Salamuddin
International Debutant
Who do you think is the better test match bowler ?
Interesting because during the 2003/04 test series between India and Australia the first 3 pitches offered hardly anything for spinners, and the fourth test at Sydney only started helping the spinners by day 3, yet Kumble well and truly out-bowled MacGill in that series. MacGill copped an absolute flogging.FaaipDeOiad said:I'd pick MacGill on a pitch that didn't offer anything for spinners, but Kumble would get the nod in most cases.
I'm aware of that, but I'm also aware (as I'm sure you are) that MacGill didn't bowl particularly well in that series, and Dravid, Laxman and company aren't the most forgiving bunch to have a bad series against as a leg-spinner.Jono said:Interesting because during the 2003/04 test series between India and Australia the first 3 pitches offered hardly anything for spinners, and the fourth test at Sydney only started helping the spinners by day 3, yet Kumble well and truly out-bowled MacGill in that series. MacGill copped an absolute flogging.
I rate MacGill and I agree that both are underrated, and are just unlucky to be in the same era as Warne and Murali. I'm just not entirely sure that MacGill would automatically be the choice on a non-spinner friendly wicket. He may well be, and Kumble's record is far from outstanding on non-spinning tracks, but MacGill has barely bowled on wickets which don't aid spin, and when he has, he's mainly been spanked to all parts of the ground.FaaipDeOiad said:The main difference between the two is that when Kumble gets a pitch that is in his favour he takes full advantage of it and is an incredibly dangerous bowler, while MacGill could be anything from unplayable to utterly crap on any sort of surface. Both underrated bowlers though.
Dravid has struggled against Warne even when Warne has bowled poorly though, but he handled MacGill like he was nothing. True with Laxman and Sachin, they always play spin well whether its Murali or MacGill, though Sachin didn't get stuck in to MacGill as much that series. VVS and Sehwag did most of the damage.FaaipDeOiad said:I'm aware of that, but I'm also aware (as I'm sure you are) that MacGill didn't bowl particularly well in that series, and Dravid, Laxman and company aren't the most forgiving bunch to have a bad series against as a leg-spinner
But doesn't that just follow your argument that they enjoy their home conditions (or conditions they are familiar with) more? Its like when we discussed that sub-continent pacers (Shoaib and Pathan come to mind) doing well on flat sub-continent pitches don't get credit they deserve, but you countered saying its their home conditions so they're used to it. Same can be said for Macgill right? I mean he's played most of his career on Australian wickets. Wouldn't he obviously be used to the characteristics of those (bounce for eg.) more-so than Kumble.FaaipDeOiad said:Kumble has a relatively poor record outside of the subcontinent over a lengthy career, and while he's certainly improved on that in recent years and he is a better bowler than MacGill in most situations, I still think he does his best work by some distance on home pitches. Generally speaking, if the match was to be played in (say) Australia or South Africa I'd take MacGill, and in most other situations I'd take Kumble.
Its actually true today as well, to a certain degree. He is not a big turner of the ball, so the batsman are confused on the best way to defend him. He turns it "just enough" for you to miss, but he'll never produce the "warne to gatting" type turn (he doesn't need to). He is very accurate.Goughy said:Has to be Kumble. He has an exceptional Test record and has been destructive in County Cricket on tracks not traditionally recognised as turners.
Also, people forget how confusing Kumble was for batsmen early in his career. Do you play him as a leg spinner, medium pacer etc? He was really a player that was unusual and of a type that batsmen had not seen before.
Goughy said:He has an exceptional Test record and has been destructive in County Cricket on tracks not traditionally recognised as turners.
It's amazing how it still seems like no one has figured out what the hell Kumble is doing. He just keeps prodding the ball in there with deadly accuracy and minimal turn and batsmen are confused as to how they're managing to get owned and how they should play him.silentstriker said:Its actually true today as well, to a certain degree. He is not a big turner of the ball, so the batsman are confused on the best way to defend him. He turns it "just enough" for you to miss, but he'll never produce the "warne to gatting" type turn (he doesn't need to). He is very accurate.
After Warne and Murali, I think he is clearly the next guy in line as the best in cricket. I rate MacGill highly, but imo its clearly Kumble.