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Cricket stuff that doesn't deserve its own thread

vcs

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Thirimanne is actually lucky to be averaging 22 or whatever it is. Think he averages 170 against Bangladesh.
 

harsh.ag

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Only attacking batsmen have runs through the slips. It's kind of a feature rather than just luck.
 

Jarquis

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
I was thinking about something similar myself the other day - whether there'd be something to evaluating how bowlers take their wickets (particularly in LO cricket). Is it more valuable to have a bowler who gets people out bowled/bw/caught behind vs bowlers who take all their wickets caught on the fence. Is their more or less variance between each type?

What makes Plunkett so much more successful than a number of other blokes who run in and bang it in half way down?
 

Bijed

International Regular
Yeah most very attacking batsmen are like that, at least in Tests. Though I guess my overall point was that while there's quite a few batsmen who ride their luck long-term, are there too many examples of the latter where a batsman is genuinely unlucky for a fair period of time?
My feeling is this doesn't happen with batsmen for particularly long periods of time as, even though a string of low scores might be more down to bad luck than bad play, it still leads to them getting dropped. Plus getting unlucky a lot will mess with a lot of batsmen's confidence and result in them playing worse to exacerbate matters.


As for bowlers, I'm generally of the opinion that if they appear to be getting lucky for an extended period of time, they're probably just doing something right in a subtle way which is hard to spot as an observer
 

morgieb

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My feeling is this doesn't happen with batsmen for particularly long periods of time as, even though a string of low scores might be more down to bad luck than bad play, it still leads to them getting dropped. Plus getting unlucky a lot will mess with a lot of batsmen's confidence and result in them playing worse to exacerbate matters.


As for bowlers, I'm generally of the opinion that if they appear to be getting lucky for an extended period of time, they're probably just doing something right in a subtle way which is hard to spot as an observer
Yeah true re: the former, no-one is going to get 30 Tests of failures regardless of how unlucky they were. I'd be interested to see examples of cricketers who failures at Test level had more to do with bad luck than bad play, though I'm aware this would be hard to find.

And a fair point re: the bowlers. Like I think the Plunkett example is probably down to his length being just about awkward enough (it also helps that he was quicker a couple of years back)
 

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