I wondered if the middle tier for bowling fell away during the Batting Boom so I went and looked at 2001-2010 with the
50 wicket qualification.
9 of 79 players to take 50 wickets averaging under 25. 14 average 25-29.99 with
11 averaging
28-29.99.
15 players average
30-31.99, and then 20 average 32-34.99. 21 average 35+ with our lord and savior the great man himself Mohammad Sami at the bottom of the averages.
So two things I immediately notice are the very good to mid-tier players have been hit by a truck and grouped strongly in the 28-31.99 bracket with only
Shaun Pollock,
Doug Bollinger and
Graeme Swann averaging between
25-27.99, and secondly there are many short careers going around.
So given 9 years is plenty of time to take 100 wickets, that's what we're going to filter for next.
34 bowlers achieved
100 wickets in this period. Only 6 averaged less than 25, and
13 less than 30. 17 bowlers retained their spots long enough to take 100 test wickets at an average between 30-34.99.
I think the most striking statistic though is how many bowlers we lose from the list. In the space of 50 more wickets we're down from
79 to just
34 bowlers. Just over half never made it, and of our original
23 to take 50 wickets at an average below 30, we are left with
13. Our big group of
26 players averaging from
28-31.99 is halved to
13.
What I might do next is look into where the new tiers are and how far they've shifted from 2001-2010.