Evening - loved reading the post about Jonty Rhodes earlier, one of the few cricketers who struck fear into the opposition with his fielding.
There was a sort of reputation around it that made you not dare take what would be a comfortable single to practically anyone else - must have been worth a lot of runs to his side not just for stops, but 'don't you dare' situations where there was probably one.
Made me think - there have been some quality batsmen and bowlers over the years whose fielding wasn't all that - some examples off the top of my head:-
Mark Richardson - pretty sure he had some sort of medical issue that inhibited his running and fielding.
Inzamam - great batsman but something of a liability in the field.
Mike Gatting - somewhat limited in what he could do as a fielder and where to put him.
whoever the worst wicketkeeper was - I guess...
Being English guys like Mullally, Tufnell, Devon Malcolm, Angus Fraser (who was one of my favourite cricketers). We had more than our share.
Some of the Indian legends had to be 'hidden' and they used to be seen as a bit of a shaky side, fielding wise.
Of the real legends of the game I remember Murali being thought of as a poor fielder - was that fair or not?
How an XI would do here against an 'average player, brilliant fielder' XI might be worthy of a conversation.
It poses a spin-off question about...how important should fielding be in team selection? Thanks in advance.
There was a sort of reputation around it that made you not dare take what would be a comfortable single to practically anyone else - must have been worth a lot of runs to his side not just for stops, but 'don't you dare' situations where there was probably one.
Made me think - there have been some quality batsmen and bowlers over the years whose fielding wasn't all that - some examples off the top of my head:-
Mark Richardson - pretty sure he had some sort of medical issue that inhibited his running and fielding.
Inzamam - great batsman but something of a liability in the field.
Mike Gatting - somewhat limited in what he could do as a fielder and where to put him.
whoever the worst wicketkeeper was - I guess...
Being English guys like Mullally, Tufnell, Devon Malcolm, Angus Fraser (who was one of my favourite cricketers). We had more than our share.
Some of the Indian legends had to be 'hidden' and they used to be seen as a bit of a shaky side, fielding wise.
Of the real legends of the game I remember Murali being thought of as a poor fielder - was that fair or not?
How an XI would do here against an 'average player, brilliant fielder' XI might be worthy of a conversation.
It poses a spin-off question about...how important should fielding be in team selection? Thanks in advance.