I'm lead to believe he's a massive Glenelg Tigers fan in the SANFL.seems weird kid qadir would come live in australia, only to go live in south australia
lol....so truebtw remember the last time we exported a leg spinner turned out to be ****s is an understatement.
Tahir bowls so flat, though. Even disregarding the fact that he barely knows where the next one will pitch, or indeed if it will pitch, (which is a pretty big thing to disregard, sure) he won't beat top class bats in the air. And without that he won't take top order wickets.Tahir does give it a rip, doesn't he?
Badree would be an ideal example of a new non-spinning leggie.
Legspin is hard work. You only really get good at it when your older, and the only way a young legspinner is going to persisted with is if pitches and conditions suit his bowling. A glut of limited overs cricket, flatter pitches, fast outfields, big bats, all do not help that.
Yep.We have to accept the number of leg spinners who can combine lots of turn with accuracy has always been vanishingly small.
Have to agree with this. I got quite excited during the World Cup last year watching him. Sad to think he'll be overshadowed by Narine, rathet than them being paired up.Still not sure what Bishoo did to be discarded. Though he had quite a bit of potential.
He does, but his leg break is delivered from near vertical which negates the revs and turn he can get. His delivery stride and follow through lacks any real power and makes him look like a roller and he defaults to his wrong-un'.Tahir does give it a rip, doesn't he?
Summed up my thoughts on the subject perfectly. In regards to Kumble, and to his credit, he constantly looked to improve his leg break and in the later stages of his career had developed his pretty decent LB.The classic case of overspin bowlers. Totally agree. Kumble was deadly, because he gave it a mighty rip, but once he gave it top spin, it did not turn much
This.John Davison was a bowler, dude. He's more famous for his innings for Canada than anything else for that reason but it was more or less a fluke; he was a bowler who batted down the order whenever he played for serious cricket sides. Would've played a lot more First Class cricket - as a bowler - if he was born a few years later, too.
I will admit, I have only seen him bowl in footage of a shield match between NSW and Vic from about '98 or '99. That's the problem I have though, he was never tested as a bowler of substance on the international stage, never played internationally in a test side, so why is he employed to shape our next top Test match spinner from the crop going through the AIS? Mentality wise, he has no insight into the test arena and mechanically, he was a very round arm offie, which unless it comes naturally to a player, limits the insights he can give to other bowler's regarding their actions, lines, etc.John Davison was a bowler, dude. He's more famous for his innings for Canada than anything else for that reason but it was more or less a fluke; he was a bowler who batted down the order whenever he played for serious cricket sides. Would've played a lot more First Class cricket - as a bowler - if he was born a few years later, too.
I agree totally. You don't have to be a world beater to be a great coach.Davison was undoubtedly a batting allrounder, the reason he batted at around 7/8 (from memory) for SA in first class cricket was because SACA didn't have a better spinner getting around and they thought they could put another bat there and just bowl handy offies.
Just because you're not a world beater doesn't mean you can't teach very well. It's not very often that the world's best players become the world's best coaches.
Ash Mallett is the best off spin bowling coach I've come across.
I think we could do with a few more leg spinning coaches though.
Nah, absolute bull****. He was a bowler Canada used as a pinch hitter to open their innings, and because it came off they kept trying it, and South Australia tried it a few times in one day cricket as well. He was nothing more than an effective pinch hitter as a batsman though.Nah Davison is a batting allrounder.
Nah look you're wrong. He wasn't of first class batting or bowling standards, but I've worked with people who have played and coached with him and they will all tell you his primary skill is as a batsman, it just so happened that off spin bowling is easier to do to an acceptable standard than batting at first class level. He may have looked like he was selected as an off spinner... but he's a batsman who bowls.Nah, absolute bull****. He was a bowler Canada used as a pinch hitter to open their innings, and because it came off they kept trying it, and South Australia tried it a few times in one day cricket as well. He was nothing more than an effective pinch hitter as a batsman though.
He played 31 First Class games or Victoria at the start of his career, in which he didn't bat above 8 once in the first innings of a game, regularly found himself coming at 9 below David Saker and/or Paul Reiffell and even spent a game batting 11 below Shane Warne. In that period he averaged eight with the bat in 42 innings. In his first game for South Australia (which happened after all that, obv) he batted 10 below Ryan Harris. He was 32 years old. You're going to tell me that a 32 year old who had played 30+ First Class games batting 8-11, bowling a ****load of overs every game and averaging 8 with the bat was a batting allrounder??
After that World Cup innings for Canada he did get some opportunities batting higher in one day cricket, and he may have even been picked to bat six or seven at some point in a First Class game after that (I cbf manually looking at any more scorecards though itbt) but it didn't work out at all - the innings was a flash in the plan - and all this happened in his mid to late 30s anyway. If he was ever a batting allrounder (which I contend anyway tbh) it was very late in his career.
The bloke was a bowler. His most famous/successful contribution came with the bat, but that doesn't change that fact.