fredfertang
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
I doubt it would have been the pace that fazed Cowdrey - if that troubled him he'd have stayed at home and celebrated his 42nd birthday with his family rather than with Lillee and Thomson
That was going to be my point. Cowdrey faced Thommo and yet rated Adcock as fast. No one sensible rates a bowlers pace from where the keeper stands. Davis calculated Tate's speed as similar to Kasprowicz yet one had the keeper stand over the stumps while the other had his standing back in the speed flattering modern way.
There had been a regression of human race with regards to reflexes during last few decades? Or was the bowler REALLY 135k? I would take the first because biology of the reflex arc has not changed much. But fitness levels do have.That was going to be my point. Cowdrey faced Thommo and yet rated Adcock as fast. No one sensible rates a bowlers pace from where the keeper stands. Davis calculated Tate's speed as similar to Kasprowicz yet one had the keeper stand over the stumps while the other had his standing back in the speed flattering modern way.
What does this mean? If it has something to with bowling speeds in history then we've moved on since the 70s too. Yet of the 2 of us I'm safe in believing thommo was much quicker than mo akramThere had been a regression of human race with regards to reflexes during last few decades? Or was the bowler REALLY 135k? I would take the first because biology of the reflex arc has not changed much. But fitness levels do have.
Watson I wouldn't pay any attention to what Ames says about Woolley. Both were from Kent and having read Ames he was something of a Kentish John Bull. He even picked Freeman in his all time world xi. I mean really. Zero cred when rating his fellow Kentish men.
As for amar Singh Hammond rated his pace off the wicket allied to seam and swing as dangerous an opening bowler he's seen. His run up is about the distance of Tates. Presently Mark Woods run up is quite short. In the clip above I love seeing Holmes stump go for a jog.
What I mean is that bowlers from yester year were slower than modern era. The "right arm fast" has been used liberally to describe bowlers, who were fast medium at best. I don't belive the fact that a 135k bowler could succeed with keeper up to the stump, unless he bowls a metronomic front foot length and look for lbws, and bowler is pretty short. 6' 4" guy bowling at 135k and keeper standing up is recipe for disaster. Anything marginally short will decapitate the keeper. It's pretty hard enough to keep to a 6' 1" spinner who bowls flat leg breaks (Anil Kumble), as shown in many injuries sustained by keepers standing to him, with broken fingers. Imaging a fast medium fella doing it. Quality of keeping has not changed much over the years. So the best possible explanation is when you see some one was fast medium and keeper stood up to the wicket both in same sentence, either the bowler was not fast medium, or he has reduced his speed to suit the conditions.What does this mean? If it has something to with bowling speeds in history then we've moved on since the 70s too. Yet of the 2 of us I'm safe in believing thommo was much quicker than mo akram
Ken Farnes bowling off a dozen paces to a packed slips cordon.From the small amount of film I've seen of him Ken Farnes had a short run, and by all accounts Eddie Gilbert (faster even than Larwood in Bradman's opinion) barely half a dozen paces
I don't recall Makram as the fastest in Pak history. Even at the time he was rated as ordinary. Granted he was rated quick but definitely not as quick as zahid or the tearaway waqarWhat I mean is that bowlers from yester year were slower than modern era. The "right arm fast" has been used liberally to describe bowlers, who were fast medium at best. I don't belive the fact that a 135k bowler could succeed with keeper up to the stump, unless he bowls a metronomic front foot length and look for lbws, and bowler is pretty short. 6' 4" guy bowling at 135k and keeper standing up is recipe for disaster. Anything marginally short will decapitate the keeper. It's pretty hard enough to keep to a 6' 1" spinner who bowls flat leg breaks (Anil Kumble), as shown in many injuries sustained by keepers standing to him, with broken fingers. Imaging a fast medium fella doing it. Quality of keeping has not changed much over the years. So the best possible explanation is when you see some one was fast medium and keeper stood up to the wicket both in same sentence, either the bowler was not fast medium, or he has reduced his speed to suit the conditions.
Nah, at best Thommo was as quick as Akthar. That's what we know. If you believe and give lot of weight to anecdotes, then Mo. Akram and Mo. Zahid were quicker than Akthar.
I rather would like to say at their pomp Mo. Akram and Mo. Zahid were regarded as Pakistan's fastest ever bowlers. I would always believe what speed gun says more than opinions.
What I mean is that bowlers from yester year were slower than modern era. The "right arm fast" has been used liberally to describe bowlers, who were fast medium at best. I don't belive the fact that a 135k bowler could succeed with keeper up to the stump, unless he bowls a metronomic front foot length and look for lbws, and bowler is pretty short. 6' 4" guy bowling at 135k and keeper standing up is recipe for disaster. Anything marginally short will decapitate the keeper. It's pretty hard enough to keep to a 6' 1" spinner who bowls flat leg breaks (Anil Kumble), as shown in many injuries sustained by keepers standing to him, with broken fingers. Imaging a fast medium fella doing it. Quality of keeping has not changed much over the years. So the best possible explanation is when you see some one was fast medium and keeper stood up to the wicket both in same sentence, either the bowler was not fast medium, or he has reduced his speed to suit the conditions.
Nah, at best Thommo was as quick as Akthar. That's what we know. If you believe and give lot of weight to anecdotes, then Mo. Akram and Mo. Zahid were quicker than Akthar.
I rather would like to say at their pomp Mo. Akram and Mo. Zahid were regarded as Pakistan's fastest ever bowlers. I would always believe what speed gun says more than opinions.
Your comment about keepers standing up has been dealt with. Sufficient to say Waqar has stumping dismissals to his credit.Nah, at best Thommo was as quick as Akthar. That's what we know. If you believe and give lot of weight to anecdotes, then Mo. Akram and Mo. Zahid were quicker than Akthar.
I rather would like to say at their pomp Mo. Akram and Mo. Zahid were regarded as Pakistan's fastest ever bowlers. I would always believe what speed gun says more than opinions.
The four films were sponsored by a combination (for advertising purposes) of the companies Lever Brothers, of Sunlight soap fame, and Nestlé, of infant food celebrity, and were first shown publicly on 7 February 1898 at the Alhambra Theatre, London, England. As test cricket matches were then still in progress in Australia and were very much in the news in England, the films were a major success.
There appears to have been a limited showing of these films in Australia. Philip Newbury presented them as part of his "Saturday Shilling Pops" shows in Melbourne at the end of May 1898, and in Sydney in October of that year. One may have been shown in Adelaide in July 1899. There are references to other showings of films with Ranji, but it is sometimes not possible to determine if any such film is from the Lever and Nestlé set or is one of the other films mentioned below.
The films were made with a Lumière cinématographe, as is evidenced by the one-per-frame-side circular sprocket holes visible in the copyright proof strips. The inside edge of one of these sprocket holes is just visible in the frame image below.
Prince Ranjitsinhji practising batting at the nets
This is the only one of the four films of which a copy survives.
The image on the right is of a frame from about 12.5 seconds into the film and shows Ranji in position waiting for the next ball.
It is a detail taken from a videotape copy of the actual film.
In the near background behind the practice nets is a light-coloured wall surmounted by a short picket fence. Behind this is a section of upward-sloping, open land before a high picket fence, one section of which is missing. And behind this is a small group of trees. Nothing but sky is visible beyond this.
The man wearing a bowler hat standing behind the net behind the stumps remains almost immobile throughout the film.
No bowler is in frame, and the only time the ball is obviously visible is as a blur on one frame before Ranji's fifth stroke.28
The inside edge of one of the sprocket holes is just visible as a black mark on the left edge of the frame near the feet of the behind-the-net observer.
The frame images provided for copyright registration are laterally inverted: Ranji was a right-handed batsman, as seen in the adjacent image.
Some of the following notes are taken from the British Film Institute's Film and TV Database entry for the film (with amendments).
The original film is 11.3 m (37 ft) in length [How many frames are there?], and plays for about 47 seconds.
The camera is positioned in the silly mid-off area, behind the side netting.
Ranjitsinhji plays the following strokes:
a drive towards extra cover,
a push on the leg side off the front foot,
a pull over mid-wicket,
a drive to extra cover,
a drive to extra cover.
A man comes into the picture to retrieve the ball.
Ranjitsinhji then plays to leg off the back foot,
a square drive,
a pull over mid-on,
a drive to extra cover,
and then moves into position for another drive.
Prince Ranjitsinhji practising batting at the nets
Image courtesy of the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia
The 1897-1898 cricket test match films