Slight weakness against SLAs and Left-arm pacers has crept into his game.Sachin at the end of the IPL was having all sorts of trouble against a few less-than-brilliant SLA's too so I'd not read a great deal into that
Both Pathan and Balaji looked genuine talents but on the away tour next year they started bowling like trundlers.You played into our hands by preparing roads in that series, and scoreboard pressure and Kumble on wearing wickets did the rest.
ThisOne look at the highlights of his hat trick in the first over against Pakistan makes me wonder where the **** it all went..
When I first started watching cricket IIRC he used to come on and get wickets first up like it was regulation. Swing, seam, pace, all gone By the time he got dropped he had been reduced to bowling cutters and slower balls to avoid getting smashed.
Pardon me if I’m repeating anything someone has already said in this thread, I haven’t had a chance to read through what most have said. The problem is that people continually put a statistic as a threshold, despite the fact that this has been proven time and time again to be untrue. We see it with batsmen, can’t be remotely test class without a 40+ average or great without a 50+ average. With bowlers the perennial argument is that you can’t be test class without a pace of 80+ mph.There's a repeated assumption when it comes to bowlers of around 80mph or less that, even if they've taken bucketloads of wickets in first-class cricket, they're not good enough for tests. It's applied pretty heavily by selectors, even when- as in the case of Stuart Clark- the player in question has already taken boatloads of cheap test wickets. And by fans, hence Darren Sammy's place is constantly being whined about despite him having the most successful start to a West Indian test career since the 90s. The Sri Lankan selectors believed it so strongly that they selected Suranga Lakmal ahead of Nuwan Kulasekara for the test series in England. It's a dogma so strong that it was used to justify a bowler with an enormously successful first-class and ODI career (and a decent start to his test career) being left out in favour of someone who's never had any remote success at any level.
So I'm questioning that assumption. Where did it even come from, and why is it applied to such a serious extent? What makes test batsmen so notably better at playing medium-fast bowling in comparison to first-class batsmen relative to their ability to play fast-medium or fast bowling? I haven't seen anywhere near enough evidence for this idea to justify the extent to which the hypothesis is accepted by the cricketing community.
You've mentioned Praveen Kumar and suggested previously that he won't bowl well against England in England.Asif's not a sub-80mph bowler & gets good bounce and carry.
It's not just about speed-gun pace, because I think it's an overrated way of judging a bowler's pace, the likes of Luke Wright & early period Shane Watson are/were consistently up around or even over 85mph, but because of their trajectory don't get much in the way of leap off the pitch to trouble the batsman.
Gus Fraser, on the other hand, rarely troubled 80mph once his back woes had reduced his youthful zip, but because of his height and great seam position was consistently a threat.
The bowlers I think will struggle at test level are sub-80mph wicket-to-wicket bowlers. Praveen Kumar has had (statistically at least) decent start to his test career, but because of his lack of anything but swing I still think when he faces a real test-quality batting line up he'll be fodder. Kulasekera doubly so because he doesn't get Kumar's swing.
That's total bollocks.Regarding the paragraph on Sammy, I’m not sure where he ranks amongst the bowlers from the WI since the 90s, but the reason why he isn’t rated has little to do with pace but because he is simply incapable of moving the ball off the straight. His record is quite ordinary when you remove his performances against Bangladesh and it’s hard to see how he is likely to take wickets at the test match level. Considering that he is keeping someone like Kemar Roach out of the side, who is not only a far more capable but just a better bowler, there is clearly some merit in the argument against Sammy.
Doubt he'll get a gig, tbh. Sree and Munaf both have more about them, IMHO.You've mentioned Praveen Kumar and suggested previously that he won't bowl well against England in England.
Gotta ask, surely that's the best place for someone like him to bowl in world cricket.
People have been saying Praveen is too slow for 4 years now in international cricket. Started in Australia when he played the tri-series final and Hayden hit him for 4 over his head. The Aussie commentators were basically laughing. He then won India the finals series 2-0.
Same thing is happening in tests imo. I know its a different game, but if there are swinging conditions I back Praveen to bowl pretty well. England more then any other place will offer those conditions to him.
It's pretty much between him and Sreesanth at the moment ,and Munaf is behind them.Doubt he'll get a gig, tbh. Sree and Munaf both have more about them, IMHO.
He doesn't nibble it about a bit though. He can swing it a long way when the conditions suit him and either side to boot.They'll offer those conditions but they'll also offer up opposition batsmen who have grown up playing against bowlers that nibble it around a bit.
He's bowled well from what I've seen of him so far but I don't think he'll cause England's batsmen too many problems.
Yeah ,he is very street smart in the way he plans and counters what the batsman are trying to do.Honestly don't think Kumar is a huge swinger of the ball for someone of his pace anyway. He seems a smart bowler so that'll count for a lot. We'll see I guess.
Is it really? Look at Sammy's test record mate. Hes had arguably 3 good innings statistically when you exclude Bangladesh. One against England on debut, a game I saw live and I can categorically tell you that he never looked like taking a wicket all game until the England team started to look for quick runs to force the declaration. The other performance against Pakistan came on a pitch that in many quarters has been debated as perhaps not even being test class, not to mention that the Pakistani batting lineup is easily the worst out of the top 9 sides.That's total bollocks.
I dont disagree with the idea that anyone who is tearing it up in FC cricket isnt deserving of a shot at the international level. By all means they do. Thats the point of the system, if you dont reward someone who takes wickets at the domestic level then it renders the system meaningless. However, there are countless examples of bowlers who have achieved fame at the FC level but couldnt help themselves to even respectable figures in test cricket.Rest of your post makes some good points. But again, a lot of it's only explaining what makes a good bowler and what makes a bad bowler. I'm not much convinced by the idea that wicket-to-wicket bowlers are capable of tearing FC lineups to shreds but not even worth a shot at test level.
He's some way short of 80mph. Was bowling 72-75mph yesterday.I make no secrets that I am a huge Praveen Kumar fan. Id be willing to put a marker down that Praveen Kumar is more likely to get wickets in England than Sreesanth if he gets a shot in the test side. Any bowler that can swing the ball both ways prodigiously even at 80mph is likely to be effective in England