Yet for some reason the trend dating back pre pandemic is completely ignored as a counterpoint of sorts that better prepared batters were already struggling without the demands of the pandemic. What makes you think that the lack of pandemic would let batters gain some runs?There's no possible way to know this for sure, which wouldn't be so hard for you accept if you didn't insist on posting like you're the God's gift to cricket analysis and calling anyone who disagrees with you an idiot.
I've brought up points like these before, but they've been similarly dismissed or ignored. I don't pretend to be more than an idiot who likes cricket analysis but most of you have been idiots who couldn't or didn't bother to understand in the first place.
Of these only the effects of Covid haven't been explored in this discussion but the rest are all either mentioned in the video or here. Like sure, you'll be on the right track like a lot of people who've noticed this and made media online about it.Yeah, this. I appreciate I don't have all the answers, but I feel like I can mount a somewhat convincing case that a range of factors that include the predominance of T20, COVID, highly-skilled bowlers, video analysis etc have contributed to the drop in run making lately. Maybe I'm right, maybe I'm partly right, maybe I don't know what the hell I'm talking about.
I also enjoy other people's points of view, but not this X guy's. It's been tedious to share a thread with a person who came up with the following: Playing T20s regularly or not has no real impact that can be measured, so basically has no impact. I mean, this as Spark said is just a weird obsession with a single Youtube video and some bar graphs.
You haven't given anything verifiable to suggest T20s have had an impact on runscoring so I don't know why calling it bullshit is so offputting.