Richard said:
There are not countless others - and what you refer to in the final example is change of pace, not simply "pace", and that can indeed take wickets with good bowling (Andy Roberts, for example, with his two-paced Bouncers), but it doesn't happen too often.
Obviously I was referring to pace generally as a factor which can take wickets, be it a change of pace or being rushed into a shot or beaten outright by too much pace.
Richard said:
Straight Yorkers rarely cause that many problems to top-class batsmen, it needs to be a swinging Yorker, then obviously it becomes deadly.
Obviously a swinging yorker is harder to keep out, but straight yorkers still get wickets as an impact ball.
Richard said:
Balls which go straight on when you'd expect them to move tend to imply that the ball has been moving, which is what I've said all along - no movement, no wicket-taking deliveries.
How many times have you said that what leads up to a delivery is irrelevant? If that was true, a straight ball could not be a wicket taker by your criteria.
Richard said:
Accurate bowling and slow scoring-rate in the limitless-over game are utterly irrelevant, as I've said countless times, slow runs are better than no runs, and no runs is what you'll get if you try to score against accurate bowling. Good batsmen, contrary to popular belief, are actually generally quite good at realising that.
The evidence of what actually happens in cricket (as opposed to what you think SHOULD happen) goes against you here. Slow scoring in a test match is obviously not as vitally significant as it would be in an ODI, but the fact is that if you play out four maidens in a row you WILL be looking to score, particularly if the bowling is good and is tying you down. Tight bowling builds pressure, it's as simple as that. A lot of it is mindset as well... and this is how McGrath gets many of his wickets. By consistently bowling in the corridor and keeping the batsman in two minds about what the ball might do, he keeps the batsman spending all his time thinking about McGrath and how to not get out to him, particularly with his reputation for getting players out wafting outside off-stump. When the batsman spends all his time thinking about the bowler and how to not get out rather than how to advance his own innings, it allows pressure to build to the point where the batsman feels he
needs to score, has a flash at something and gets himself out. Once again it is good bowling and not poor batting, it's just that the good bowling comes in the form of a whole spell rather than one impact ball which swings 4 metres and knocks out two stumps, which appears to be the only way you think a bowler can deserve his wicket.
Richard said:
And short balls that get gloved to short-leg or Hooked to square-leg are exceptionally rare. Short-leg is by-and-large a waste of a fielding position, and short-balls are more a defensive weapon than an attacking one. Of course, good players of the short ball are very good at waiting for the right ball and then hitting a stroke along the ground. Short bowling on an uneven pitch can be effective, but not on a true one.
You are quite simply wrong here. Short balls getting gloved to short-leg or in the air to the keeper or slips or bowler are not particularly rare at all, and if a bowler is bowling good short stuff there is a fair chance of it happening. Short leg is certainly not a waste of a fielding position, as it keeps the batsman aware of the location of the field, and makes them wary when playing the short ball. As you saw with Lee in the first test, a significant part of getting wickets with the short ball is getting a batsman in two midns about what to do. Putting men out for the hook and a short leg for the gloved ball assists in this, as batsmen will be more wary about allowing the ball to hit their gloves or bat, and be less willing to play the hook shot. The hilarious thing about this of course, if that if Geraint Jones hadn't pulled out of that hook shot late on day 1 at Lords, and had hooked it down the throat of the fielder in the deep, you would be discounting Lee's wicket as one obtained from a poor shot. Instead, he changed his mind and didn't hook, the ball followed him down the slope and struck him and he got out, and of course that's a wicket gained through the pitch.