Neil Pickup
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The two stand out sides over long periods of the last twenty five years have been the West Indians and the Australians.
The West Indian side was based around a battery of scarily fast bowlers (Croft, Garner, Patterson, Marshall, Holding, Ambrose, Walsh...) who frequently destroyed the opponents, and were backed up by a good - but not as good - batting line up.
The Australians have been the opposite, with a batting line up sweeping all infront of them but with a slightly weaker bowling line up, and have relied on themselves to get 500 every time out.
Yet when one part of the side fails, things start to go wrong. Recent tests have shown that when the Aussie bowling doesn't click, the batting can't always drag them out of the hole. This case, I think, is less pronounced in a bowling based side - probably because of the fact that batsmen get one chance, bowlers get plenty.
To cut the waffle short - what would you rather have?
A brilliant top six OR A brilliant bowling attack?
Bowling for me!
The West Indian side was based around a battery of scarily fast bowlers (Croft, Garner, Patterson, Marshall, Holding, Ambrose, Walsh...) who frequently destroyed the opponents, and were backed up by a good - but not as good - batting line up.
The Australians have been the opposite, with a batting line up sweeping all infront of them but with a slightly weaker bowling line up, and have relied on themselves to get 500 every time out.
Yet when one part of the side fails, things start to go wrong. Recent tests have shown that when the Aussie bowling doesn't click, the batting can't always drag them out of the hole. This case, I think, is less pronounced in a bowling based side - probably because of the fact that batsmen get one chance, bowlers get plenty.
To cut the waffle short - what would you rather have?
A brilliant top six OR A brilliant bowling attack?
Bowling for me!