• Welcome to the Cricket Web forums, one of the biggest forums in the world dedicated to cricket.

    You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join the Cricket Web community today!

    If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

So I was watching a bit of test cricket over the weekend…

Jono

Virat Kohli (c)
… and suspicions that I (and some others) made clear just after the Champions Trophy are starting to become increasingly obvious. These suspicions are that people singling out sub-continental batsman as the only ones that struggle against movement (whether seam or swing) and extra bounce in modern day cricket were pretty much wrong.

Following the Champions Trophy there were all sorts of articles and comments by so called experts (with Sanjay Manjrekar leading the way) as well as posts by CW members claiming that the results of the CT, and the fact that no Asian team made it to the semis, was further proof that they still couldn’t handle pitches which had bounce and/or seam. These cries came from people from various corners, including fans of India, SL and Pakistan themselves.

Yet the enthralling test cricket I’ve just watched over the weekend (I’m mainly talking of NZ vs. SL and SA vs. Ind, not necessarily the Ashes) points to something completely different, something that I and others argued to counter this point. I distinctly remember SJS having a real crack at the Asian teams after the CT in an article on CW, and Sanz and I heavily disagreed with his points. I believe (and its pretty clear tbh) that its not just Asian batsmen which are struggling with bowler friendly wickets more-so then before, it’s the majority of batsmen. Yes batsman have obviously always struggled when the pitch favours the fast bowlers, but players’ techniques are being further exposed nowadays for reasons we’ve already gone into many many times (flat tracks, decline in bowler quality etc.)

Sri Lanka and India are much maligned cricket teams often because of their poor test records away from home. Yet in the past few days Sri Lanka have just well and truly thrashed New Zealand on their home soil by over 200 runs to level the 2 test series 1-1, and perhaps even more shocking due to what took place during the ODI series, India have just embarrassed South Africa on their home soil by 123 runs.

The amazing thing about these wins is that the NZ and SA have been completely demolished by impressive fast bowling (yeah Murali and Kumble played parts in the wins, but Malinga for SL and Sreesanth and Zaheer for India were the main instigators). South Africa was embarrassingly dismissed in the 1st innings for only 84 by India on a track which was greatly helping the fast bowlers, and NZ themselves only made 130 on wickets they should be very used to by now. On top of that, its not like the fast bowlers were all-time greats; Malinga and Sreesanth are hardly your McGrath, Flintoff or Pollock (not yet anyway hey SilentStriker ;)), hell they’re not even as good or as experienced as Ntini, Nel, Akhtar and other very good fast bowlers around ATM. Yet they ran through the NZ and SA batting sides, with genuine pace and swing on helpful pitches for fast bowling.

These aren’t just fluke wins either, because you can only go back a few months earlier to see Sri Lanka draw a 3 test series with England 1-1 only one season after Australia lost the Ashes to them. India too only a few months ago defeated the WI away from home 1-0, with the only test victory happening on the most juicy bowler friendly track of the 4 test series.

I’m not going to argue that these sub-continental batsman are any good at playing the moving ball all of a sudden (hell after Sri Lanka’s poor batting performance in the 1st innings of the 1st test, I criticised them heavily), what I’m arguing is that they aren’t too much worse (if at all worse) at playing it then most batsman in world cricket. Its not an Asian problem like some like to conveniently point out (whether it be self-loathing sub-continent fans who like to stick the boots into their team at all times, or other fans who conveniently use the “flat track bully” comment to denigrate any Asian batsman’s accomplishments).

The first evidence to me was the way South Africa handled Stuart Clark and the other Australian fast bowlers on their own turf which aided seam movement. They were simply woeful. They weren’t much better in the ODI vs. Pakistan at Mohali in the Champions Trophy (which they happened to win due to Pakistan being even worse and having to bat in even tougher conditions). Umar Gul and Iftikhar made them look like fools (they were lucky they didn’t face Asif and Akhtar).

This isn’t an overreaction from an excited Indian fan after a rare overseas victory either, because even if the results didn’t occur (say NZ and SA miraculously chased down those huge targets they were set as the pitches flattened out) the evidence was already there when NZ and SA (a) struggled on their own home grounds against teams not known for their fast bowling, and then (b) couldn’t bowl out their Asian counterparts despite having vastly superior pace attacks who are used to these conditions. Nor is it a case of an Asian vs. non-Asian debate (Lord knows we’ve had too much of that lately), or a hyperbolic “international cricket is in its worst case ever, all batsman suck and are overrated etc.” (Had too much of that as well). We’ve gone over the batting friendly era arguments over and over. My major contention is that the misconception of if you throw any Asian batsmen (other than a Dravid or Inzy) on a track with bounce of seam movement, they suddenly suck. Well they may often suck, but they’re not alone.

The best examples of this fallacy I can think of, other than the massive overreaction after the CT (honestly has Sanjay Manjrekar ever not taken an opportunity to take a swipe at Asian teams) were the SA commentators during the India vs. SA test. They’ve been accused of bias before, particularly by many Australian fans during the last tour there, but some of them were pretty stupid much of the time during this test. They made it seem like Laxman couldn’t hold a bat the right way, yet he scored vital runs and outplayed Kallis, Gibbs and Smith who are apparently SA’s best batsman. Whenever an Indian batsman fails away from home on a juicy pitch it’s their technique that’s at fault and they’re flat track bullies who can’t handle pace, however if a South African batsman fails they’re just “out of form.” Not buying that at all, Gibbs and Smith in particular simply have obvious technical flaws which have been exposed countless times, and will be again if they ever have to bat on a pitch like at Johannesburg against good fast bowling. Obviously you have your Wasim Jaffer, Upul Tharanga, Shoaib Malik and Imran Farhat etc. who often get shown up when there is either extra bounce or movement, and that may be due to domestic cricket not having enough pitches with these characteristics (though India have already taken steps to change this, and Pakistan clearly have it as on of their priorities), but then what does it say about SA and NZ cricket when they produce these wiickets for domestic cricket, and their batsmen still struggle? For every Jaffer there is an Amla, for ever Tharanga there is a Jamie How etc.

Just some thoughts that have been circling around in my head the last couple of days which particularly came to the fore over the weekend’s occurrences. Here's hoping there could be some good discussion surrounding it.
 
Last edited:

Matt79

Global Moderator
Epic post. Didn't see either of the specific batting performances you're talking about, but I've thought over the last two years the pendulum has begun to swing away from the 'all bowlers are crap' and 'all pitches are roads' theory, in reality if not perception.

To single out Asian players as struggling against the moving ball IS unfair, based on the evidence of all teams performances really.
 

Dravid

International Captain
I read 2 paragraphs, then scrolled down to see how big it was, and damn, how long did it take you son?

Will finish reading the rest right now
 

Jono

Virat Kohli (c)
Apologies for the length. Pretty much just rambled some thoughts down and tried to make it as coherent as possible.
 

The Sean

Cricketer Of The Year
Jono said:
Apologies for the length. Pretty much just rambled some thoughts down and tried to make it as coherent as possible.
Possibly the least justified apology ever. That post was brilliant mate. :)
 

Slow Love™

International Captain
Jono said:
Obviously you have your Wasim Jaffer, Upul Tharanga, Shoaib Malik and Imran Farhat etc. who often get shown up when there is either extra bounce or movement, and that may be due to domestic cricket not having enough pitches with these characteristics (though India have already taken steps to change this, and Pakistan clearly have it as on of their priorities), but then what does it say about SA and NZ cricket when they produce these wiickets for domestic cricket, and their batsmen still struggle? For every Jaffer there is an Amla, for ever Tharanga there is a Jamie How etc.
I was going to give a glib answer about out-of-date assumptions as to pitches offered in India and elsewhere (in the sense that many countries are now producing roads and dead flat pitches while India has clearly shown a propensity to produce more varied pitches in recent times), but then I realised that this particular point you made exposes a hole in that argument big enough to drive a truck through. I guess NZ and SAF have been fairly weak in test cricket recently anyway (and Murali certainly played his part in NZ's recent demise), not sure that's really the answer though. And South Africa's recent record in ODIs has obviously been very good, and the white ball tends to move around more, if anything.

Interesting thoughts, anyhow - I'm not entirely sure how much the result of the recent India/SAF test proves, as I think a big factor in the result was SAF's underestimating and lack of respect for their opponent (I wonder what such a difference between ODIs and tests means in that regard though). But you are probably right that batsmen around the world (certainly anywhere else as much as on the subcontinent, who probably have more specific issues with high bouncing wickets) are struggling a great deal against the moving ball, including players with extremely high averages - which leads inevitably to criticisms of flat track bullies and the like; and not many contemporary batsmen are immune to such attacks.
 
Last edited:

honestbharani

Whatever it takes!!!
excellent post, Jono. Gotta agree with all that you have said. In reality, the RSA and NZ batsmen have a LOT of problems because not only are they suspect (as has been shown in the matches over the weekend) against quality swing and seam bowling on a tough wicket, they are still basically amongst the worst against decent to good international class spin. At least the Sri Lankan and Indian players have that taken care of to an extent.


But then again, given the sort of spinners that are coming through in India and Sri Lanka, the day may not be far off when these guys are gonna get bowled out by a South African, Australian or New Zealand or even England spinner. The balance has to be stuck by all test playing nations to have wickets encouraging (NOT helping, big difference there) swing, seam, pace and also spin bowling. That is one of the reasons Aussies have been so good in the past decade and a half. Brisbane swings and seams, Perth is quick and bouncy, Adelaide is flat, Melbourne is Brisbane + Adelaide at times and Sydney and, at times, HObart turn and are sometimes slow. That's why the Aussie players seem more rounded when they come in than most other international players.
 

Nate

You'll Never Walk Alone
My only two things to pick at are that Murali has been at his dominant best against the Kiwis, and that New Zealand`s excuse can partly lie with playing next to no Test Cricket. :)

Apart from those two things, your post was absolute crap. ;)
 

nightprowler10

Global Moderator
Great post. Agreed with every single word. I wonder if this post/thread will make/break a record of recieving the most CW awards.
 

Fusion

Global Moderator
Excellent post. I humbly suggest to the CW mods that this be posted as an article on the front page. It can be a counter view to the one that SJS posted a while ago.

Jono, you're a legend!
 

mohammad16

U19 Captain
Dude surely sub continent batsmen are underrated a bit in thier ability to play on good bowling wickets

but i think that witohut a doubt the S african and australians are better

u can jus tell by the footwork, almost all batsmen in the australian team have good footwork while in india u can only say that tendulkar and dravid have it

in pakistan, maybe only younis khan

if australians and s africans have struggled on good bowling wickets, its simply because the balls they got were too good, or they took it too easy againts the opposition

another thing that comes into play is the increase of through the line shots

this increase has taken place all over the world and not just in the sub continent

u see alot of players everywhere playing alot of shots jsut through the line because even in s africa and australia, most pitches these days feature predictable and stable bounce

anyways i have no doubt that subcontinent batsmen < the rest of the world when it comes to playing in good bowling conditions

the fact that both have struggled doenst mean that they both are even, it happens
 

silentstriker

The Wheel is Forever
I kind of agree with that. I think everyone would agree that Australia are the best at playing in any type of condition. I do think that everyone else does better than Subcontinent batsmen on fast and bouncy pitches, but perhaps the difference isn't as telling as I had thought.

With that said, India out bowled SA in the first innings. If they both had to face the same type of bowling, who would have scored more runs? When one side outbowles another, its very hard to compare the batting with each other.
 

Dick Rockett

International Vice-Captain
I've been saying for a long time now (although admittedly not on these boards), that the modern tendency towards big scores and batting records is mainly due to the dearth of quality bowlers in world cricket, rather than some sort of batting rennaissance.

Even the mighty Australians, who are by far the best team in the world right now, cannot handle swing and/or seam movement - see the 2005 Ashes, or practically every time they've faced Shane Bond.

So yeah, basically I agree with Jono there, although not with his assessment of NZ pitches, which I believe are based on an outdated stereotype. I certainly don't believe that greentops are anything for us to be ashamed of, but I was there at the Basin during the weekend, and that pitch was a road. It was a combo of quality bowling, and inept batting that ensured the result we got.
 

Top