Starfighter
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Okay, I kew this might set off a storm of stupidity. Please be sensible.
Does anyone remember about eight to ten years ago, especially when they had that crackdown on throwing bowlers, that some people (granted, I think more in the Cricinfo comments section than anyone authoritative) said they would have to allow a lot more throwing?
The gist of the argument was, that with pitches so batting friendly and with batsmen so good at hitting, they would have to allow up to 30° of bending (or some other convenient number) to offset this. This argument seemed to be especially advanced when it became apparent that pretty much no-one could bowl the doosra legally.
Now there might be some room for this argument in ODIs,and T20s, where leg spinners have definitely been in the ascendency in recent years due to their greater variety. But this being CricketWeb, and me being me, I'm talking specifically about tests.
Over the past decade (to this date) four of the top ten wicket takers have been finger spinners, as have been ten of the 35 to have taken over 100 test wickets. In comparison there has been only one leg spinner. Ashwin and Jadeja have taken their wickets at averages not seen since the predominance of covered pitches. Have pitches been more spin friendly? Of course they have, but that would only go against the idea that more elbow bend is needed. And I don't think anyone would have predicted that Australia's leading wicket taker of the period (indeed, leading wicket taker overall in the past ten years to date) would be a balding groundsman bowling offbreaks with barely even a hint of variation. And that in general the first choice spinners for most countries would be finger spinners of the non-'mystery' variety.
Maybe the frequency of such arguments was overblown in my mind. But it's quite conspicuous that in tests finger spin is alive and well (and even thriving in some places) while the doosra is practically extinct and dodgy actions are thankfully rarer than a decade ago. So it's funny to think back on those comments that I used to read.
Does anyone remember about eight to ten years ago, especially when they had that crackdown on throwing bowlers, that some people (granted, I think more in the Cricinfo comments section than anyone authoritative) said they would have to allow a lot more throwing?
The gist of the argument was, that with pitches so batting friendly and with batsmen so good at hitting, they would have to allow up to 30° of bending (or some other convenient number) to offset this. This argument seemed to be especially advanced when it became apparent that pretty much no-one could bowl the doosra legally.
Now there might be some room for this argument in ODIs,and T20s, where leg spinners have definitely been in the ascendency in recent years due to their greater variety. But this being CricketWeb, and me being me, I'm talking specifically about tests.
Over the past decade (to this date) four of the top ten wicket takers have been finger spinners, as have been ten of the 35 to have taken over 100 test wickets. In comparison there has been only one leg spinner. Ashwin and Jadeja have taken their wickets at averages not seen since the predominance of covered pitches. Have pitches been more spin friendly? Of course they have, but that would only go against the idea that more elbow bend is needed. And I don't think anyone would have predicted that Australia's leading wicket taker of the period (indeed, leading wicket taker overall in the past ten years to date) would be a balding groundsman bowling offbreaks with barely even a hint of variation. And that in general the first choice spinners for most countries would be finger spinners of the non-'mystery' variety.
Maybe the frequency of such arguments was overblown in my mind. But it's quite conspicuous that in tests finger spin is alive and well (and even thriving in some places) while the doosra is practically extinct and dodgy actions are thankfully rarer than a decade ago. So it's funny to think back on those comments that I used to read.
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