straw man
Hall of Fame Member
Turned into a surprisingly good discussion, I agree with the general conclusions. NZ CW WAGs. Only things I want to add are:
IMO there's a spectrum on nature vs nurture even within cricket. There's the expression 'fast bowlers are born, not made' which rings true - you have to have those fast-twitch muscles and other physical attributes. It wouldn't matter how much training I had, I would never be able to bowl anywhere near 130km/h. I think fast bowling (and probably wrist spin) is further towards the 'nature' end of the spectrum, closer to running and swimming, while batting is more multi-dimensional. Yes you still have to have some natural ability, but there's a lot more room for nurture, training, coaching, environment etc.
Cricket is an extremely rare sport in that you see some players made to do something they're not necessarily any good at: bowlers have to bat. That's like a live laboratory of nature vs nurture. We often see bowlers that start as genuine #10s and #11s at international level develop their batting very significantly over a season or two with intensive coaching and practise. Even to the point someone like Ajaz Patel or Iain O'Brien can block the ball bowled at 140km/h, hang around at the crease, duck bouncers, pick spin bowling, hit a few bad balls, build a bit of an innings. A bowler, even one that bats number 11 (except Chris Martin) in international cricket, absolutely dominates with the bat in club cricket and I doubt they have a heap more batting 'natural ability' than those players. So this also supports the view that batting is more dependent on nurture/training/environment. And obviously 'son of's often get a heap of that from an early age.
IMO there's a spectrum on nature vs nurture even within cricket. There's the expression 'fast bowlers are born, not made' which rings true - you have to have those fast-twitch muscles and other physical attributes. It wouldn't matter how much training I had, I would never be able to bowl anywhere near 130km/h. I think fast bowling (and probably wrist spin) is further towards the 'nature' end of the spectrum, closer to running and swimming, while batting is more multi-dimensional. Yes you still have to have some natural ability, but there's a lot more room for nurture, training, coaching, environment etc.
Cricket is an extremely rare sport in that you see some players made to do something they're not necessarily any good at: bowlers have to bat. That's like a live laboratory of nature vs nurture. We often see bowlers that start as genuine #10s and #11s at international level develop their batting very significantly over a season or two with intensive coaching and practise. Even to the point someone like Ajaz Patel or Iain O'Brien can block the ball bowled at 140km/h, hang around at the crease, duck bouncers, pick spin bowling, hit a few bad balls, build a bit of an innings. A bowler, even one that bats number 11 (except Chris Martin) in international cricket, absolutely dominates with the bat in club cricket and I doubt they have a heap more batting 'natural ability' than those players. So this also supports the view that batting is more dependent on nurture/training/environment. And obviously 'son of's often get a heap of that from an early age.