viriya
International Captain
Yea Murali's friends in the Aussie universities..Whereas... Murali... He of the ever clean action... Might just have had some good friends or allies at the top.... Chucking law promptly changed to suit. Hmmm.
Yea Murali's friends in the Aussie universities..Whereas... Murali... He of the ever clean action... Might just have had some good friends or allies at the top.... Chucking law promptly changed to suit. Hmmm.
I hope you're not implying that Australians are cheats as well.Yea Murali's friends in the Aussie universities..
Mike Selvey said:The electronic equipment used to detect the angles of the arm and the speed are sophisticated. The bowler must reproduce the same speeds and spin rotation as in match play, and there is comparison with real-time down to ultra-slow footage. Thus, it has become increasingly difficult to camouflage faults and certainly Ajmal appears to have been unable to do so.
Yeah that would be it, easier to con the testers in the past.Mike Selvey on Ajmal's ban.
The Guardian's chief cricket correspondent seems to concur with my theory:
Which is very interesting when you consider this point through the lens of Kung Fu Kallis' above post about Murali...Yeah that would be it, easier to con the testers in the past.
I don't think there is a positive in it either but how pleasant or otherwise a finding is has no relevance to its truth value. In other words, just because it would be nice to pretend he wasn't gaining any unfair advantage over his peers doesn't mean we should do so.Even though I'm on the other side of the fence I do get the opinion of those that want these suspect players tested and ousted, I do........but I'm failing to find any positive in this. Bowlers that I loved to watch and brought so much unique diversity to the game are now being tagged "dirty rotten cheats"...........just doesn't sit well with me at all I'm afraid.
Throwing in a phrase like 'unique diversity' does make the reader feel good temporarily, but a euphemism doesn't disguise the fact that bowlers like Ajmal undermine the very foundation of bowling, and what it means to bowl a cricket ball.So whats the upshot of all of this then?? Is this more ammunition for the Murali knockers and will a legend of the game now have a bigger question mark against his records?? Are people scrubbing his name off their ATG lists as we speak??
Even though I'm on the other side of the fence I do get the opinion of those that want these suspect players tested and ousted, I do........but I'm failing to find any positive in this. Bowlers that I loved to watch and brought so much unique diversity to the game are now being tagged "dirty rotten cheats"...........just doesn't sit well with me at all I'm afraid.
"Cheating" is an emotive word and not useful in the current context. Personally, I don't care much whether Ajmal was cheating or not (he probably wasn't) as it's secondary to the overall effect that chucking has on the meaning of bowling and the ethos of cricket. Chucking is the enemy, not the bowler. So let's play the ball rather than the man.Yeah look, I've got no real counter for that watson........I disagree with you, but I can't say you're wrong. I guess this just comes down to opinion at the end of the day.
In 2012 when Ajmal ripped England apart I was posting on another forum, everyone was up in arms over him convinced he was chucking and therefore a cheat...........I just couldn't get my self worked up over it. I was just in awe of his skill and performance and knew I was watching a very special bowler. As an Eng fan it would have been easy (and far more convenient) if I could have got sucked into the we were cheated brigade, but it didn't bother me and I couldn't make it bother me.
Even now after he has been found to exceed the laws and in all probability was back then, I still don't feel like Eng were cheated in the UAE..........I still say we were outdone by a class bowler.
Perhaps I'm naive I dunno, but 10°, 15°........20°............I just don't care.
Apparently, it is possible to chuck and not be aware that you are chucking. That means that you are not cheating, just bowling incorrectly.He was doing something not permitted by the rules in order to leverage a competitive advantage. He was cheating,
I have no reason to doubt Tony Lock's word.......Lock continued to take wickets in heaps at home. The hapless Kiwi batsmen of 1958 were no match for his guile and occasional speed as he devastated them to capture 34 in the series at just 7.47 apiece, with eleven scalps at Leeds.
Yet, success abroad eluded him. In the Ashes series of 1958-59, England sent what was hyped as their strongest ever team. Peter May’s men were trounced 4-0 and Lock finished with just five wickets from four Tests. His bowling, suited to the helpful English wickets, was toothless on the hard tracks of Australia where finger spinners have traditionally struggled.
At the other side of the Tasman Sea, however, Lock found the soft surface of Christchurch very much to his liking. Five for 31 and six for 53 ensured the third 11-wicket haul of his career, and scripted his first success story away from England. Yet, this was the very tour in which Lock was shocked when shown a film of his own bowling. The action was so obviously illegitimate that he exclaimed, “Had I known I was throwing I wouldn’t have bowled that way.”
The second remodelling
So, at the age of 30, Lock went back to the drawing board and began to sketch his future with a legitimate action. His bowling became almost orthodox, classical. The loop had returned, and guile was added from his treasure troves of experience.
Tony Lock: A colourful character and an excellent left-arm spinner - Latest Cricket News, Articles & Videos at CricketCountry.com
There's a difference between breaking the rules and cheating IMO.Yeah look, the notion that somebody cannot break the rules unless they intentionally do so is bull.
Nah, everybody knows that when a bowler oversteps the front line by half an inch he's actually a cheating bastard and a terrible person who doesn't respect the game.There's a difference between breaking the rules and cheating IMO.
I just automatically assumed Ajmal knew there was something wrong with his action when he started wearing long sleeves.There's a difference between breaking the rules and cheating IMO.