What is my second point? I'm not sure how you are splitting them.I don't get your second point. What are you suggesting here?
What is my second point? I'm not sure how you are splitting them.I don't get your second point. What are you suggesting here?
I am splitting them by your use of sentences and where my reply edit ceased and your post continued with "They will also..." :PWhat is my second point? I'm not sure how you are splitting them.
Steyn has suffered neutral umpires at homeImran averages around 20 at home but over 25 in England. One would assume that his fast-medium swing bowling would be suited to England more than Pakistan but that's how it is.
God bless Shakoor RanaSteyn has suffered neutral umpires at home
But I am sure Pakistan started producing favourable conditions for Imran, Wasim and Waqar as against the spinners who were better looked after before Nawaz emerged.
Cross era for poor DaleGod bless Shakoor Rana
The umpiring thing must even out because other countries had **** umpires too.
The link you provided suggests it is runs scored rather than time at the crease that determines if a batsman is set. Assuming equal averages, batsmen will be be coming in more frequently but will also get off the mark more quickly for a team with higher SRs- batsmen are set for an equal amount of time in this way of calculating.I am splitting them by your use of sentences and where my reply edit ceased and your post continued :P
The link you provided suggests it is runs scored rather than time at the crease that determines if a batsman is set. Assuming equal averages, batsmen will be be coming in more frequently but will also get off the mark more quickly for a team with higher SRs- batsmen are set for an equal amount of time in this way of calculating.
I've heard this too, but I seriously question it outside limited overs of course.Not particularly. We know batsmen will spend less time at the crease if a team is striking faster. I doubt there is a way to measure if the impact is meaningful. A pressure impact as a result of tight bowling from the other end will also generate positive results. It would be an enormous study to compare these two, which nobody is going to undertake, and I doubt it would give a meaningful answer anyway.
Take thommo because he is actually taking wickets. As for who is helping his teammates take wickets more (excluding their WPM) hard to say. Pressure build up is very real on every body but the most insanely patient bats. You can see it in games. My feeling is that you are right, but to an extremely limited degree. No way to test this though.I've heard this, but I seriously question it.
If a bowler bowls cheaply, he is doing the team a favour as against giving runs away, but if he isn't taking wickets, (unless trying to stall scoring for a draw), he is doing the team a disservice to try and win as he isn't bringing a new batsman out for all the bowlers to target including himself.
Gavin Larsen may bowl in tests with a fabulous E/R of 2.1, but his SR was over 80. So his mid 28 average while looking good, didn't do much for the team. Compare to Thommo, similar average at 28, but a SR of 52. (this is 5 overs difference give or take, plus the overs the rest of the bowler bowl in the time it takes to bowl those 5 additional overs).
He was leaking runs, but he took wickets and brought more new batsmen to the crease.
I'd take Thommo any day of the week.
I doubt it is all that limited. The difficult part is proving who got the better benefit from it between players without going through the scorecards.Take thommo because he is actually taking wickets. As for who is helping his teammates take wickets more (excluding their WPM) hard to say. Pressure build up is very real on every body but the most insanely patient bats. You can see it in games. My feeling is that you are right, but to an extremely limited degree. No way to test this though.
Two competing effects? I am only talking about one. The rest of the team's bowling ability to take wickets.You are comparing two competing effects and speculating that not only is one greater, but that it is significantly greater. Without any data to support this, it is too speculative for me.
Oh - bowlers with low E/R, my apologies. Yeah - I really don't buy into that anywhere near as many do. In my experience teams typically just bat until they have enough runs if bowlers aren't taking wickets and batsmen up the ante more when looking to declare.Pressure created via restriction of runs vs batsmen spending less time at the crease
It is a bit different for a 5th bowler doing that to get through those overs as cheaply as possible for the good of the team when the big 4 come back on to bowl them out, but if an opening bowler is doing it like you say, the team has a major problem.Yeah you can just bowl wide of off stump all day and finish with 15-10-10-0 and you're really economical but haven't really achieved much. Kallis used to do this a few times that i saw toward the end of his career. Just seemed like a pointless waste of time.