chasingthedon
International Regular
I think kyear2 has had it tough too, two 14ths and a 13th - randomizer doing a good job on the whole though, I think.So low in the order again.
I think kyear2 has had it tough too, two 14ths and a 13th - randomizer doing a good job on the whole though, I think.So low in the order again.
Yeah. But, I guess it balances out as both him and me get two quick picks.I think kyear2 has had it tough too, two 14ths and a 13th - randomizer doing a good job on the whole though, I think.
Right - I like picking at the turn actually (though I haven't here yet).Yeah. But, I guess it balances out as both him and me get two quick picks.
The concept of a Yorkshireman running out of twaddle to say is a new one on me
So, sort of like a South African 1950s version of Malcolm Marshall, but obviously, not quite of the same class.The handsome, fair-haired Adcock, however, could be just as terrifying. Both bowlers were tall — Adcock, at 6ft 3in, was an inch shorter than (Name removed) — and capable of making the ball rise steeply from a length. Their bouncers, of course, were aimed at the batsman’s head. If Adcock was marginally less inclined to invective, and indeed capable of being perfectly agreeable off the pitch, in the Test arena there was little to chose between the two bowlers in aggression.
Adcock’s action was certainly the more original. “He bowls without interruption in the course of his run,” Wisden observed, “swinging his arm on a trunk that is virtually upright — like a sudden gust turning a light windmill.”
At every stage his toes remained pointing towards the batsman, while at the moment of delivery a plumb-line from hand to ground would have brushed down the bowler’s right flank. (Name removed) thought him “as near to being an arm bowler as anyone I have ever seen”, and wondered how such an action could deliver such ferocious pace.
Fred Trueman, for his part, marvelled at how Adcock managed to bowl outswingers with an inswinger’s open-chested action; the miracle was, however, most certainly achieved. Moreover, Adcock improved with age, becoming even faster as he concentrated on rhythm rather than muscular effort.
But if Heine was the bogeyman Adcock lost little or nothing in comparison. South African journalist Charles Fortune said of him "Adcock in action is the very picture of what a fast bowler should be. His entire action is beautiful to behold and his pace a shade hotter than that of his contemporaries." From the perspective of an England batsman xxxxxxxx wrote; "Somebody remarked once that arm bowlers could not be really fast. Well, he (Adcock) was as near to being an arm bowler as anyone I have ever seen, and he was decidedly quick." Adcock's teammate and sometime captain xxxxxxx xxxxxx had this to say in his autobiography; "Adcock I must rate, technically, as the finest new-ball bowler produced in South Africa during my career. He had the priceless asset of extracting pace and disconcerting lift from the most lifeless of pitches."
Didn't realise you're a Yorkshireman, Jake - surprised you didn't go for a top order of Dravid, Kallis, Barrington with Simpson opening - #diginYeah being near the end of the order actually helps (except maybe in round 1) as you get to plan your team better by picking two close together.
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I considered Barrington over Kanhai but thought a possible Kallis-Barrington partnership may put off the purists.
Picking in 5 ftr, or as soon as I've run out of twaddle to say
I don't agree with this sort of ethnic stereotypingDidn't realise you're a Yorkshireman, Jake - surprised you didn't go for a top order of Dravid, Kallis, Barrington with Simpson opening - #digin
Piss off you Lanc get.I don't agree with this sort of ethnic stereotyping
Really strong team.Derek Leslie Underwood b 8 June 1945
1.
2.
3. Kanhai
4. Kallis
5. Compton
6.
7. Walcott
8. Tate
9. Marshall
10. Underwood
11.