& there are always the category straddling exceptions like Derek Underwood & Chris Harris anyway!Swervy said:remember that these type of categories were originally done when there was no measuring speeds accuratly...these categories were given to bowlers based on perception...some bowlers (marshall springs to mind) may not have been as fast as others through the air,but could really rush the ball through to the batsman faster off the pitch...a speed measurement may not really reflect how fast the ball is pereived by the batsman...
So I dont really think its possible to put definate boundaries on what is fast etc (I know what I mean anyway )
I agree; it doesn't matter a jot. I'm not proud of myself for being bothered by it, but I do have a pedantic streak. A little voice in me that says "I'll think you'll find that..."Top_Cat said:What does it really matter if Channel 9 or Cricinfo call someone one type of bowler or another? I mean, how would you classify guys like Michael Holding or Lillee or Hadlee who bowled off short runs frequently? Is it what the bowler 'generally' bowls or what they're capable of?
If it's capability, McGrath, for example, would have to be rated 'fast' because I've seen him recently top 140km/h but he generally bowls within himself. Jason Gillespie generally bowls in the 130-135km/h range but we all know he's capable of 10km/h more than that. So where do you put him? Mohammed Sami has been clocked in the high 150's yet in the recent series against Australia, he didn't pass 150km/h and only got up in the high 140's a couple of times. So where do you put him?
It's only really exceptional in terms of what he chooses to bowl. McGrath *could* and has shown in a few games I've personally seen bowl 140km/h+ but he just kicks back a gear generally. He's not busting a gut just to reach that speed is what I'm saying I guess. Someone like Craig White could occasionally get up to 145km/h+ but he was really going flat-out.That is very exceptional for McGrath. But it's (87mph in old money) only nudging "fast" for me. If that was his stock delivery I would concur, but I would imagine his average speed now is no more than 80-1 mph (128-130kmh in your fancy foreign metric system!). I'd call him a fast/medium.
Yeah, well you can use facts to prove anything that's even vaguely true!Top_Cat said:And the metric system ain't fancy, it's just logical. I happen to know much of both by virtue of the fact that I was a scientist who had to communicate with people in other similarly backwards countries . You tell me what's more logical:
10 millimetres = 1 centimetre
100 centimetres = 1 metre
1000 metres = 1 kilometre
or
1000 gram = 1 kilogram
1000 kilograms = 1 tonne
1000 tonnes = 1 kilotonne
vs
12 inch = 1 foot (and there are no sub-divisions of an inch other than fractions).
5 280 feet = 1 mile
3 miles = 1 league
or
16 ounces = 1 pound
14 pounds = 1 stone
~ 143 stones = 1 ton = 2000 pounds
And do I really need to bring up fluid ounces/pints/quarts/gallons/bushels/chaldrons???
The biggest bug-bear for me was in dealing with smaller quantitites than an inch/ounce/fluid ounces. They had to be expressed as fractions when dealing with American and British labs and it used to annoy me that they refused to read anything with micrograms/microlitres written on it. Grrrr...........
Errrhmmm.......sorry, bit OT.
thats merely a question of perception that is due to the purity of one's bowling action. McGrath has a flowing bowling action so he doesnt look to be overworking.It's only really exceptional in terms of what he chooses to bowl. McGrath *could* and has shown in a few games I've personally seen bowl 140km/h+ but he just kicks back a gear generally. He's not busting a gut just to reach that speed is what I'm saying I guess. Someone like Craig White could occasionally get up to 145km/h+ but he was really going flat-out.
McGrath should DEFINATELY be Right Arm Medium Fast, not Fast Medium.