Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
OK, let's try that on a match-by-match basis rather than blurring the picture with overall figures. I actually agree with you that the only stuff that really matters is from the 2007 summer onwards (ie, his first 6 games aren't relevant). So...Yeh, you're right, an economy rate of 4.94 in the modern game is awful isn't it, 4.85 in 2008 as a whole as well, awful. Question, do you actually check anything before you post it? Or do you just filter through your encyclopedic cricketing knowledge and hope that you stumble upon something that scarcely resembles the truth? Only bowled well in NZ?
West Indies in England: 3 Matches, 5 wickets at an average of 28 with a strike rate of 33, and an economy of 5.00
England in Sri Lanka: 5 Matches, 11 wickets at an average of 19 with a strike ratte of 24 and an economy of 4.64
England in New Zealand: 5 Matches, 8 wickets at an average of 25 with a strike rate of 25 and an economy of 5.42
New Zealand in England: 5 Matches, 7 wickets at an average of 21 with a strike rate of 35 and an economy of 3.58
South Africa in England: 5 Matches, 8 wickets at an average of 18 with a strike rate of 24 and an economy of 4.37
The only series' where he's averaged over 30 with the ball are his first series against Pakistan where he was thrown in way too early, then the 2 series against India at home and away, and away he finished with far better figures than Andrew Flintoff, and he bowled very well. Ishant Sharma's figures were only slightly better than Broads, and they're his home conditions.
I'm sure none of those stats will be valid though, as it's not numbers that make a player, it's watching the games and using your superior cricketing knowledge that wins arguments............
9-20-3 - very good
10-49-2 - pretty poor but not diabolical
9-71-0 - awful
8-27-0 - good
9-54-1 - very poor
9-34-1 - good
10-51-4 - not especially outstanding, but not dreadful either
10-84-1 - absolutely woeful
9.4-46-2 - poor
10-44-0 - OK-ish
10-54-2 - poor
8.3-42-2 - poor
8-26-2 - good
10-54-2 - poor
9.1-36-3 - good
9-26-3 - very good
3-32-0 - very poor
10-32-3 - very good
10-75-2 - extremely poor
6-41-0 - extremely poor
Then there was the NZ home series where he was consistently good to excellent.
10-61-1 - very poor
10-23-5 - outstanding
6-28-0 - poor but not dreadful
6.1-33-1 - poor
1-0-1 - 1 over can never be here nor there
10-74-0 - extremely poor
10-55-4 - decent effort
9-36-1 - good
6-49-1 - extremely poor
8.4-54-1 - very poor
So, that's 4 very good, 5 good, 3 OK, 7 poor and 10 very poor. Plus a full series (4 games, as 1 was reduced to a 24-over match) of good. I can't get so thrilled about Broad's ODI bowling as some, I'm afraid.
And no, an economy-rate of close to 5-an-over is unacceptable, whatever the time. Even in the modern (1990s and 2000s) era of ODIs, good bowlers still don't go for anywhere near that much. 4.2-4.3-an-over is the sort of economy-rate good bowlers will be going for, and exceptional ones under 4. Whereas in older ODIs (the 1970s and 1980s) any good bowler had to have a rate a fair way under 4.
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