I had him and one more gentleman in my mind as batters are going really fast. Picked Bland for his ability to bat fast and stunning fielding which would be a huge plus in ODIs.Bland twas going to be my next pick. Oh well.
yup, mine tooBland twas going to be my next pick. Oh well.
There were few batsmen more attractive to watch than John Tyldesley. He was exceptionally quick on his feet and so always appeared to have plenty of time in which to make his strokes. Essentially a batsman of enterprise, when he went forward to the ball it was nearly always to hit. He also possessed a very strong defence and had at his command practically all the strokes in the game. His ability to adapt himself to circumstances was emphasised in a Test match at The Oval in 1905, when Armstrong, bowling well outside the leg-stump with an offbreak, reduced to impotence a number of batsmen, but not Tyldesley, who drew back and cut him. One of the best of outfieldsmen, he was very fast, picked the ball up cleanly, and had a very accurate return, in addition to being a very sure catch.
CricInfo
His deadly yorker -- "I can produce it at will" -- proved virtually unplayable and he finished the tour with 37 more wickets than Sobers, the next most successful West Indian bowler.
Wisden - Charlie Griffith
And then, there was Charlie Griffith: tall, muscular, massive and oozing power – the meanest of them all. A career of 94 wickets from 28 Tests at 28.54 is impressive enough, but it does not tell the complete story. It does not tell the way how Griffith, in unison with fellow Barbadian Hall, had intimidated batsmen all over the world with pace. Neither does it tell how lethal Griffith’s toe-crushing yorkers were, or how ruthless his bouncers were.
Charlie Griffith: Dreaded fast bowler from the island that produced some of finest pacemen in cricket history - Latest Cricket News, Articles & Videos at CricketCountry.com
My first recollection of the yorker being used not just as an occasional variation but as a mainstream delivery was by the fearsome West Indies fast bowler Charlie Griffith, while Ted Dexter, at the very outset, was the first to realise its value in one-day cricket. Then, spectacularly, came Joel Garner, a giant who, towards the end of an innings, was simply unhittable - Mike Selvey
Yorker back to keep batsmen on the hop - Cricket - Sport - theage.com.au
Same. Either bowler would do the job, but tended slightly toward Griffith.Was between McDonald and Griffith for me.