How can you compare their effectiveness when Lyon has been bowling to international batsmen while O'keefe has been bowling to domestic blokes.Hopefully this is the series where O'Keefe finally cements a spot, and we can stop worrying about justifying Lyon's position on the grounds that he's been "ok".
I'm know I'm in the minority with this opinion, but Lyon is not, never has been and never will be even in the same league as O'Keefe when it comes to effectiveness. SOK has been the best spinner in Australia by far for well 5-6 years at least. Guy should have played 70-80 tests by now.
That's not even taking batting ability into consideration at all.
**** the haters
Very difficult, obviously. But at best all you can say is that there is no evidence either way in that regard.How can you compare their effectiveness when Lyon has been bowling to international batsmen while O'keefe has been bowling to domestic blokes.
No way. Warne holds onto his grudges like grim death. Admirable traitYou're expecting consistency from SK Warne? He's quite capable of doing both in the same commentary stint, if not the same sentence.
The thing is though, bowling spin at lower levels is very, very different to bowling spin at Test level (especially finger spin, and especially in Australia).Very difficult, obviously. But at best all you can say is that there is no evidence either way in that regard.
O'Keefe has out-bowled Lyon an overwhelming majority of the times they've played together, both in terms of skill + figures and he has ridiculously better statistics in every aspect
I have every confidence that O'Keefe would have done a much better job than Lyon had he been playing for the last 5 years, in bowling alone.
The best you can say in support of Lyon is that he's "looked good" and "mostly hasn't been terrible".
Yes I've heard all of this a hundred times before and am quite aware of the reasons why Lyon is preferred by the selectors, whether they are really legitimate or not. Doesn't mean I agree with them in the slightest and don't believe they are almost entirely rubbish, practically speaking. As I said, it's just my opinion.tl;dr Lyon and SoK are two very different styles of finger spinner, can't really blame the selectors for opting for Lyon's style.
Would love to see them do a Swann/Panesar 2012 demolition job for the next few years though.
I don't have an argument with any of that Burgs. I'm mostly just thankful that after 5 years or so the selectors have finally seemed to accept that Lyon and SOK are clearly our best two spin options.Nathan Lyon remains the WPNCOS. His status in unchallenged. SOK will; be a great foil for him in this series and hopefully moving ahead, because quite apart from what he brings as a SLA bowler, his batting should be very handy when we suffer the inevitable lollapses we've had in recent years at important times through different series.
Yeah, this is a point Peter McIntyre has made too -- he found it easier to bowl to Test teams in tour matches than to Australian domestic players, simply because of the familiarity with conditions; domestic guys are less worried by bounce and overspin because they're so used to it (I mean, Warne took his Victoria wickets at ~35 each). Obviously the Shield now is nothing on the 90s, but the point may well still stand. Drawn even more sharply into focus by Lyon historically struggling on the subcontinent, where the ball simply doesn't bounce and he doesn't have the sidespin variation to compensate.If I were to hazard a guess regarding Lyon's better Test figures it would be that in Tests (at home at least) he's bowling to players in unfamiliar, bouncy conditions whereas in the Shield he's bowling to batsman in very familiar conditions. Also bowling with Test quality quicks at the other end tying the batsman down so they get out to him doesn't hurt.