The partition ****ed up our fast bowling resources.Poor India. Even you guys are loling at what's left of the pace battery. When did spin bowling become such a massive cultural phenomenon in India anyway? I would have thought after Singh and Nissar in the 30s a raft of hungry young quickies would have followed thereafter.
Would have been amazing. But why exactly did partition screw up India's fast bowling potential? Spin bowling has just been so ingrained in India's cricketing culture for so long. A lot of my Indian friends tell me that part of it lies in the fact that Indian streets are so crowded, and so a big run up isn't always possible. So spin is favoured.The partition ****ed up our fast bowling resources.
Imagine if it'd never happened... Gavaskar, Miandad, Kapil, Imran and Qadir on one team, and in the next gen, Sachin, Dravid, Inzi, VVS, Wasim, Waqar, Kumble.
Nah, we are just lazy ****s who can't be bothered.Would have been amazing. But why exactly did partition screw up India's fast bowling potential? Spin bowling has just been so ingrained in India's cricketing culture for so long. A lot of my Indian friends tell me that part of it lies in the fact that Indian streets are so crowded, and so a big run up isn't always possible. So spin is favoured.
Fazal Mehmood. If he was Indian, he would be our best ever pacer.Pakistan didn't produce many great quicks before Imran either. That's the biggest difference.
Right, but he wasn't a pace bowler, more of a medium pacer. Khan Mohammad was faster but he wasn't a star like Fazal was for some reason.Fazal Mehmood. If he was Indian, he would be our best ever pacer.
The case of Madhav Apte is among the most baffling in Indian cricket. A very correct opening batsman with an array of strokes, he started off with a century on debut in the Ranji Trophy for Bombay against Saurashtra in 1951-52. Recognising his talent early, the selectors gave him his big break in his second season of first-class cricket when he was picked for two Tests against Pakistan in 1952-53. With scores of 30, 10 not out and 42, he was an automatic choice for the tour of West Indies that followed. Over there he exceeded expectations. He opened the batting in all five Tests, and had scores of 64, 52, 64, 9, 0, 163 not out, 30, 30, 15 and 33. With a tally of 460 runs (51.11) he finished second to Polly Umrigar in the Test figures and ahead of Hazare, Mankad, Roy and Manjrekar. His century was a marathon innings that helped India to draw the match after they were in danger of defeat. He came back from the tour with his reputation enhanced many times over but to his dismay and to the astonishment of cricket fans in the country, he was dropped like a hot potato. But for one token appearance against the SJOC team in 1953-54 he never played an official Test again.
I imagine Azhar would have still got in as a batsman. The team's match-fixing potential would also have been immense, with him, Wasim, and presumably Salim Malik making it as well in the early '90s.The partition ****ed up our fast bowling resources.
Imagine if it'd never happened... Gavaskar, Miandad, Kapil, Imran and Qadir on one team, and in the next gen, Sachin, Dravid, Inzi, VVS, Wasim, Waqar, Kumble.
Poor India. Even you guys are loling at what's left of the pace battery. When did spin bowling become such a massive cultural phenomenon in India anyway? I would have thought after Singh and Nissar in the 30s a raft of hungry young quickies would have followed thereafter.
Binny
Sardesai
Azharuddin
Pataudi
Azhar has been pickedMohammad Shami
Ishant Sharam
Mohammad Azharuddin
Ajinkya Rahane