How do CWers think batting strategies have changed? Cant be all conditions and fielding restrictions.
Well the point I was making is still relevant. Modern day batsmen just have a different definition of what is possible. 7 RPO isn't an impossible feat anymore. It's kinda like the 4 minute mile - once it was broken, people realised it could be done, and suddenly everyone was doing it. Modern day batsmen are no longer intimidated by high run rates. 6 RPO, 7 RPO, we're now in a world where 320 is chased down as effortlessly as 220 would have been 10 years ago. No doubt they're helped by pitches, bats, rules, etc. But the mentality is certainly a big change.
I think on big change is also in the way teams/batsmen pace their innings. In the 90s and 00s sides batting first used to bat out the middle overs quietly, and kept wickets in hand for the big explosion in the final 10 overs. In modern day cricket, we see batsmen exploding basically as soon as they're set and have wickets in hand. It's a waste of resources otherwise - why arbitrarily wait for the 40th over and play out dots and singles when you can hit relatively risk-free boundaries instead? And what if you build and build for a big finish, but then get out, and the new batsmen in can't get going straight away? Modern batsmen now play a simpler gameplan - get your eye in, and then go hard. The only time you temper your aggression is when you don't have much batting to come, or if you're managing a run chase.
Add to that more creative strokeplay, less textbook techniques (which is also why there are more collapses in bowler friendly conditions), and generally bigger stronger men with bigger stronger bats...and it's easy to see the changes in ODI cricket.
Bowling is what's more interesting to me - I've talked about this before, but more and more bowlers
want to get batsmen to get caught in the deep in modern cricket. Back in the 90s this was only an acceptable plan for part-timers and death bowlers, but nowadays front-line bowlers are adopting this plan more frequently, quite often as Plan A. There is a certain level of humility in that. It also shows that not only must frontline bowlers be capable of using helpful conditions to exploit poor techniques and bowl out sides, but they must also be able to fall back and use variations and accuracy to deceive batsmen who are coming after them. The polarisation between the demands of ODI/T20 and Test cricket have increased a lot more in the last few years I feel, to the point where we see very few bowlers be consistently successful across all formats. A guy like Dale Steyn is clearly a better Test than ODI bowler, for instance, but if were playing in the 90s he would have been a bonafide ATG in both formats.