Starfighter
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Eh, I've decided I'm not going to blather anymore on this one. Form your own opinions.
Yeah, Lock seems to have been preferred anyway, at least at home. If Wardle didn't write that article it would be interesting to see who'd been selected in the XI in Australia, as Wardle way outbowled Lock in SA in 56/57. Ironically Lock was more effective on Australian pitches after he'd stopped throwing.Miller was quick as the recollections of those who faced him confirm. He was fast approaching 34 years of age in 1953 where some decrease in speed would be expected. The non selection of Wardle is in some way justifiable. Given the talent England had available and selected in 58/59 you'd think they wouldn't miss him. That they were well beaten is still one of the most inexplicable reverses in the Ashes contests.
That's actually Australia arriving at the Tilbury Docks in April.Okay, okay, all I'm saying is that in the newsreels Miller to me doesn't have the obvious hustle that Lindwall and some others have. He's not the only one of whom recollections say was faster than what they look on video. Sylvester Clark would be a good example.
I think part of Bradman's use of Miller in '48 was also in relation to his back troubles
Yeah, Lock seems to have been preferred anyway, at least at home. If Wardle didn't write that article it would be interesting to see who'd been selected in the XI in Australia, as Wardle way outbowled Lock in SA in 56/57. Ironically Lock was more effective on Australian pitches after he'd stopped throwing.
I think fitness issues with the fast bowlers aside the main issue with the England team in 58/59 was that they were very disunited as a team, and after their collapses in the first test (not that we did better in the first innings) they just checked out mentally, a bit like in 2013-14 I suppose.
One thing about that stands out in that series is the slowness of the over rates, something that seems to have been started by Hutton on the previous tour and enhanced by greater use of pace bowlers. On day 2 at Brisbane England bowled 57 overs - equivalent to 76 six balls, which was very slow for then although I think the West Indies must have neared the mark enough times later on, and Australia only 56 (74.4) on the last day Adelaide, but England takes the prize with only 51 (68) overs on the second day at Adelaide. Must have been supremely dull to watch. To think that in 1948 England had bowled 114 overs in a day as Australia chased 404 to win. A nearly 40% reduction in the over rate in just ten years is astonishing.
Anyway, here's the first test in '46. During England's innings you can see that the amount of bounce off a length from modestly paced balls from Toshack and Miller (who cut his pace to control the bounce) is quite remarkable, and perhaps one of the few films to show well the effects of a sticky pitch.
Also that shot from an Antarctic expedition at the start. I love how you get a bit of the clip before, always makes for a nice contrast.
I think a contemporary commentator is more likely to know the correct prenunciation than an internet warrior looking on nearly a century later.Suffice to say, the 'Gabba looked at bit different then. Still ugly though.
The narrator's mispronunciation of O'Reilly is rather cringe worthy.
Except every other commentator, all O'Reilly's contemporaries and the man himself pronounced it the usual way mr smart.I think a contemporary commentator is more likely to know the correct prenunciation than an internet warrior looking on nearly a century later.