Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
A great innings is one which repels great bowling. Outstanding bowling simply cannot be got on top of, as such - unless you're Bradman, or a Viv Richards playing a ten-times-or-so-in-a-lifetime innings, or someone else playing a once-in-several-lifetimes innings (eg Nathan Astle at Christchurch 2001/02).Bradman would disagree. Your comment is suggestive there's no such thing as a great innings, that when a player makes a large score it is always the fault of the bowling, or the bowling is substandard.
That just isn't so, with respect.
If the bowler is good enough (and the best usually are) then he always controls the game. Every now and then, truly outstanding batting can play through that. But you cannot just hit outstanding bowling off itself - if the bowler keeps his head and his body shape, he'll get you 999 times out of 1000, maybe more, playing that way.
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