Bit confused by this question. In the scenario I'm giving, the team is batting in the fourth innings trying to bat out the game and if they're 8 or 9 down, the bowling team would be well within their rights to claim the half hour. In the obviously highly unlikely situation that they keep surviving to the end of the fifth day, I'm just curious as to whether that extra half hour taken on Day 4 would come out of play on Day 5, or if it is just a completely extra half hour added to the Test.It's a result thing, not an end of innings thing isn't it?
Because they're tall, get a little bit of movement with the new pill, and consistently hit just short of a length at low-ish pace. that sort of bowling is tough for batsmen early on in one dayers since there's enough there to be discomforting, but not enough to be able to just lean on the ball and send it to the boundary. That's why they tend to get smacked at the death too, because they usually suck at yorkers and don't have enough pace to beat the bat when batsmen are swinging hard.Why are guys like Tsotsobe, McKay, Mills and Perera so successful bowling their up and down pies in ODI cricket?
you get the choice to use the roller overnight when you're batting and at the innings break.Just heard Shastri talk about heavy rollers. I know they make pitches flatter but I heard something about teams opting to use it in between innings. What's that about?
Cheers. I thought they just do it every innings break lol.you get the choice to use the roller overnight when you're batting and at the innings break.
The heavy ones obviously compress the pitch more and flatten it out for about half an hour. There are situations when you might not use it e.g. you might not want to bat for very long and might want the pitch to break up more.
When a bowler who conventionally swings it away starts getting inswing you can logically assume it's going to be reverseHow do you folks distinguish between reverse swing and conventional swing when watching cricket on TV? I have seen conversation on CW when one poster says "good reverse swing". Another says "no, that was conventional swing". How do you tell?
Conventional swing is when the new ball swings (in the direction the seam is pointing) or the old ball swings towards the rough side. Reverse swing is when the ball swings towards the shiny sideHow do you folks distinguish between reverse swing and conventional swing when watching cricket on TV? I have seen conversation on CW when one poster says "good reverse swing". Another says "no, that was conventional swing". How do you tell?