If you get a chance to see some of the footage from 75-76, I think you'll find that Thommo in particular, and also to some extent Lillee, kept the lid on Viv pretty well. Not that thee's an abundance of footage around mind.Waqar may ave not been as quick as Thommo, but calling Thommo the quickest that international cricket have produced is a big deal. Roy Gilchrist was teribly quick. Mohammed Akram and Mohammed Zahid were also much quicket than Shoaib. My gut feeling says that Zahid may have been the quickest ever, because he was beating Lara with pace. naver mind his team mates. Very diifucult to find Thompson beating Richards with pace (Richards probably better against quicks than Lara).
Late swing may exaggerate it, but that's broadly true of any bowler really. The eye does not have the power to make judgements of speed to a lower resolution than that.I think that it is near impossible to judge the pace of a late swing bowler (without a speed gun) to a range of anything under 10kph.
Not sure "kept the lid on" is the right phrase - he went for about 5.5 per 8-ball over in the series, though with a decent average of 28,65. He had figures like 10-0-69-1 and 11-1-62-5.If you get a chance to see some of the footage from 75-76, I think you'll find that Thommo in particular, and also to some extent Lillee, kept the lid on Viv pretty well. Not that thee's an abundance of footage around mind.
Except no one classifies leg spinners as medium pacers.The most successful medium pacer ever (though not the best) is Anil Kumble. And it is likely to remain that way for a long long time.
Would agree. Close call with Asif on the count of quality but Vern wins because he could stay on the park. There seems a modern trend to upscale the pace of bowlers with the likes of Vern, Asif, Abbas and even Copeland called fast medium.In modern times Philander.
Not really. All would be considered fast-medium prior to the fifties (and probably as late as the seventies), at least Asif at his fastest (occasionally got it to the mid 130s) would have been considered fast. Alec Bedser, Maurice Tate etc. were considered fast-medium at the time.There seems a modern trend to upscale the pace of bowlers with the likes of Vern, Asif, Abbas and even Copeland called fast medium.
Exactly. There's no way guys like Philander, Asif, Wagner etc would be called "medium pacers" in bygone eras. These guys are genuine medium-fast bowlers the likes of which have been leading international attacks for years.Not really. All would be considered fast-medium prior to the fifties (and probably as late as the seventies), at least Asif at his fastest (occasionally got it to the mid 130s) would have been considered fast. Alec Bedser, Maurice Tate etc. were considered fast-medium at the time.
If anything there's been the opposite trend.
Ha hardly. Would find it difficult to believe Philander was 20 ks over, say Bedser or Cartwright. And Davis has speculated Tate's pace as about that of Kasper. And Copeland fast medium ... come on. I've also seen the term medium fast used commonly in trove articles from pre WWII. Not sure what the point is about Bedser entering an era at Fast medium and Cartwright leaving it at medium only to have guys like Copeland and Abbas get into this one as fast medium. They're just loose definitions.Not really. All would be considered fast-medium prior to the fifties (and probably as late as the seventies), at least Asif at his fastest (occasionally got it to the mid 130s) would have been considered fast. Alec Bedser, Maurice Tate etc. were considered fast-medium at the time.
If anything there's been the opposite trend.
I will take credit for influencing thisExactly. There's no way guys like Philander, Asif, Wagner etc would be called "medium pacers" in bygone eras. These guys are genuine medium-fast bowlers the likes of which have been leading international attacks for years.
If anything, in bygone eras it was more common for an actual "medium-pacer" (i.e. CDG or slower) to be seen as a genuine bowling option and not a curiosity.
FTR Wagner doesn't even really belong in this conversation at all as he's mostly been a bog-standard 130-something fast-medium bowler, unfortunately the combination of slightly declining pace with age and belated widespread exposure on the Australian tour has led to this meme of him being "a medium pacer who bowls bouncers".
Vaas doing it over with Lara over a decade should qualify too then.Alec Bedser held the wood over Don Bradman for a short period of time with his leg trap and generally dealt with the best batsman in most opposing sides very effectively. That's good enough for me.
One dismissal for 221 in five test matches does not count as 'having the wood' over anyone.Vaas doing it over with Lara over a decade should qualify too then.
Davis can speculate how he wants on pace, but the actual footage shows something different. Plus you have the comparisons of observers. You do see medium fast, though it's hardly consistent, and for bowlers slower than, say, Abbas. Wiaden quite pointedly rejected the term an unneeded.Ha hardly. Would find it difficult to believe Philander was 20 ks over, say Bedser or Cartwright. And Davis has speculated Tate's pace as about that of Kasper. And Copeland fast medium ... come on. I've also seen the term medium fast used commonly in trove articles from pre WWII. Not sure what the point is about Bedser entering an era at Fast medium and Cartwright leaving it at medium only to have guys like Copeland and Abbas get into this one as fast medium. They're just loose definitions.