used it, except at the nets.Load the side of the ball which is in better condition with moisture (this changes the weight distribution of the ball) and keep it smooth
convectional swing.
You are not going to get swing with the new ball. For starters, both sides are in the same condition so how would you tell. You also need the two sides of the ball to be in different conditions to get reverse swing.The Aftermatter: The Physics of Cricket: What is 'Swing Bowling'?
'If you did begin to bowl at 100 mph or more, then you may begin to notice reverse swing with even a new ball'.
I am interested in what speeds you need reverse the ball. Cooley says 85mph but if the ball is really rough 80mph.
'Cooley wonders if reverse-swing is something which spinners can do; and, as an experiment, Simon Jones had cut his pace down to 50mph and still reverse-swung the ball, but only when it has been roughened up beyond the legal limits'.
In Bob Woolmer's 'Art and Science of Cricket', I remember he said that the ball will reverse in different directions on either side of around 135km/h, I believe. Would that be plausible?I'm not sure that's 'reverse swing'...it would be if it actually went towards the shiny side. But it's unlikely without you doing something else to the ball first.
I meant that from what I can remember, he was saying that a ball that was swinging in at 110km/h could be bowled with exactly the same action at 135km/h and it would swing out. I will have to dig up that book and find out.what do you mean either side of 135 km/h? at 90 km/h too?
You would have to change the seam angle to get it to swing the other way. Angle of seam is the most important factor in which way it will swing (if it swings). Might be possible with the same bowling action.I meant that from what I can remember, he was saying that a ball that was swinging in at 110km/h could be bowled with exactly the same action at 135km/h and it would swing out. I will have to dig up that book and find out.