Starfighter
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Nah, I'm not even from Sydney.Starfighter, you're not from Hurstville by chance are you?
Why do you ask btw?
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Nah, I'm not even from Sydney.Starfighter, you're not from Hurstville by chance are you?
If the lefty Nissar is bowling to is Fishlock then the innings is coming to an end and it was a long one. So I'd expect he would have been tired though he still looks swift. My favourite bowling action from that era is Allen's.
Some footage from India's 1936 England tour at the Oval. Shows a somewhat better view than the 1932 footage, Amar Singh bowls the first ball, Nissar the one at the end (doesn't look a fast as the 32 footage IMO). Jahangir Khan and CK and CS Nayadu are the others.
26 overs for an express bowler in a day is a fair workload. 129 for a team is exceptional. I agree the shorter run ups would explain it. Even Nissar's wasn't overly long. and yeah, there are plenty who played against and watched him that raved about Amar Singh.I wouldn't consider his effort exceptional though, 26 overs out of 129 (in a day!). In comparison Amar Singh bowled 39.
During 35/36 there was a tour by an Australian XI to India. It wasn't a very strong team, being a bowler heavy lineup of players generally past their best, but Nissar put up some remarkable figures:
1st 'test': 6/72, 0/18
2nd 'test': 6/35, 1/25
3rd 'test': 4/72, 4/80
4th 'test': 5/61, 6/36
The series was shared 2 all.
I find it interesting that Amar Singh perhaps is more often regarded the better bowler despite Nissar's numerical superiority.
It's funny how things change, whereas before the war India depended on pace while afterwards their opening attack would have struggled to reach 70 mph on their very best day.
The second hyperlink is identical to the first and does not show the fourth Test.Some assorted short newsreels:
Third Test Durban 1939
Fourth Test Johannesburg 1939 - in this one you can see Hammond falling to Norman Gordon, who died in 2014 aged 103, the only test cricketer to make the ultimate century.
Better coverage of Hopper Read can be found here.And a couple of silent clips:
The Oval Test 1935 - This one contains a couple of distant shots of Holcombe 'Hopper' Read in his only test, he was said to be the quickest in England during his brief career, though erratic. Unfortunately he was forced to choose his business career over cricket. Also a notably incompetent batsman with a FC average of 3.59. I saw some footage of Stan Nichols who also opened the bowling in this match somewhere, but I can't remember where.
What happened to Watson? I really enjoyed his tireless and consistently high quality contributions to this thread.great work Starfighter, indeed taking over where Watson left.
Got banned for being a scumbag.What happened to Watson? I really enjoyed his tireless and consistently high quality contributions to this thread.
HereThe second hyperlink is identical to the first and does not show the fourth Test.
Many thanks for this and all the other fabulous contributions you have recently made to this thread.
Unfortunately his good posting in this thread was counterbalanced by his bigoted nonsense in the politics threads.What happened to Watson? I really enjoyed his tireless and consistently high quality contributions to this thread.
The video that I posted for the second test 24/25 seems to show most of it at 3:20 or so, but I've never seen it from a standing start. He seems to take twelve steps there, so maybe 14 all up? I think most of his pace comes from his body and shoulder.The lupine pack attack on an effectively muzzled Watson, was one of the most disgraceful pile ons I've seen and far worse then anything he said. If you were a part of it you should be ashamed of yourself.
Some of the footage here has been terrific. The vid on the Essex team is like finding a masterpiece at a garage sale. Well done Zebra. I have never been able to find footage of Jack Gregory with his entire run up. If someone could succeed where I've failed and post a link I'd be grateful. I'd like to see the extent of his run up compared to the rather short runs ups that seemed to dominate his era.