• 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.

Sajid Mahmood bowls at 92mph ?!

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
Allott wasn't close to being good enough at test level: his average of >40 isn't lying.
tbf though his FC record was probably superior to Mahmood's.
Allott might've been poor at Test level but sheeysh hardly a horror-story. No worse (quite a bit better maybe indeed?) surely than the likes of McCague, Giddins, Schofield et al?
Not sure when you had in mind for your stated criteria. Must be some point prior to WW2 surely?
Probably sometime in the 1920s or 1930s. Certainly post-Rony Stanyforth.

But then again - you look at the fact Tony Lewis was picked to captain England as late as 1972/73.
 

wpdavid

Hall of Fame Member
Allott might've been poor at Test level but sheeysh hardly a horror-story. No worse (quite a bit better maybe indeed?) surely than the likes of McCague, Giddins, Schofield et al?
Being generous, we'd call him unpenetrative. In the extreme. Obviously bowled straighter than Mahmood, but rarely looked like taking wickets. As I said, an average of 41 or whatever it was doesn't lie.

Probably sometime in the 1920s or 1930s. Certainly post-Rony Stanyforth.

But then again - you look at the fact Tony Lewis was picked to captain England as late as 1972/73.
They probably viewed that in the same was as picking Brearley as a specialist skipper a few years later.
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
Being generous, we'd call him unpenetrative. In the extreme. Obviously bowled straighter than Mahmood, but rarely looked like taking wickets. As I said, an average of 41 or whatever it was doesn't lie.
Yeah, but I mean, Mahmood doesn't look like taking wickets and he's hopelessly wayward.

A bowler who can keep the scoring-rate down (seem to remember noticing Allott keeping West Indies quiet while others went around the park more than once TBH) is at least of some amount of use, even though obviously any good Test bowler needs to take wickets.
 

Lillian Thomson

Hall of Fame Member
Paul Allott was a perfectly acceptable choice at the times when he was chosen. Pigott was a unique selection and the selectors can't be blamed for the fact that he was the only English bowler left in New Zealand who could walk without a stick.
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
IIRR, he was about the only option. He wasn't a shocking selection, but he was one of the worst and most undeserving cricketers ever to play for England since MCC passed the motto of always picking the best team available, 1910 or whenever it was.
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
I wasn't trying to call Pigott a shocking selection in the first post, just a shockingly poor player by international standards.
 

Top