tooextracool
International Coach
a lot more actually....Richard said:Really? How many?
About 1\8th at the absolute most, I'd be willing to wager.
a lot more actually....Richard said:Really? How many?
About 1\8th at the absolute most, I'd be willing to wager.
no he was never too wide, only too short.Richard said:Far too short, often, and too wide, quite a bit.
In the New Zealand series he was pretty accurate for the most part, but he went round the park in all the West Indies Tests, even though he got a stack of wickets in the Fourth.
no it happens far less often then you seem to realise....Richard said:It happens far more than you seem to realise.
no its the same thing except that with a death-threat you end up being a lot more nervous and under a lot more pressure.Richard said:A death-threat is rather more than "being nervous and under pressure".
More "being terrified and being wholly understandibly totally unable to concentrate on anything else".
no your eye can afford to be ordinary if you can make up for it in other skills.....Richard said:Everyone relies on concentration - but equally your eye has to be of a certain standard before concentration comes into it.
yes but a ball like that would 99 times out of a 100 have been played and missed at, therefore any batsman that got an edge on that must be considered unlucky. and its amazing how you completely ignored the fact that he was the top scorer from either side in that innings.Richard said:Which is precisely the point.
RUDs are all part of bowler-friendly pitches..
2 thingsRichard said:Which is why Nico Boje got 8 cheap wickets...
and there we go again, wherever convenient you say that it was poor batting was what got bowlers wickets yet when boje gets 8 wickets you dont do the same.Richard said:Poor batting. In both cases. Added to high-class swing-bowling, mostly from Akhtar.
Don't think he did too well anyway.
so it adds to the list that refutes the case then?Richard said:No surprise there....
no its not, if someone scored 40 when the entire team scored 100 you cant say that he failedRichard said:A failure is a failure - mitigating circumstances or not, this is about looking at patterns.....
oh no,even if you look at it your way 6 successes and 9 failures on seamer friendly wickets suggests that hes definetly not a FTB......you dont just magically play well so often on seamer friendly wickets.Richard said:Or rather you think I'm wrong, I think I'm right yet again.
yet 2 isolated incidents from 2 different seasons dont prove a thing, i wouldnt be surprised if he succeeded against other spinners in the same season.Richard said:And looking at his averages for both seasons you'd say not.
"Weakness against spin" is not something that can have exact words put to it - simply looking uncomfortable, regularly playing down the wrong line, when the ball is turning - edging onto pad. Being discomfited by the turn is all anyone has to do to have a problem with spinners..
you've expained your statements by twisting them around some more....Richard said:No, I've explained why I haven't, your only response is "you have"...
and in my experience short bowling has got wickets just about as often while cutters havent been half as effective on flat wickets.Richard said:They're more effective the drier the wicket, yes, but they can make the ball move enough on anything (even a seamer, though because you've got seam-movement, which is easier to bowl, it's unneccesary) enough to be dangerous if you hit the right areas.
In my experience short deliveries haven't got anywhere near as many wickets and movement (whether seam, swing, cut or turn) has. If yours is different you're going to have different attitudes and values.
yes they have bowled well enough its just that they havent been fortunate enough. indeed on another day the same 30 plays and misses might have got many more wickets....Richard said:Well if everyone wants to stick to their guns rather than watching properly that's their choice.
It's better to do what you say than bowl well then get a wicket with an out-and-out poor delivery, but still if someone gets 30 play-and-misses in a spell of 25 overs and takes 5 wickets, all with nothing deliveries, they haven't bowled especially well IMO.
Because you see far more instances of things happening to the like of Collymore.
no mcgrath and ambrose have been extremely similar in the kind of wickets that they take, indeed if mcgrath doesnt deserve the wickets hes taken neither does ambrose.Richard said:Not if they came in the middle of spells where wickets were taken with good balls.
Look, lots of wickets (probably more than not) will come off poor balls for just about every bowler, ever.
The fact is, in the period 2001-2004 McGrath has played on an occasional seaming pitch and has bowled plenty of wicket-taking balls; he has played on lots and lots of non-seaming, consistent-in-bounce pitches, and has taken barely a single wicket with a wicket-taking ball. Yes, I've seen most of the wickets.
I know perfectly well that McGrath and Ambrose's ability with seam are similar (personally I'd say McGrath is a better swinger than Ambrose was), but the difference is Ambrose was a far better cutter of the ball.
yes and ambrose always had a fantastic ER, because he was deadly accurate.Richard said:Mostly it does, though.
And I'd say it was significantly more than 9\10 - maybe 19\20..
its almost always, not always, id say that its 8/10 times that it is the case, therefore you cant use something like that to prove me wrong.Richard said:Many as you want - you're not going to change the fact that inaccurate will almost always be more expensive than accurte.
and by your counts hes been wayward on several occasions.Richard said:Yes, they do - must have made a mistake with the figures, too..
no he has, except that anything that vaas does whether it be a ball on leg stump ends up being lauded for some reason or the other..Richard said:All right, then "he's had spells where he's bowled every bit as accurately as Curtley and McGrath's best spells".
And he hasn't had nearly the amount of poor strokes played as McGrath typically has.
and because batsman only play poor strokes when you can penetrate and create pressure.....Richard said:Who needs penetration when you get loads of poor strokes? If Chaminda had had as many poor strokes played to him as McGrath, he'd be considered every bit as good..
nowhere near as accurate as someone like flintoff was in the last series...i dont remember him trying to bounce lara out at the start of his innings and i dont remember him pitching the ball up every now and again either.Richard said:He looked like he was doing pretty well in the last series...
so now its just 3 years then? and based on those 3 years you say that mcgrath and pollock dont deserve their wickets throughout their careers?Richard said:No, just for the last 3 years.
and did those other options work as successfully as flintoffs?? laras average against all the teams suggest that it didnt....Richard said:What a coincidence that is.
D'you think there might be a reason why they didn't try it? Because they had better options, maybe?.
no there were several edges etc that went over the fielders and over the slips.Richard said:Certainly it was a flat wicket - it almost never happens on seaming, turning or uneven wickets.
There were indeed a few edges - no chances, though. I'd have mentioned them if there were, and I'd not rate the innings anywhere near so highly. Edges happen in any innings..
if it was too short at times then it obviously wasnt good ball after good ball then was it??do you not understand what bowling ball after ball in the right areas means?Richard said:The bowling very often consisted of good-line balls being thrashed through the covers, and middle-stump balls being forced down the ground. It was a bit short at times, but there was nothing wrong with the lines and certainly that sort of bowling would almost never be anywhere near that expensive normally.
err its called 'luck'?Richard said:Really? What use is that to the fielding side? It's only use if it's followed by an edge to hand.
no that is frustration using economy rates, something that you completely denied ever happened with quality batsmen. and it usually doesnt given that both harmison and giles didnt cause significant problems to the respective sides.Richard said:Bowling where you've got no chance of hitting the ball is, believe me, far more frustrating than bowling at the top of off all the time!
Anyone who watched the Giles-Tendulkar innings can tell that! Or Harmison in Australia.
Nothing is impossible.tooextracool said:no you're not, if you've watched the game on tv its highyl unlikely that you can be wrong about a pitch right there, but its impossible for an expert whos done both to be wrong.
Rather an ignorant definition of "ignorance", there.tooextracool said:actually with someone of your ignorance, id always like to double check.....
Which provides no problem whatsoever to anyone.tooextracool said:because you need to actually watch cricket to see that....
Yes, of course - in your perception.tooextracool said:a lot more actually....
As demonstrated by Gayle repeatedly thrashing him through the covers at the start of most innings.tooextracool said:no he was never too wide, only too short.
Going round in circles here...tooextracool said:no it happens far less often then you seem to realise....
Incomparably so, in fact.no its the same thing except that with a death-threat you end up being a lot more nervous and under a lot more pressure.
It can afford to be ordinary but it cannot afford to be below a certain standard.tooextracool said:no your eye can afford to be ordinary if you can make up for it in other skills.....
It's not amazing - I didn't ignore it - but nonetheless the match produced a not-outstanding total from him.tooextracool said:yes but a ball like that would 99 times out of a 100 have been played and missed at, therefore any batsman that got an edge on that must be considered unlucky. and its amazing how you completely ignored the fact that he was the top scorer from either side in that innings.
And the two reports I read on this match both described the surface as a turner, which Nicky Boje took advantage of. So I didn't just assume actually - but I don't think too many people would really consider Boje that good a bowler on non-turners.ive said time and time again that just because a finger spinner takes wickets on a surface it doesnt automatically mean that it is a turner
Because that's what the case has been.we've seen several other bowlers do it on non-spinner friendly wickets and on those occasions you have put it down to poor shots etc.
No, I actually saw the pitch and most of the wickets in this case - it was poor batting and high-class swing bowling (neither of which have any reflection on the pitch). No turn, no seam.and there we go again, wherever convenient you say that it was poor batting was what got bowlers wickets yet when boje gets 8 wickets you dont do the same.
No, you think it does - I think it does not.so it adds to the list that refutes the case then?
You can - and he did.no its not, if someone scored 40 when the entire team scored 100 you cant say that he failed
No, you don't - you just play well on an odd occasion.oh no,even if you look at it your way 6 successes and 9 failures on seamer friendly wickets suggests that hes definetly not a FTB......you dont just magically play well so often on seamer friendly wickets.
He might possibly have done - nonetheless, it's just a tiny bit of a coincidence that someone can have 2 of those isolated incidents, 3 years apart, where something of a very similar nature happens. It's even more of a coincidence that the relative player was a Western Australian - batsmen who've always been notorius for weakness against spin because of not facing very much of it.tooextracool said:yet 2 isolated incidents from 2 different seasons dont prove a thing, i wouldnt be surprised if he succeeded against other spinners in the same season.
No, you've said I have.you've expained your statements by twisting them around some more....
Then we've reached another dead-end... that will resurface next time we get someone discussing the merits of bowling.and in my experience short bowling has got wickets just about as often while cutters havent been half as effective on flat wickets.
They might - and if they have, well bowled.yes they have bowled well enough its just that they havent been fortunate enough. indeed on another day the same 30 plays and misses might have got many more wickets....
If you say so...tooextracool said:no mcgrath and ambrose have been extremely similar in the kind of wickets that they take, indeed if mcgrath doesnt deserve the wickets hes taken neither does ambrose.
Indeed.yes and ambrose always had a fantastic ER, because he was deadly accurate.
I'd say it's about 19\20.its almost always, not always, id say that its 8/10 times that it is the case, therefore you cant use something like that to prove me wrong.
Yes, he has - he's been accurate far more often, though.and by your counts hes been wayward on several occasions.
Rubbish, I've never praised him for bowling poorly.no he has, except that anything that vaas does whether it be a ball on leg stump ends up being lauded for some reason or the other..
If batsmen play poor strokes you don't need to bowl penetratively!and because batsman only play poor strokes when you can penetrate and create pressure.....
If you say so - nonetheless, his figures were far better than they normally are. And it still doesn't change the fact that, in Lara's 13-year career, there are bound to be more than a few occasions where people have tried that.nowhere near as accurate as someone like flintoff was in the last series...i dont remember him trying to bounce lara out at the start of his innings and i dont remember him pitching the ball up every now and again either.
No, I don't - I've always said I can only guess at the rest of their careers before 2000\01-2001.so now its just 3 years then? and based on those 3 years you say that mcgrath and pollock dont deserve their wickets throughout their careers?
Lara's failed in other series, believe me - especially between 1994\95 and 2001\02.tooextracool said:and did those other options work as successfully as flintoffs?? laras average against all the teams suggest that it didnt....
Yes, there were, I just said that. There weren't, however, any chances.no there were several edges etc that went over the fielders and over the slips.
It wasn't just Ntini, it was all the bowlers - and yes, shortish balls can be good balls, as long as they're on the right line. All the bowlers bowled plenty of good-line balls, and Gayle thrashed many of them through the covers.if it was too short at times then it obviously wasnt good ball after good ball then was it??do you not understand what bowling ball after ball in the right areas means?
makhaya ntini is a master of bowling absolute rubbish short stuff on flat wickets and this was no exception....
Yes, it is - nonetheless, it results in a fast scoring-rate without wickets falling, which is no use to the fielding side and a lot of use to the batting side.err its called 'luck'?
I've not once said it never happens - I have, however, said it doesn't happen very often to quality batsmen, and when it does it doesn't result in wickets falling anywhere near as often as some seem to think.no that is frustration using economy rates, something that you completely denied ever happened with quality batsmen. and it usually doesnt given that both harmison and giles didnt cause significant problems to the respective sides.
and id take an opinion of someone who is 99% right....of course the fact that several other experts happened to agree with him on the fact that the motera wicket was dead makes totally impossible for all of them to be wrong.Richard said:Nothing is impossible.
once again showing your ignorance.....Richard said:Rather an ignorant definition of "ignorance", there.