stephen
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
I made this post elsewhere but I'll copy it here as well:
The fifth bowler is going to bowl around 20 overs in the course of a match. They're there to give the wicket-takers a break and maybe get a batsman out mistiming a pie.
So you pick the best batman who isn't going to go for 6+ an over. That's it. It doesn't matter if he's a spinner or an underarmer, so long as he's got a reasonable economy and can bat. Most important is that he can bat.
If M Marsh was bowling at his best and Maxwell was going for 5 runs per over, we can expect the bowling difference between them to be maybe 2rpo. If they bowl 25 overs in a test, the difference is 50 runs. For them to bowl 25 overs in a test means that we've probably bowled a team total of around 230 overs. If Lyon bowls 70 overs and the quicks bowl 45 overs each, that is a total of 205 overs. In the test just past, Anderson bowled 53 overs (for comparison's sake).
If they bat for 230 overs, that probably means that they've made at least 700 runs (at 3rpo) over the course of the match. We've probably lost if that's the case (230 overs is over half a full uninterrupted the test match).
But back to our all rounders. If Marsh bowls his 25 overs at 2rpo cheaper than Maxwell (which is quite generous - realistically the gap would be much smaller), we've given up 50 runs.
So the question is, do you think that Maxwell's batting is 50 runs better than Marsh's in a situation where we'll be bowling 230 overs or more?
If we bowl less overs - say 180 overs in total (20 more than this test) and each of our quicks bowls 40 overs and Lyon bowls 60 (not a huge workload) then we won't even need a part timer, or if we do they'll get 10 overs across the match.
So in a situation we're likely to win, is Maxwell's batting worth 20 more runs than Marsh's batting in total? Or maybe split the difference, do we think that Maxwell is likely to make 35 more runs across the course of a test match than Mitchell Marsh?
On current form and past performance I would say yes, Maxwell is far more likely to do better than Marsh, particularly if conditions favour Marsh's bowling (since we have three of the world's best fast bowlers who will be getting the ball ahead of him).
The fifth bowler is going to bowl around 20 overs in the course of a match. They're there to give the wicket-takers a break and maybe get a batsman out mistiming a pie.
So you pick the best batman who isn't going to go for 6+ an over. That's it. It doesn't matter if he's a spinner or an underarmer, so long as he's got a reasonable economy and can bat. Most important is that he can bat.
If M Marsh was bowling at his best and Maxwell was going for 5 runs per over, we can expect the bowling difference between them to be maybe 2rpo. If they bowl 25 overs in a test, the difference is 50 runs. For them to bowl 25 overs in a test means that we've probably bowled a team total of around 230 overs. If Lyon bowls 70 overs and the quicks bowl 45 overs each, that is a total of 205 overs. In the test just past, Anderson bowled 53 overs (for comparison's sake).
If they bat for 230 overs, that probably means that they've made at least 700 runs (at 3rpo) over the course of the match. We've probably lost if that's the case (230 overs is over half a full uninterrupted the test match).
But back to our all rounders. If Marsh bowls his 25 overs at 2rpo cheaper than Maxwell (which is quite generous - realistically the gap would be much smaller), we've given up 50 runs.
So the question is, do you think that Maxwell's batting is 50 runs better than Marsh's in a situation where we'll be bowling 230 overs or more?
If we bowl less overs - say 180 overs in total (20 more than this test) and each of our quicks bowls 40 overs and Lyon bowls 60 (not a huge workload) then we won't even need a part timer, or if we do they'll get 10 overs across the match.
So in a situation we're likely to win, is Maxwell's batting worth 20 more runs than Marsh's batting in total? Or maybe split the difference, do we think that Maxwell is likely to make 35 more runs across the course of a test match than Mitchell Marsh?
On current form and past performance I would say yes, Maxwell is far more likely to do better than Marsh, particularly if conditions favour Marsh's bowling (since we have three of the world's best fast bowlers who will be getting the ball ahead of him).