I was quoting from his cricinfo profile to emphasise the light he was seen in. And leg spin was certainly a dead art outside the subcontinent pre Warne, while now kids are growing up wanting to be leggies rather than fast bowlers.For the last time, Warne DID NOT revitalise leg spin, and leg spin was certainly NOT an extinct art. Put down Haigh and pick up Guha to get this. Or just take a random look at India and Pakistan in the 80s and 90s.
Which is not what was said earlier and so conveniently ignores a large part of the cricketing world, making Warne's revolutionary appeal a local phenomenon. Interesting that Warne's era preceded that of the off-spinners reign with Swann, Ajmal, Ashwin, Lyon and left-arm spinners such as Herath, Monty, Ojha. Kind of makes you wonder where all the kids are. I am tired of this glorification of Warne. Leg spin is a tough, tough art, and we get a good one very rarely. No revolution is happening there. And one would think that Australia's leg spin masters of the past would be enough to inspire anyone who was really looking for inspiration, oh, like, maybe Warne for instanceI was quoting from his cricinfo profile to emphasise the light he was seen in. And leg spin was certainly a dead art outside the subcontinent pre Warne, while now kids are growing up wanting to be leggies rather than fast bowlers.
I think you make a good point, however Warne would probably be more a catalyst for kids to become leg spinners now than the likes of O'Reilly or Grimmett etc. I just think they're more likely to see Warne on TV than happen to look up stats on the other greats as some of we who aren't kids would.Which is not what was said earlier and so conveniently ignores a large part of the cricketing world, making Warne's revolutionary appeal a local phenomenon. Interesting that Warne's era preceded that of the off-spinners reign with Swann, Ajmal, Ashwin, Lyon and left-arm spinners such as Herath, Monty, Ojha. Kind of makes you wonder where all the kids are. I am tired of this glorification of Warne. Leg spin is a tough, tough art, and we get a good one very rarely. No revolution is happening there. And one would think that Australia's leg spin masters of the past would be enough to inspire anyone who was really looking for inspiration, oh, like, maybe Warne for instance![]()
Funnily enough my original post was stating how Warne was over rated because of how glorified he is, ie I agree with youWhich is not what was said earlier and so conveniently ignores a large part of the cricketing world, making Warne's revolutionary appeal a local phenomenon. Interesting that Warne's era preceded that of the off-spinners reign with Swann, Ajmal, Ashwin, Lyon and left-arm spinners such as Herath, Monty, Ojha. Kind of makes you wonder where all the kids are. I am tired of this glorification of Warne. Leg spin is a tough, tough art, and we get a good one very rarely. No revolution is happening there. And one would think that Australia's leg spin masters of the past would be enough to inspire anyone who was really looking for inspiration, oh, like, maybe Warne for instance![]()
I'm very interested to hear why you think so.As far as 'real' leg-break google bowlers go I think that Mailey, Grimmett, Benaud, Gupte, and Warne are pretty much tied for first place, with Warne perhaps a nose in front because of his longevity. But I certainly don't think that he was any more skillful than his counterparts.
Yeah t's a load of ****, isn't it? Leg spin was never dead. It was flourishing in the subcontinent decades before Warne came along. It's honestly incredible how so many people buy into that nonsense.For the last time, Warne DID NOT revitalise leg spin, and leg spin was certainly NOT an extinct art. Put down Haigh and pick up Guha to get this. Or just take a random look at India and Pakistan in the 80s and 90s.
OK, here is some stuff on Benaud since his skill as a leggie is often overlooked..........I'm very interested to hear why you think so.
It is interesting that Perry commented on Benaud's accuracy ('pin-point accurate') because he doesn't seem to have that reputation. However, Benaud’s career Economy Rate of 2.11 clearly supports this observation. It is slightly better than Grimmett’s, and a deal better than Warne’s;He fell between the styles of two great leggies, Arthur Mailey and Clarrie Grimmett. Benaud was never going to be the proliferate 'billionaire' with the ball like Mailey, yet at times he was prepared to toss the ball up and tempt the batsman into having a heave-ho and he caused plenty of catches in the deep. Also like Mailey he could get bounce. Yet, on the whole, he was more like Grimmett, who used the top-spinner and wrong’un as surprises rather than stock deliveries, and who applied relentless pressure to batsman. Benaud worked on tying a batsman down and forcing error through adventurism or frustration. He could be pin-point accurate as the other great spinners, but was not afraid to vary his length to unsettle a batsman and keep him guessing. It was rare in Benaud’s career, particularly from the time of the 1956-57 tour of Pakistan and India (24 wickets at 17.66), and for the next seven years, for him to be smashed out of the attack. Not even the great Garry Sobers took control of him more than a couple of times in their many encounters.
‘Bradman’s Best Ashes Teams’
Here is a piece on the great Indian leggie that explains why he is a great Indian leggie. It's really very good;I'm very interested to hear why you think so.
Subhash Gupte
Subhash Gupte, the Indian leg-break bowler who has died aged 72, was considered by no less an authority than Sir Garry Sobers to be the finest wrist spinner he ever batted against.
This assessment is all the more striking when it is remembered that Sobers fought many a duel against Richie Benaud. Moreover, in his recent autobiography Sobers goes even further, judging Gupte to have been a better bowler than Shane Warne.
Gupte, however, played in only 36 Tests, and rarely enjoyed the luxury of belonging to a dominant batting side which left him plenty of runs to bowl against. He performed against formidable opponents on perfect batting wickets, under captains who sometimes failed to set sensible fields and with fielders who were often unreliable.
Even so, after only 18 Tests he had 10 times taken five or more wickets in an innings - a feat he achieved only twice more in the latter part of his career. It took him only 22 Tests to reach the mark of 100 Test wickets. Such was his early dominance that Mihir Bose, in his History of Indian Cricket, refers to the period 1953 to 1956 as "The Age of Gupte".
Hero-worship spawned imitation, and Bishan Bedi was only one of the great Indian spinners of the next generation to find inspiration in their predecessor's career. Gupte seemed a small and slight figure to bear the weight of so much renown.
Yet his frail, spidery physique lent itself to a classical high-armed action, the only oddity in which was a curious skip as he released the ball. He relished long spells, and never suffered from sore fingers, being very much a wrist rather than a finger spinner, with the ability to turn the ball on even the best batting wickets.
His bowling combined unvarying accuracy of line and length with every permutation of flight and spin. Shane Warne, Sobers points out, is far flatter through the air than Gupte; in addition Gupte mastered not only leg break and top-spin, but also two different types of googly, one bowled with a lower arm. As he would also bowl the occasional leg break with a lower arm, batsmen were none the wiser.
Subhashchandra Pandharinath Gupte, born in Bombay on December 11 1929, learned his cricket alongside thousands of other ordinary Indians in Shivaji Park.
He first created a stir playing for Bombay University in 1947-48, and the next season played for Bombay in the Ranji Trophy. But his first Test, against England at Calcutta in December 1951, was inauspicious; in a dull draw he took no wickets and was dropped.
It was therefore with some trepidation that the Indian selectors picked Gupte for the tour of the West Indies early in 1953. "The Three Ws" - Frank Worrell, Everton Weekes and Clyde Walcott - were then at the height of their powers.
Inevitably, they scored highly against the Indians. But they could not altogether master Gupte, who took 27 wickets in the Tests at a respectable 29.22 apiece. In all first class matches he claimed 50 wickets, more than twice as many as anyone else, and nearly half the 107 that fell to bowlers.
The Indian community in the West Indies welcomed the tourists with particular enthusiasm, and at the first match in San Fernando, Trinidad, Gupte met his future wife Carol, who had been taken to the game by her Indian father. She watched entranced as Gupte took six for 29.
In 1955-56, Gupte reached his peak, taking 34 wickets in a home series against New Zealand. Towards the end of 1956, however, he had a harder time against the Australians, hungry for success after their humiliation at Laker's hands in England. In particular, Neil Harvey put Gupte to the sword.
When they first played against each other, Harvey was unable to spot the googly; he simply guessed that he would get one first ball, and dispatched it to the boundary. Yet Gupte kept his head under the onslaught, and the eight wickets he took in the three-match series were purchased at the by no means prodigal expense of 32.87 apiece.
Over the two next years India played no Test cricket. When the West Indies visited India at the end of 1958, Gupte returned the remarkable analysis of nine for 102 in the first innings of the second Test at Kanpur; he would have taken all 10 if the last man had not been dropped by the wicket-keeper.
When India toured England in 1959 Gupte, with 95 victims, was the leading wicket-taker. But in a hot summer, which should have suited him, he disappointed in the Tests, his 17 wickets costing 34.64 each. Uncharacteristically, he rather lost heart, as chance after chance went down in the field.
After three Tests against Pakistan in 1960-61, Gupte was replaced in the Indian side by his younger brother Baloo. Yet he was back at the end of 1961, and against England at Kanpur showed that he had lost none of his skill as he took five for 90, including a spell of four for six in 18 balls.
Gupte was still only 32, and still seemed to have a long international career in front of him. But in the next Test at Delhi he got into trouble after a hotel receptionist complained of being harassed over the telephone by one of the Indian players. The call in question was traced to the room which he shared with Amritsar Kripal Singh.
Gupte, in fact, was wholly innocent. Riled, though, by the suggestion that he should have prevented Kripal Singh from bothering the receptionist, he reacted by giving a member of the Indian Board of Control the rough side of his tongue. He was informed that he would not be selected for the forthcoming tour of the West Indies. He never represented India again.
Altogether Gupte played in 115 first-class matches, taking 530 wickets at an average of 23.71. His best performance was in 1954-55, when he claimed all ten wickets for 78 for Bombay against Pakistan Services and Bahawalpur.
In Test matches he finished with 149 wickets at a cost of 29.55 each. As a batsman he rarely reached double figures, averaging 6.31 in Tests and 8.18 over his career.
He played for Rishton in the Lancashire League between 1954 and 1957; for Heywood in the Central Lancashire League in 1958; and for Lancaster in the Northern League in 1960 and 1961. Representing Rishton against Accrington in 1956, he claimed two hat-tricks in one innings.
Gupte was a jovial character, well liked in the game, though never afraid to speak his mind. After the end of his Test career he retired with his wife to her native Trinidad, where they brought up their two children. He died on May 31 at Port-of-Spain.
Subhash Gupte - Telegraph
Nice way of pigeon holing a dissenting opinion even before you start. Warne's aggregate is a reflection of his far greater opportunities. On averages O'Reilly and Grimmett are in front. Those 2 played their strongest opponent more regularly than Warne did too.Warne is the greatest leg spinner ever.Even if you wear the most biased of glasses,no one can argue against Warne being the best leg spinner the game has ever seen.
But who is the 2nd best?Qadir?Kumble?Anyone else?
Discuss.
Funnily, who was / were Australia's strongest opponet over his career?Nice way of pigeon holing a dissenting opinion even before you start. Warne's aggregate is a reflection of his far greater opportunities. On averages O'Reilly and Grimmett are in front. Those 2 played their strongest opponent more regularly than Warne did too.
Quite funny how this line of argument is always used against the likes of Barry Richards, Graeme Pollock et al when they're named in top 10's of all time. Saying that, Glenn McGrath was a better batsman than Brad Hodge. Anyone who disagrees, go look at the statisticsNice way of pigeon holing a dissenting opinion even before you start. Warne's aggregate is a reflection of his far greater opportunities. On averages O'Reilly and Grimmett are in front. Those 2 played their strongest opponent more regularly than Warne did too.