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Absolutely he did. I'm sorry, but Bolo couldn't be more wrong here.Didn't Ambrose rely on seam movement alongside bounce as his main weapon?
Absolutely he did. I'm sorry, but Bolo couldn't be more wrong here.Didn't Ambrose rely on seam movement alongside bounce as his main weapon?
Hell I've read that Ambrose was to seam movement what Wasim was to swing.Absolutely he did. I'm sorry, but Bolo couldn't be more wrong here.
Love that video. For those nuts who thought Amby was one dimensional
Average already is a product of strike rate and economy rate.Stats do matter, but not to the exclusion of all else
I recall reading a comparative study in The Cricketer mag, where the the author devises a stat called ' Effective Bowling Average '.
It amalgamates the Avg. with the SR by taking the Square Root of Avg. X SR.
His reasoning was that it is just as important to take wickets fast, cause this has a bearing on attaining victory within the limited time frame
I think you’re markedly under rating the ability to consistently put the ball in the right spots to the right batsmen at decent pace with subtle variations in movement.Where does Ambrose stand amoung the bowlers who used the fewest tricks? Holding, Garner, Ambrose, Walsh to some extent. Be tall, fast and get bounce. Other than length and going hulk, did any of these guys actively try to get the ball to talk?
You seem to have very exacting standards as to the quality of footage you need to judge a player.I don't know why I ever try to understand anything about bowlaing via YouTube. The process is always the same. Look at couple of video's. . Realise I'm watching something specifically edited to not be nothing like their typical bowling.
Google it. Get exactly opposite answers to my question.
Go back to YouTube. Try to refine what I'm looking for. Wade though potato quality, frame rates, angles and wrong video until I eventually get frustrated and give up, usually with more questions than I started with.
Let me try this a different way. When he moves the ball off the pitch, is this seam as we normally speak of it? If so, he might manage to get movement 25% of the time before the ball gets too old. How is it deviating the rest of the time?
I stated this as my memory of watching him live. Half the forum has told me I'm wrong. It's too long ago and I'm not sure. But if so many people are confident he kept the ball moving, someone must know how. I saw seam and what looked like 1 cutter amoungst many, many.wicketsI think you’re markedly under rating the ability to consistently put the ball in the right spots to the right batsmen at decent pace with subtle variations in movement.
Control is as much a skill as hooping it around corners. Ball only has to move half a bat width to take an edge or get someone through the gate/ lbw. Ambrose used to do it a lot.
McGrath’s hat trick is also a classic example.
The most famous highlights are good quality. The footage is completely useless though. The more representative the footage, the worse the quality. I can't see if the bat has hit it or where it pitched. Not very exactingYou seem to have very exacting standards as to the quality of footage you need to judge a player.
Fair enough. As other people have noted, Ambrose was very much a seam bowler in the McGrath mould. One thing I always found odd about him was he stopped bowling what was an excellent Yorker which he had when he first came on the scene. On his first tour of Australia he looked like the new Garner and hit a fair few poles with his Yorker, but then he basically stopped bowling it.I stated this as my memory of watching him live. Half the forum has told me I'm wrong. It's too long ago and I'm not sure. But if so many people are confident he kept the ball moving, someone must know how. I saw seam and what looked like 1 cutter amoungst many, many.wickets
I don't think the expected survival time against top seam is very high. I reckon he took a high proportion at the start of the innings and put it into lockdown waiting from r mistakwsFair enough. As other people have noted, Ambrose was very much a seam bowler in the McGrath mould. One thing I always found odd about him was he stopped bowling what was an excellent Yorker which he had when he first came on the scene. On his first tour of Australia he looked like the new Garner and hit a fair few poles with his Yorker, but then he basically stopped bowling it.
I suppose he just got blokes out bowling good length.
And garner never stopped yorking people which is why he probably ended up with a better sr than amby.Fair enough. As other people have noted, Ambrose was very much a seam bowler in the McGrath mould. One thing I always found odd about him was he stopped bowling what was an excellent Yorker which he had when he first came on the scene. On his first tour of Australia he looked like the new Garner and hit a fair few poles with his Yorker, but then he basically stopped bowling it.
I suppose he just got blokes out bowling good length.