honestbharani
Whatever it takes!!!
should have started with McGrath.extremely harsh punishments. i guarantee you'll see much less chucking at all levels the moment someone cops a life ban for doing it.
should have started with McGrath.extremely harsh punishments. i guarantee you'll see much less chucking at all levels the moment someone cops a life ban for doing it.
Without any sort of consequences, yeah.But Jack, is this the ONLY thing that players get away with at the club level? In my opinion, there are a number of things players get away with at that level because they never play at a higher level and this is just one of them.
A lower social-class lady, who one day imagines being some sort of famous actress or celebrity, has many problems. She is addicted to various drugs, including alcohol, and to sustain her addiction she gets her money from selling herself.well, I am not sure how the club scene works in Australia but I am talking about guys getting away due to biased umpiring, using runners etc etc.. Heck, I know of bowlers who take wickets due to biased pitch preparations.. I just think this is like one of those, that are always going to be there at a lower standard...
True, but lets leave your [insert female relation here] out of this etc. etc.A lower social-class lady, who one day imagines being some sort of famous actress or celebrity, has many problems. She is addicted to various drugs, including alcohol, and to sustain her addiction she gets her money from selling herself.
Let's not try to help her find a better career, or prevent her drug-use, simply because she has other problems, right? Wrong. Eliminating one problem is better than leaving it there.
If you can point out where in this conversation I've said fast bowlers should be able to bend their arm more than the allowable amount I'll be happy to run through CW nude. Unless I'm mistaken, the argument here is against bowlers who consciously bend their arm inwards and then straighten it again, not hyperextension. So I'm assuming you're talking about the former. While we're at it, can someone tell me why we're apparently referring to the current limits for blokes like Ajmal and Murali, but the old limits for McGrath and anyone else who wasn't actually suspected of throwing when we talk about 99% of bowlers throwing? If we're going to go back to saying someone with an action like McGrath 'throws' then we're obviously back at the old limits. Which means Murali's over again, and so is Ajmal. (I'm not one who thinks Murali throws either by the way, since he was tested a number of times and cleared I have no problems with him).Bending ur elbow at point of delivery helps you hurl down the ball faster too.. That is not an unfair advantage?
If you gain an advantage from it then it's unethical. If you can't deliver the ball within the limits allowed then you shouldn't be playing. Given the amount of people that have to be tested I'd suggest most bowlers can bowl within the limits, so those who can't shouldn't receive any leeway.I mean unfair in the sense of being almost unethical in the context of the game. Bowling wides to deny scoring opportunities is almost unethical, hence penalised.
Don't hurt yourself just because someone holds an unorthodox view
BTW who other than me finds Murali's action beautiful and mesmerising?
Nice answer
True, but lets leave your [insert female relation here] out of this etc. etc.
This, and the fact that bowling as opposed to throwing is a defining quality of cricket, sum up my feelings of this topic aptly. Nonetheless, whether or not Ajmal's delivery exceeds the legal limit shouldn't detract from the skill he has displayed.If you gain an advantage from it then it's unethical.
I'm not so sure. If he's throwing (and, frankly, he is) he's breaking a rule to gain an advantage. To my way of thinking that must detract from his performance.:
This, and the fact that bowling as opposed to throwing is a defining quality of cricket, sum up my feelings of this topic aptly. Nonetheless, whether or not Ajmal's delivery exceeds the legal limit shouldn't detract from the skill he has displayed.
Yeah I agree. I can turn it square if I throw it, and I wouldn't think that should gain any accolades. Given my hand nearly touches my shoulder when I do it's highly unlikely I'd get away with it in a game...although if all they can do is report me after the match, then I'm not sure at what point I'd be stopped from doing so.I'm not so sure. If he's throwing (and, frankly, he is) he's breaking a rule to gain an advantage. To my way of thinking that must detract from his performance.
Does anyone know where we can see the ICC report on all this when they declared nearly everyone chucks by the way?
Pappus' plane - cricket stats: What is a chuck?The ICC's current tolerance of 15 degree elbow straightening (or 'extension'? not really sure of the difference) was based on a study done by Porter, Elliott, and Hurrion during the 2004 Champions Trophy. Unfortunately, the full details of the study haven't been released to the general public.
Unless you can find something to back that up. I find that to be baiting Australians. No data has been released, the only quotes I've read say McGrath, along with Pollock and every other bowler in history had some arm flexion, up to 12°. Allowing up to 15° makes nearly every action, including perhaps 75% of properly illegal actions, permissable. To keep saying "McGrath chucks" is just baiting.When McGrath was found to be chucking, his 12 degrees did not include hyperextension..
Because maybe the people on the original ICC committee didn't understand the biomechanics of bowling/throwing. Perhaps the test does not determine between the two. Ethically speaking, it's because the intent of the law, and the difference with cricket, is the attempt to bowl with a straight arm. The law has become too loose, and allowed a technique not within the spirit of the game. I'd equate it more with aluminium bats, underarm bowling, deliberate wides and ball tampering.But why exactly is it bad to be allowing this? The definition has always been that if you straighten your arm from bent position or you bend your arm from a straight position, you are chucking. They then did all these tests and figured out everyone is doing one or the other and set a limit of 15 degrees as the maximum allowable flex, either way. Why exactly is the type of action described there suddenly termed as unfair and illegal?
Fair dinkum. Firstly you haven't seen Ajmal, next you don't know the rule.You do understand that this word "chucking/throwing" has a completely arbitrary definition for cricket. No one ever had to prove anything. They could just as well tell us that we do not count the elbow angle and we simply take the shoulder angle for chucking, and that would be that. I am not sure of any laws that specifically mention the elbow angles.
Law 24 (No ball) - Laws - Laws of Cricket - Laws & Spirit - Lord's3. Definition of fair delivery - the arm
A ball is fairly delivered in respect of the arm if, once the bowler’s arm has reached the level of the shoulder in the delivery swing, the elbow joint is not straightened partially or completely from that point until the ball has left the hand. This definition shall not debar a bowler from flexing or rotating the wrist in the delivery swing.
It was spambot who brought up McGrath and fast bowlers.. And no one is applying different goalposts for McGrath and Murali/Ajmal here, except for spambot a couple of others arguing that very point. They are the ones who, you know, think McGrath has hyperextension and that he never flexed his elbow while bowling, to any degree. Obviously, he is not a chucker and MUrali/Ajmal is.. That is why people here have brought up facts that showed that McGrath was just as much a "Chucker" as Murali/Ajmal, if that is how they define chucking.If you can point out where in this conversation I've said fast bowlers should be able to bend their arm more than the allowable amount I'll be happy to run through CW nude. Unless I'm mistaken, the argument here is against bowlers who consciously bend their arm inwards and then straighten it again, not hyperextension. So I'm assuming you're talking about the former. While we're at it, can someone tell me why we're apparently referring to the current limits for blokes like Ajmal and Murali, but the old limits for McGrath and anyone else who wasn't actually suspected of throwing when we talk about 99% of bowlers throwing? If we're going to go back to saying someone with an action like McGrath 'throws' then we're obviously back at the old limits. Which means Murali's over again, and so is Ajmal. (I'm not one who thinks Murali throws either by the way, since he was tested a number of times and cleared I have no problems with him).
Generally speaking, it's far easier to bend your arm bowling off-spin than it is bowling quick. It's almost impossible bowling leggies. (and by 'bend' I mean your arm moving in towards the shoulder, not out due to hyperextension).
Does anyone know where we can see the ICC report on all this when they declared nearly everyone chucks by the way? Personally I don't believe the original rules were ever supposed to implicate someone with an action like McGrath, Pollock, Gillespie, Malinga. Donald, Lillee, Khan, etc etc. It's interesting that the ICC chose to throw everyone in the pot.
The very point here is that those limits and rules were arbitrary and unfair in the first place.If you gain an advantage from it then it's unethical. If you can't deliver the ball within the limits allowed then you shouldn't be playing. Given the amount of people that have to be tested I'd suggest most bowlers can bowl within the limits, so those who can't shouldn't receive any leeway.
I have not seen Ajmal's teesra. I have seen him bowl before you know.. And fair dinkum, the law refers to allowable flex of 15 degrees, either straightening or bending. I am pretty sure of that, even though it is not mentioned in the site.. You just can't hurl a cricket ball down 22 yards without bending a straight elbow or straightening a bent elbow.. I thought that was basic. Oh well.Pappus' plane - cricket stats: What is a chuck?
I personally wish we could get past McGrath;
Unless you can find something to back that up. I find that to be baiting Australians. No data has been released, the only quotes I've read say McGrath, along with Pollock and every other bowler in history had some arm flexion, up to 12°. Allowing up to 15° makes nearly every action, including perhaps 75% of properly illegal actions, permissable. To keep saying "McGrath chucks" is just baiting.
Proof that Muttiah Muralitharan does not chuck - YouTube
I can't get my head around Murali. On one hand he can bowl the doosra with an arm brace on, on the other hand he is registered with 14° flex and brings it down to 10° with practice. But I think his freakish shoulder means that maybe he could be the only one to be able to bowl it with no elbow flex - but only under controlled conditions, with the brace on. The flex with it off could be involuntry.
Because maybe the people on the original ICC committee didn't understand the biomechanics of bowling/throwing. Perhaps the test does not determine between the two. Ethically speaking, it's because the intent of the law, and the difference with cricket, is the attempt to bowl with a straight arm. The law has become too loose, and allowed a technique not within the spirit of the game. I'd equate it more with aluminium bats, underarm bowling, deliberate wides and ball tampering.
Fair dinkum. Firstly you haven't seen Ajmal, next you don't know the rule.
Law 24 (No ball) - Laws - Laws of Cricket - Laws & Spirit - Lord's
Haha what? Plenty of people raise a stink over sledging.I have not seen Ajmal's teesra. I have seen him bowl before you know.. And fair dinkum, the law refers to allowable flex of 15 degrees, either straightening or bending. I am pretty sure of that, even though it is not mentioned in the site.. You just can't hurl a cricket ball down 22 yards without bending a straight elbow or straightening a bent elbow.. I thought that was basic. Oh well.
I am pretty sure sledging does not go with the spirit of the game either. Yet no one raises a stink on that.
Haha I definitely do. I'm in the minority on the issue (as with a few other things ) but yea, people definitely raise sledging.Haha what? Plenty of people raise a stink over sledging.
Whether someone throws under the rules, whatever they are, is a pretty central issue to the game.
yes we have not checked every one.So you're saying we haven't checked everyone!?
This 99.9% of bowlers chuck thing must be a bit of a fallacy then.