Kylez
State Vice-Captain
mental issues.
mental issues.
If his natural length wasn't suitable then he wouldn't have had the domestic success he's had.Still not sure about Tremlett's natural length in English Conditions though .It is shorter than Ideal for those conditions which is a major reason why he was not in the English setup till now.
Like Ishant Sharma ,Australian pitches were ideal for him and the gap between him and Sreesanth i Australia as a bowler would be very big for me ,but in England with Sreesanth being a pitch it up and Swing bowler(though erratic) the gap reduces significantly.
His Domestic record is Good ,not great and That is why he wasn't in the team till last year ,i guess.If his natural length wasn't suitable then he wouldn't have had the domestic success he's had.
Also, guys like Flintoff succeeded in Test cricket despite having a shorter natural length.
Sreesanth actually has a beautiful bowling action in one meaning of the word. What really ****s him is his seam position, can be the best seam position in cricket at times but most of the time it wavers away. Reckon it's one of the main reasons for his inconsistency. When Sree gets his seam position right though, He bowls pretty damn well.
Actually a lot of his wickets were to fullish balls. As one would expect - his height means the batsman is less certain of whether to get on the front foot or not.Need to see more of Tremlett to judge his natural length IMO. He's a tall guy but remember him getting Phil Hughes with a nicely pitched up delivery in one of the Ashes Tests.
It is not exactly about the extra bounce at Perth.Reckon this is another case of the bouncy Aussie pitch stereotype striking again.
In Perth, The pitch was indeed bouncy, Tremmers dominated.
The next test was in Melbourne on a pitch without much bounce yet adapted his line and dominated again. Reckon he'd be a frightening prospect on a pitch like Lords '05.
Had a spell at Middlesex before he debuted as a test player & one at Hants in 2007. Went good-very good, but not absolutely exceptionally.Stuey Clark would have run riot in England at his peak tbh.
It is not exactly about the extra bounce at Perth.
All the Aussie pitches tend to offer good bounce atleast and Melbourne offers pretty good seam movement of length.
Generally Length/back of the length bowlers tend to do well in Australia ,compared to most other countries,specially England where swing bowlers who pitch it up are better off most times.
Stuart Clark,Ishant Sharma,Tremlett etc.. among others have done better in Australia than other places.
Meanwhile the swing bowlers like RP Singh ,Hoggard,Sidebottom,Old version of Zaheer etc.. have done better in England than in Australia by a margin.
Obviously there are going to be exceptions but i think it is a general trend.
Big call. Sehwag's record against us is awful and Gambhir struggles when the ball darts around. In English conditions I'd say Strauss has the best technique to cope.As for ratings...Indian openers > English Openers. Indian middle order > English middle order. English captaincy > Indian captaincy. English fast bowling > Indian fast bowling (Zaheer > Anderson but Tremmlet and Broad way, way better than the rest of the Indian pace attack). English spin bowling = Indian spin bowling (well, Swann way better but effect is neutralized since he is bowling to better players of spin).
Overall, it's pretty even, with the difference being selection and obviously the home conditions.
Actually, anyone up for an avatar bet? I say Harbhajan ends up with a better bowling average than Swann.
See, I won't deny that Gambhir plays some ridiculously pathetic needlessly risky shots which don't even give return against short bowling and looks like a No.10 sometimes against decent out-swing but most importantly, He puts the runs on the board.Big call. Sehwag's record against us is awful and Gambhir struggles when the ball darts around. In English conditions I'd say Strauss has the best technique to cope.