Abstract says 83 bowlers in total for the study. Don't know how many had "suspect" actions.Sample sizes?
Laws didn't 'want' to measure chucking more accurately? Um, okay.One doesn't need a bio mechanist's degree to understand it really.
A) Laws didn't want third elbow used initially as the force of the elbow means a 'chuck'
B) The doosra uses the force of the elbow, so it's a chuck.
Obviously you don't agree but whatever.
The current arm straightening angle.What is CEA?
The deliveries use wrist and shoulder. The elbow is a support. If the elbow joint is straightened, it's a chuck as per old law.Laws didn't 'want' to measure chucking more accurately? Um, okay.
All deliveries use the elbow to deliver force. FFS thats how bowling works
Stop being dumb.
Just because existing methods of identifying chucking are not perfect, it doesn't mean all doosra are chucks. Where is your evidence that it is impossible to bowl the doosra legally outside of waahs from former cricketers and your own existing perceptions?
It is the aesthetics that bother you?
This is all true. It is also true that every single bowler in the history of the game straightens their elbow to bowl.The deliveries use wrist and shoulder. The elbow is a support. If the elbow joint is straightened, it's a chuck as per old law.
A ball is fairly delivered in respect of the arm if, once the bowler's arm has reached the level of the shoulder in the delivery swing, the elbow joint is not straightened partially or completely from that point until the ball has left the hand. This definition shall not debar a bowler from flexing or rotating the wrist in the delivery swing.
In a doosra you need to straighten it to bowl it.
Oh, okay.Also, don't confuse it with the likes of McGrath. If you think Murali and McGrath's bowling actions have same issues, you are not understanding the topic.
Not at all.It is the aesthetics that bother you?
I will quote some posters who have already articulated why McGrath shouldn't be compared with Murali (in 2005!)***** said:Oh, okay.
Guess I'm done wasting my time then.
SJS said:By saying that others like McGrath and Vettori also flex, a false justification is being sought for the new law. I call it false because the flex of McGrath Vettori and Pollock was not what the rule was made for 150 years ago and that still holds !!
FaaipDeOiad said:This for me is the absolute crux of the matter, and thank you for pointing it out. It doesn't matter if McGrath flexes 1 degree, 5 degrees or 16 degrees, because the fact is he does not chuck and does not violate the original chucking rule in word or spirit prior to its perversion. The chucking rule was designed to stop bowlers from THROWING the ball and DELIBERATELY straightening their arm in order to gain benefit that other bowlers would not have. Off spinners get more spin and express bowlers get more pace from purposely straightening their arm in delivery, for reasons that should be obvious to anyone who goes out in the nets and tries it. This is what the law is designed to stop, not someone who runs in and through no fault of their own has their elbow bend in the wrong direction a few millimetres, or someone who bowls with a perfectly legitimate action but happens to flex their arm 6 degrees instead of 5 or 16 degrees instead of 15. It is designed to ensure that bowlers bowl with a CRICKET action and nothing else. Bringing specific levels of flexion, lab testing off the field and teams of bio-mechanists into the equation in no way clarifies the law or makes it easier to enforce, and in actuality the most recent change has made the law absolutely IMPOSSIBLE to enforce. Roger Clemens could open the bowling for the USA in their next ODI match and simply be asked to head into the lab at the end of the game to have a test. Furthermore, the most recent changes have made it possible to purposely chuck to a certain degree and still be within the legal limits, when in Meckiff's days the moment you tried to purposely chuck with 14 degrees of flexion to get some extra pace off a shorter runup you would be pulled up and no-balled.
For me, this problem has one main origin, which is the inability or unwillingness of the ICC to support their umpires in making their judgement call as the rules required in a match situation. The response from the BCCSL and Arjuna Ranatunga when Murali was originally called for throwing was utterly disgraceful, and the ICC should have reacted strongly and immediately to defend Emerson and Hair and failed to do so, and ever since then the situation has got progressively worse.
I don't know what to say to thisWhat is also annoying is how a doosra is allowed if it's 14 degrees but not allowed if it's 16 degrees. It's the same ****ing delivery. Either allow both of them or outlaw both of them.
It legitimizes all deliveries up to 15 degrees. Otherwise McGrath and Pollock extending up to 12 degrees would have been out of the game.New law legitimises doosra upto 15 degrees. It shouldn't be legitimate.
So test for that 1223846 parameters and find the one that makes muralitharan illegal? Wow, what a genius!The current law is not correct. I have already explained why several times.