That's what the 'side-spin instead of overspin' part was referring to.No. Barnes had a leg break at least.
Chris Harris and Salim Malik indeed bowled legcutters than drifted in. since he bowled front of the hand variety he did not get much spin. But the same back of the hand variety drifts more and spins more as well.I always used to imagine something like what Chris Harris bowled (with a less ridiculous action obviously), but judging by this Peebles source that I will again quote:
NO that's not the basic difference between them . . . there is much more to it.So basically, Barnes was a Kumble who bowled more side-spin instead of over-spin?
Skippos ?From the looks of it he bowled a lot like skippos who gets drift, dip and turn at ~100kph
Oh I was not talking about the quality of the bowlers. Just wanted to confirm my understanding of the type of the bowler he was based on the discussion on the previous page. I used Kumble as a comparison as a spinner who bowled at pace without much flight. However because Kumble bowled overspin he didn't get drift or much spin. Barnes bowling side-spin at a similar (?) pace, would have got drift into and spin away from the batsman.NO that's not the basic difference between them . . . there is much more to it.
- Barnes bowled with the new ball, Kumble didn't.
- Barnes was one of the best new ball bowlers in the history of the game - not Kumble
- Barnes moved the bal very sharp and very late in to the batsman - Kumble couldn't
- Barnes made the ball move very sharply off the pitch from leg stump to hit the off stump - Kumble's leg breaks turned negligibly if at all.
Not to mention that Barnes bowled with great success both at home and away including against Australia - not Kumble.
They were a bit different
I understandOh I was not talking about the quality of the bowlers. Just wanted to confirm my understanding of the type of the bowler he was based on the discussion on the previous page. I used Kumble as a comparison as a spinner who bowled at pace without much flight. However because Kumble bowled overspin he didn't get drift or much spin. Barnes bowling side-spin at a similar (?) pace, would have got drift into and spin away from the batsman.
A better way to put it is that he seems a mixture between Kumble and Warne*. Like the former in terms of speed and (lack of) flight and like the latter in terms of drift and spin.
*Note again - Only talking about bowling type, not quality.
This sounds almost exactly like Warne's ball to Gatting. Could you clarify in what way it's different from a leg-spin bowler's drift.He bowled deliveries that started in a line outside the off stump and then at the last minute 'swung' in sharply to land on the leg stump, then, having squared up the batsman completely, they would move off the pitch in the opposite direction to hit the top of off.
Akram's famous delivery to Croft seemed like it swung both ways in the air (went in first and then extremely late outswing from about leg stump), however on closer inspection it actually only swung out late. That in movement at the start of the delivery was due to the angle he was bowling at.I've edited my last post to say Bedser's famous delivery swung in to pitch on leg and break away to hit off. (not leg as I previously said). And yes Agent N it is how witnesses to it described Barnes' bowling though I'd also say he was definitely slower than Akram based on those same accounts.
The floater too, like what Prasanna was a master of, moves away in the air in flight but on pitching continues to hold its line rather than change course and come back.Akram's famous delivery to Croft seemed like it swung both ways in the air (went in first and then extremely late outswing from about leg stump), however on closer inspection it actually only swung out late. That in movement at the start of the delivery was due to the angle he was bowling at.
Junaid is also pretty good with the angles he uses, especially when he was bowling around the wicket in Sri Lanka (got a lot of wickets that way).