Well done for noticing that the heading of the video was incorrect.Hey what do you, know, the video watson provided was actually this match
3rd Test: West Indies v Pakistan at Kingston, Feb 26-Mar 4, 1958 | Cricket Scorecard | ESPN Cricinfo
It's the game where Sobers got the 365 to set the new record. The scorecard matches up with the one you can see if you pause the video at 1:34.
So, the first bowler is almost certainly Khan Mohammad, as none of the other bowlers in the scorecard match Khan's description. And the medium-pace-cutter bowler seen a bit later is Fazal.
Yeah Fazal seems a lot like Bedser, and from his action, Khan reminded me of Wes Hall a bit.Well done for noticing that the heading of the video was incorrect.
So what do you make of Fazal's action ORS?
To me his action is a little round armed, and there is not much follow through at all. To take all those wickets Fazal must have put a lot of 'work' on the ball as he seems about medium-fast. He has been compared to Alec Bedser and I reckon that comparison is about right.
Khan Mohammad seems quicker than Fazal, and you can tell that he's trying for outswing, or maybe a leg-cutter in the deliveries we saw. His head leaning over to the left during the run-up is quite distinctive.
Those were the days of the back-foot no-ball rule, so overstepping with the front foot wasn't an issue.Some great footage of Ernie McCormick, Bill O'Reilly, and Bill Voce bowling - although very brief. McCormick seems really quick and has Hammond caught while fending one to short-square. O'Reilly's delivery is interesting as the Umpire doesn't seem to mind him overstepping by a good half metre. What the?
What's the difference between medium fast and fast medium?
The frame rate looks bit crappy. I would go with the distance where the keeper and slips stand. Was this wicket quick or slow? or was it matting? If it was matting, the pace is very poor given where the keeper stands. Regulation 125k bowlers get the ball carrying nicely to keeper at this distance.Here is some footage of Adcock and Heine bowling to England. Unfortunately there are only two deliveries by Adcock at 1 min 5 secs, and 1 min 25 secs. The second bit of footage shows Godfrey Evans being caught at leg-slip. Adcock doesn't seem to to have a pause in his delivery where he gathers himself like most quicks. Instead he seems to 'runs through the crease' rather like Procter used to do, and looks every bit as fast. Scarily so.
I find Cowdrey's comment interesting. Cowdrey had faced Lindwall and Miller in 54/55, and then again during the Ashes series of 1956. In 1956 he opened the batting and made some good scores.Blond and 6ft 3in, he was a striking figure, although it was not until late in his career that he added muscularity to his speed. His run-up was straight and fluent, and he delivered the ball with a high arm and a perfectly upright body. Batsmen and fellow bowlers were baffled by how much pace and, crucially, lift from a good length he generated from this curious, whippy action - "like a sudden gust turning a light windmill," said Wisden......
His first-class debut for Transvaal came in November 1952; just over a year later he was opening the bowling for South Africa against New Zealand at Durban. He played in all five Tests in that series, delivering 24 wickets and plenty of physical and psychological damage. But he failed to live up to expectations in England in 1955, when he was plagued by injury: he missed the Fifth Test after breaking a bone in his foot in the Fourth at Headingley. However, by the time England visited South Africa in 1956-57, he was working superbly in tandem with his permanently snarling new-ball partner, Heine.
Doug Insole, England's vice-captain on that tour, said: "Colin Cowdrey was to open the innings, but on the boat on the way over said he didn't want to. He didn't think his technique was up to coping with Adcock and Heine." Adcock took 21 wickets at under 15 as the series finished 2-2, and rattled most of the England batsmen, notably captain Peter May. "Adcock was undoubtedly very quick," Insole said. "Some thought he was the fastest they played against."
Wisden - Neil Adcock