wellAlbidarned
International Coach
So, how about that moon landing eh.
A still pic? You got the definition of chucking fundamentally wrong.
Besides chucking is such a nob issue in case of spinners in my eyes. Have expressed my views on that before.
That's not a very nice description of Murali, Migara.Looks like a old grumpy fella who dislikes math.
He definitely has a congenitally bent elbow - obviously he can't straighten it completely, and that's fine, but only as long as there isn't any significant bending from that position. If you look at footage like this (and it's not the best example anyway) it's pretty clear to me there is: Is Muralitharan's bowling action legal? - 2004 (Part 2) - YouTube.Even when you got to watch him with the super slow motion camera, there wasn't any sign of extension of the elbow, yet so many other levers were moving around it.
NO, they were not proven wrong later. What was decided was to take the decision out of their hands and Murali would have passed under the rules eventually decided on (actually, I think they toyed with 5 degrees for a spinner for a while which he would definitely have failed). The umpires were correct under the rules of the time (and in fact could not be wrong) even if Murali's arm was iron bar straight. You can't go changing the rules later and then say "See, they were wrong" because their decisions did not agree with the rules you made up. All you can say is the rules existing at the time were bad.Which was blatantly wrong as proven later. Umpires mistake, is a mistake. Whether it's official or not doesn't matter. What matters is the absolute truth.
I reckon they'd strike all his wickets from the record and ban him from any form of cricket for the rest of his life, such is the esteem in which we're held in cricketing circles worldwide.What would be the outcome of this poll/thread if the current consesus was YES?
I don't chuck...I wasn't tested.That is incorrect - he was the catalyst for doing the study which proved everyone chucked. If the study was done and only he was found to chuck, the rule would almost certainly would not have been changed.
So was McGrath's and Pollocks until they were found to extend up to 12 degrees, lot more than Murali's stock ball. The fine line is, no one has checked Swann. If you want to check somebody, first check some "normal" looking ones to see what is normal. And it was found out that what human eye interprets as a chuck (unless a blatant obvious 45 degree one) is grossly insensitive measure. If you are checking Ajmal, so should be Swann.I'll agree with you to a point, but throwing (pun not intentional) Swann into the mix is ridiculous. His action is pretty much perfect.
No. It's possible for a guy who, to the naked eye, looks like a chucker to turn out to be legit, but the inverse is borderline impossible.So was McGrath's and Pollocks until they were found to extend up to 12 degrees, lot more than Murali's stock ball. The fine line is, no one has checked Swann. If you want to check somebody, first check some "normal" looking ones to see what is normal. And it was found out that what human eye interprets as a chuck (unless a blatant obvious 45 degree one) is grossly insensitive measure. If you are checking Ajmal, so should be Swann.
All models are wrong but some are useful.
If McGrath was measured at 12 degrees, I would like to know what Lee was then, because he looks to have far more of an elbow 'flick' than the former.So was McGrath's and Pollocks until they were found to extend up to 12 degrees, lot more than Murali's stock ball. The fine line is, no one has checked Swann. If you want to check somebody, first check some "normal" looking ones to see what is normal. And it was found out that what human eye interprets as a chuck (unless a blatant obvious 45 degree one) is grossly insensitive measure. If you are checking Ajmal, so should be Swann.
You may have an educated guess on that, and most probably it would have been more than Murali's doosra.If McGrath was measured at 12 degrees, I would like to know what Lee was then, because he looks to have far more of an elbow 'flick' than the former.
Wrong. It was proven without doubt that even clean actions can be borderline with elbow extension. either test all or test none and move forwards.No. It's possible for a guy who, to the naked eye, looks like a chucker to turn out to be legit, but the inverse is borderline impossible.
Apologetics for McGrath chucks? I'd say Asians have looser joints than Caucasians so would be entitled to a larger extension if I wanted to counter it.With McGrath, I do think he had a little visible flick of the elbow, but that's more just a feature of tall, lanky fast bowlers in general and it's well within the current rules anyway.
Care to share your top secret sources no-one else has ever seen on this matter? A bent arm can appear bent or straight from different perspectives, but a straight arm is straight however you look at it.Wrong. It was proven without doubt that even clean actions can be borderline with elbow extension. either test all or test none and move forwards.
woah lets not go nutsYou may have an educated guess on that, and most probably it would have been more than Murali's doosra.
You have incredible eyes.No. It's possible for a guy who, to the naked eye, looks like a chucker to turn out to be legit, but the inverse is borderline impossible.
With McGrath, I do think he had a little visible flick of the elbow, but that's more just a feature of tall, lanky fast bowlers in general and it's well within the current rules anyway.
I thought Lee was actually reported and tested at some stage, but I could be wrong.If McGrath was measured at 12 degrees, I would like to know what Lee was then, because he looks to have far more of an elbow 'flick' than the former.