Richard said:
Curtley Ambrose was every bit as accurate. So, believe it or not, is Chaminda Vaas.
And yet Curtley was capable of taking his wickets in conditions that don't suit seam through good bowling. So is Chaminda.
Pollock and McGrath, on the other hand, just tend to be rather lucky..
are you seriously out of your mind? chaminda vaas is as accurate as curtly ambrose? have you watched anything of curtly ambrose bowling? sure vaas has had times when hes been extremely accurate but hes had many more periods when hes been absolutely wayward. even in the spells in which hes been extremely accurate he hasnt been anywhere near as accurate as ambrose who could infact bowl every ball in the same spot.
and i know ambrose can take wickets in any conditions, just like mcgrath can and has done so consistently. again the reason why ambrose got more than 400 wickets was because he too was deadly accurate.
Richard said:
Brett Lee has tried it twice (and yes, he does tend to be a bit more accurate in occasional short spells where he's aiming for the chest and head).
rubbish, brett lee and accurate? he couldnt bowl 3 balls in the same spot if he tried to.
Richard said:
I can't conceive Wasim, Waqar or Shoaib have never tried it. Donald was quite likely to have tried it. Who knows, even Andre Van Troost might have tried it in 1998 (that was a joke, I am perfectly well aware of the fact that he was one of the most wayward bowlers you'll ever see at the top level).
its quite likely that they didnt try it, and im not talking about bouncing it towards their head, its quite easy to get out of the way of those, im talking about bowling into the body at considerable pace and then following it up with a well pitched up ball....no its quite conceivable that they didnt try it to the extent that flintoff did, just like bowlers havent exploited haydens weakness?
Richard said:
Yeah, well lets see what happens in the almost-inevitable event that Harmison and Flintoff try it against Graeme and co. (and Langer and co., and Sachin and co.
we shall indeed see....
Richard said:
So you bowl in the right place, accurately, but the batsmen play like Chris Gayle plays occasionally and repeatedly hit perfectly decent balls through the covers for boundaries. Is there still pressure then?
Sorry, it's just like Nasser's comment 2 years ago, after Anderson's 10-6-12-1: "I don't care about statistics, what I like is the length he bowled". Yeah, Nasser, that accuracy would have been oh so important if Bevan and co. had decided to run down the pitch and smash him for 5-an-over!
Accuracy is no use without economy, though the two almost always go hand-in-hand in the First-Class game. (And in the one-day game the great skill is making accurate bowling expensive)
err no, because no batsman, no matter how good he is can consistently smash good balls for 4(unless they include edges thro slip etc, and even thats unlikely), not gayle, not anyone else.
Richard said:
I have - in my experience good batsmen don't let a slow scoring-rate get to them - they know it's not relevant.)
OMG how many times do i have to say it?can you please show me where i have said that slow scoring rates leades to pressure in tests? i've consistently said that you need to bowl every ball in the right areas at the right pace.....
Richard said:
Or rather, that you try to twist them around for me, but you can't find a way to, so have to resort to saying you have.
nope, ive never needed to twist them for you, you are already twisted.....