Swervy said:
i do get the feeling that you think that anyone who played in that 2000 WI vs England series can do know wrong despite ist being a series to battle it out for the wooden spoon of world cricket...why is it an insult to compare Harmison to Ambrose , they are both tall, have similar actions..only Harmison is a bit quicker.
Well, we don't know that, Ambrose was only ever timed in 1998\99. He wasn't as quick then as he was in his early career (fairly obviously, given that he was 35 then). And I'd not call them similar actions. Ambrose's was straight in, straight up, straight through, Harmison's is much more up, down, through. About the only similarity is they both come from about 10ft.
And so what if the teams were perceived to be poor: there were many fantastic players on either side, the main reason England had largely been so poor was because there were so few occasions everyone played together; injuries were common, as were losses of form.
Ambrose most definately was a great, but he did improve throughout his career... allow Harmison similar space to improve, despite the fact he has had a bigger impact on international cricket much earlier on in his career than Ambrose did
And how can you really say Harmison is not as good as exploiting seam movement as Ambrose was, when in the same sentence you even say Harmison hasnt had the chance to do so...Ambrose really peaked as a bowler around 93 94 ish time, so was aged in his early 30's....Harmison has 5 years on him
Hmm, Ambrose's career as a great by universal acceptance started with his eight-for against England at Kensington (even though, bizarrely, his 46ao demolition is better remembered) - in his 19th Test, mind you, when he was aged 26. After that, he never ended a game with his average below 25. But he hasn't had the advantage of carrying a weak attack like Harmison has for the last 7 months - he had the most difficult of all starts imaginable, in amongst Marshall, Patterson and co.
Harmison is not as good at moving the ball off the seam as Ambrose was - if there was so much as a trace of seam-movement, he'd find it. Harmison, while he's bowled on seamers infrequently, has bowled on them occasionally and has struggled to seam the ball consistently.
It's a long time before we'll see whether Harmison is anything like as good as Ambrose - and seriously, there have been few better, Ambrose is a great among greats - and personally I doubt it. Then again, I don't suppose too many who saw Ambrose in his first 6 Tests would have guessed how good he was going to be.