Obviously seeing good cricket.
I don't see how that is relevant to what we were discussing.
I was making the point that the reason there are so few spinners out there at the highest level who give the ball a massive tweak is because it's bloody hard, just as hard as fast bowling.
The perception of spin being 'easier' than fast bowling, and thus less deserving of helpful pitches, is completely false. Only a small handful of people who posses the innate ability to spin the ball that much, just like how only a small handful of people possess the ability to bowl 140+. To suggest that spin is easier is to suggest that there would be a large number of high-quality spinners going around if the pitches favoured them more. I believe that is completely false. Even if every pitch overnight became a minefield, there would only still be a handful of exceptional bowlers capable of what Ashwin and the like are. It's like if every pitch suddenly favoured quick bowling, there would still be only a small % of individuals capable of bowling past 140.
I don't see what Clarke's 6/9 has to do with this.
I think you have completely misunderstood what actually happens when pitches are excessively helpful for bowlers, which is the root cause of all the later misconceptions here. It's not about the top-line bowlers--the Kumbles and Ashwins etc etc. They can take bags of wickets on pitches with much less assistance--Ashwin has taken plenty of wickets on pitches less helpful than Nagpur, and Anderson doesn't need a greentop to be deadly; that's what makes them top-line bowlers. The problem with excessively bowler-friendly pitches is that they give so much assistance to
mediocre bowlers, and because of the discrete "one ball can dismiss a batsman" nature of cricket, what happens on such pitches is that it actually significantly
narrows the gap between the really good bowlers and the mediocre bowlers like Clarke, which is why he can rock up and pick up 6/9 simply by bowling fast, loopy darts and allowing the pitch to turn them into unplayable nightmare balls.
This is not a phenomenon unique to pitches with too much turn/uneven bounce. A few years ago we had a serious problem in Australian FC cricket where the average Shield pitch was a bona fide greentop. By your logic, this should have made the really top bowlers--Johnson, Starc, Pattinson--way, way more effective comparatively because they were "better" and hence better placed to exploit the conditions. What instead happened is that we got an entire legion of frankly merely okay medium pacers like Butterworth and Copeland turning out truly absurd figures, consistently averaging around or below 20 despite doing nothing more than strolling up at 125kmh and putting it vaguely on the spot with an upright seam.
So no, if every pitch turned into a minefield overnight, that would not help out genuinely world-class bowlers like Ashwin because they would suddenly be in serious competition with average bowlers for a limited number of wickets, compared to a pitch that merely gives them assistance. Ditto if every pitch became a greentop overnight. Overly bowler-friendly pitchers do not help out good bowlers. They help out mediocre ones, and
that is what makes them bad cricket pitches, because they decouple the evolution and result of the actual cricket on display from the
quality of the cricket on display, and long-term they lead to **** cricket and **** cricketers. Same obviously goes for overly batsman-friendly pitches.