It takes a lot more effort to run a three than it does to hit a four! Small boundaries mean that big hitters are never out of the game. Its not surprising all the big chases are on small grounds.Yeah.
Nah it's not. Nicks don't actually go for six, pretty frequently they don't even carry to the cordon. An edge through second slip goes for four regardless of the size of the ground. Yes, on a small ground, you get balls carrying for six that would otherwise have been four or caught, but that applies for both teams and typically doesn't change between innings. The thing that really changes between the first and second innings is the urgency of the batting team, and that's the thing that is really highlighted by a big ground.
I think you're interpreting his point a bit wrong. It's easier to defend 350 on a big ground than a small ground.. but it's easier to set 350 in the first place on a small ground than a big ground.It takes a lot more effort to run a three than it does to hit a four! Small boundaries mean that big hitters are never out of the game. Its not surprising all the big chases are on small grounds.
Definitely fitness. It clearly drains him to bowl 15-20 in a day, and then have to come back the next day and bowl again.I don't know what happens to Shami in tests. He's stuck to decent lines and bowled with good pace here. It's not as though this bowling will not work at all in tests... so why the **** does he bowl dross?
Maybe it's a stamina issue? I've seen him bowl good opening spells of 5-6 overs and then when he comes back, he sprays it all over the place.