kyear2
International Coach
I meant the finalists and the winners. There was a vote, a series of votes. Just because you may disagree with the results doesn't make it wrong.There's no 'right' in these things.
I meant the finalists and the winners. There was a vote, a series of votes. Just because you may disagree with the results doesn't make it wrong.There's no 'right' in these things.
Yeah and because you agree with the vote it doesn't make it 'right'.I meant the finalists and the winners. There was a vote, a series of votes. Just because you may disagree with the results doesn't make it wrong.
I'd really appreciate it if we reserved the letters "MM" for the one and only the late Sir Malcolm.....jkI think that we've accidently selected a first rate team. WG Grace, Ambrose, and two spinners instead of the usual one make it more interesting.
Thanks for running the show MM.
****ers that think cricket is played with a new ball all the time.Some people just don't rate spinners. Silent Striker reckoned they were a pop group and Richard reckoned there isn't a single spinner that would be chosen ahead of Ian Bishop in an all time bowlers list.
That's the point. A fast bowler can bowl at best half to 2/3rds the overs a spinner can bowl before getting tired and his effectiveness dropping off. You run the risk of overbowling and injury and shortening careers. The spinners main advantage is his runup and delivery requires far less effort and so despite a slightly higher average he delivers 30-50% more wickets per match. A spinner can literally bowl half the overs of the team. Try that with a fast bowler and he'll retire in one series after busting his joints. Take an extreme example. One fast bowler with a strike rate of 30 and average of 15. But he has no stamina and can only bowl 10 overs per innings. Vs a spinner with an average of 25 and strike rate of 60 but he can bowl 40 overs an innings no problem. Who is more valuable? This isn't LO cricket where overs are cappedMurali's WPM was so high because the SL captains bowled him just about non-stop for the majority of the innings. I remember when SL came here some years back (the series where McCullum ran out Murali) and he bowled 40 overs out of one 90-over NZ innings.
If these SL captains had had the rest of the WI pace quartet to call on or Gillespie, McGrath, Warne et al. then Murali would have a far lower WPM.
Depends on the rest of your attack. Bit of a silly example though because your hypothetical fast bowler doesn't exist but quite a few have fit the bill for your hypothetical spinnerTake an extreme example. One fast bowler with a strike rate of 30 and average of 15. But he has no stamina and can only bowl 10 overs per innings. Vs a spinner with an average of 25 and strike rate of 60 but he can bowl 40 overs an innings no problem. Who is more valuable? This isn't LO cricket where overs are capped
Your overall point on the utility of having a spinner in the attack and for the team is well made but that example is not the best. Most fast bowlers can and do bowl 15-20 overs per day.That's the point. A fast bowler can bowl at best half to 2/3rds the overs a spinner can bowl before getting tired and his effectiveness dropping off. You run the risk of overbowling and injury and shortening careers. The spinners main advantage is his runup and delivery requires far less effort and so despite a slightly higher average he delivers 30-50% more wickets per match. A spinner can literally bowl half the overs of the team. Try that with a fast bowler and he'll retire in one series after busting his joints. Take an extreme example. One fast bowler with a strike rate of 30 and average of 15. But he has no stamina and can only bowl 10 overs per innings. Vs a spinner with an average of 25 and strike rate of 60 but he can bowl 40 overs an innings no problem. Who is more valuable? This isn't LO cricket where overs are capped
The strawman seems to have distracted too much from the argument, which at the most fundamental level is that the spinners energy conserving action allows him to bowl a lot more and take ~30% more wickets per match.Your overall point on the utility of having a spinner in the attack and for the team is well made but that example is not the best. Most fast bowlers can and do bowl 15-20 overs per day.
Yeah this isn't reinventing the wheel. Most sides will pick a spinner for these reasons unless circumstances are extreme enough to make it not worth it regardless.The strawman seems to have distracted too much from the argument, which at the most fundamental level is that the spinners energy conserving action allows him to bowl a lot more and take ~30% more wickets per match.