4000+ ODIs have been played and unless my statsguru-fu is rinsed, not a single game has been won without taking a wicket.
I hear you dawg. Wickets are important in odi.
Oh - you mean without taking a wicket at all- not losing a wicket right?
But who cares really? Chase what you gotta chase.Or fail. All out or zero wickets down is still a losss right if the opposition score more right? Lose a wicket or 3 - no dramas if you get the score required?
None of the above stops the possibility of the chasing team from successfully chasing a score 0 wickets down that the posting team made 0 wicket s down. So with all respect to your historical knowledge of odi cricket, it does not defeat absolutely the conceptual reasoning I gave. Like I said previously - I understand the value of taking wickets, but we can all agree,
no side side needs to be bowl the opposition out to win an odi game. And taking less wickets does not result in a loss. With all due respect :-)
Feel free to split hairs, but unless the chasing side is entirely bowled out early, E/R is more determinitive of the winning team than bowling average and taking wickets in limited overs, always. ALWAYS (besides messrs Duckworth Lewis trying to strike a balance between the 2 on a sliding scale). Which was my point. My apologies for not clarifying to the point of being sufficiently explicit.
Now I agree that losing wickets more than correlates, but is actually a common factor of posting a lower cricket score in odi cricket, but not a single wicket need fall to determine the winner in a cricket game. Not even in test cricket - hint declarations.
So with all respect, I will still value E/R over wicket average in limited overs cricket unless the average per wicket is sufficiently amazing and yes I differentiate between middle over and death overs bowling.
I'd even agree middle overs bowlers who don't take wickets hurt the E/R of death bowlers. But that was never my point. I was comparing death bowlers, and tbh with you, I don't care if they get wickets at the death besides it being a dot ball and hopefully get into some weaker batting UNLESS they bowl the opposition out significantly short of 50 overs, which is rarer against top opposition. That was my intended meaning without ever attempting to split hairs. It doesn't matter if the chasing team scored more runs for the loss of more wickets. The only issue is - besides rain and adjustments like Duckworth Lewis- did they score more runs?
I'm even happy to assume that Henry and Southee get the same amount of wickets up top against top opposition. For me, death bowling support for Boult is a primary bowling problem to solve.