Hicheal Michael
U19 Captain
MacGill averages 30.81 without Warne playing before Warne had retired which, IIRC, was around about the time MacGill injured his knee.
Well that does confirm that he is as good as Warne, at least against India.To understand this you need to look a bit closer.
When he played with Warne it was usually because the conditions were right for two spinners. A large portion of the time he played as the solo spinner was against India in 03 while Warne was banned. The same India who annihilated Warne and Murali. He averaged 50 vs India. The rest of the time as solo spinner he had good times and bad times but it's not easy to extrapolate from these data sets. The with Warne dataset is obviously too favourable but the without Warne dataset under sells his abilities.
Arguably Australia lost the 05 Ashes because MacGill was sitting on the sidelines while Warne took 40 wickets while Lee, Dizzy and Kasper bowled absolute filthy puss.
MacGill would have been seen as one of the best modern spinners if he'd been born a decade before or after he was, or if he was born English.
There is an anecdote that he ordering grass of the pitch to be removed from the pitch, midway in the game. The side playing them was a pre-test era Sri Lanka. I'll try to dig the news.But on the field his reputation was a grand one.
Don't think he would have got the batsmen easy to bowl at in 2000s. There is definite waning of the ability to play spin. Unlike in 2000s, where guys who were not good against spin stuck it out, by grinding, none of the recent batsmen tend to do it.No idea. Migara/ someone who has seen a lot of Lanka, any thoughts?
Ashwin gives it a massive rip. So he can beat batsmen on both edges anywhere in the world. Herath cannot do it unless the pitch takes spin.I feel like you've got that backwards. Ashwin seems to have more tools to be effective away than Herath. And given that the difference in spin-friendliness of SL pitches and away pitches are probably even more pronounced than those of India's then you'd expect Herath to have a more pronounced difference in effectiveness home and away.
That's funny, I was told in another thread that standards in cricket were increasing.There is definite waning of the ability to play spin. Unlike in 2000s, where guys who were not good against spin stuck it out, by grinding, none of the recent batsmen tend to do it.
Yes that's what I'm sayingAshwin gives it a massive rip. So he can beat batsmen on both edges anywhere in the world. Herath cannot do it unless the pitch takes spin.
Overspin is counter productive on Asian pitches (ball stops on the pitch), where batsmen camp on back foot. Gives more time to adjust. Side spinning balls, when land on the shiny side, keeps low, and hurries through without stopping on the pitch like the ones that spin. And that is usually the end when the batsman is on backfoot.Regardless of the pace he bowls, he definitely bowls with a lot more overspin than this generation's Asian spinners.
Playing of pace bowling however has improved. Don't thinh a West Indian quartet will intimidate the **** out of many teams like it used to be.That's funny, I was told in another thread that standards in cricket were increasing.
I'd think helmets and non-irregularly bouncing pitches might have a bit to do with that though. Players are certainly much more fearless than they used to be.Playing of pace bowling however has improved. Don't thinh a West Indian quartet will intimidate the **** out of many teams like it used to be.
Techniques of modern batsmen would have been different if they had to play all the time on pitches with variable bounce, uncovered pitches, poor bats, no helmets etc. etc. etc.I'm not sure how techniques of modern batsmen would hold up on pitches with variable bounce. Abysmally, going by the recent Wi v SL series.
Yes so much so that it should be banned, fretting over the bygones is utterlyTechniques of modern batsmen would have been different if they had to play all the time on pitches with variable bounce, uncovered pitches, poor bats, no helmets etc. etc. etc.
Techniques of older batsmen would have been different if they had to play all the time against modern bowlers, current levels of fielding, better protective gear, DRS etc. etc.
Comparing different eras in cricket and trying to find a common denominator between them is a thoroughly pointless exercise. .
yes, to an extent. Avoiding playing too much off the back foot for starters. But when it comes to balls that shoot really low there's not a whole lot you can doIs there any batting technique at all that can hold up against variable bounce? It's just a lottery.
Barrington and Gavaskar did play very well on pitches with variable bounce, It is a complete lottery only when the bounce is both variable and vicious (very fast).Is there any batting technique at all that can hold up against variable bounce? It's just a lottery.