Himannv
Hall of Fame Member
I actually logged into cricinfo just to check lol.Turns out Malcom Marshall is alive after all. Knew it.
Alive in our hearts.
I actually logged into cricinfo just to check lol.Turns out Malcom Marshall is alive after all. Knew it.
It's because Tait is utterly useless when he bowls more than two overs in a row.I wouldn't say it's dying but the push with 20/20s could limit the amount of genuine pace bowlers who stick with test cricket. Some of the bowlers listed here like Tait have already shown that their not going to stick with tests or even one dayers in some cases, lets hope the youngsters don't want to emulate these players and live off 20/20 comps.
5 vs 4 days? (25% extra effort in that itself) Travel/different conditions taking a toll? Having to put in 100% every moment in test matches? Better standard of cricket = better efforts? Pressure?They're playing more international cricket. Darren Gough bowled about 44,000 balls in first-class cricket, Fred Trueman, who retired around the same age, about 99,000. And 'Fiery' was considerably less injury-prone than the Dazzler. Obviously players have to dive around in the field far more than they did in the Fifties, but it's not clear to me why a bowler is more likely to be injured playing Test cricket or ODIs than in the County Championship.
3 day cricket in the era of Trueman, Bedser, Statham etc.5 vs 4 days? (25% extra effort in that itself) Travel/different conditions taking a toll? Having to put in 100% every moment in test matches? Better standard of cricket = better efforts? Pressure?
But you can't compare a batsman's cricketing life with a bowler's. Fast bowling is a lot more physically demanding then batting. That is why you have bowlers leaving the circle earlier then batsmen. I.e. Sachin and Waqar...debuted in the same test...(if i am not wrong)...Waqar impressed and left...Sachin is still in and still impressing...Name 30 best batsmen of all-time, and there will be at least 4 of them playing currently - Sachin, Ponting, Dravid, Kallis...if not more...
Name 30 best fast bowlers of all-time, and there will be maximum one name there from the current crop - Dale Steyn.
Not that good fast bowlers are dying, but that if everything goes the way it is, that might be the case 10-15 years down the line.
Stop making yourself look stupid when you talk about FC cricket.5 vs 4 days? (25% extra effort in that itself) Travel/different conditions taking a toll? Having to put in 100% every moment in test matches? Better standard of cricket = better efforts? Pressure?
It's funny how wrong someone can be in one short sentence5 vs 4 days? (25% extra effort in that itself) Travel/different conditions taking a toll? Having to put in 100% every moment in test matches? Better standard of cricket = better efforts? Pressure?
A great way to summarize and put things into perspective. It is true that the psyche of the batsman has changed because of better protection equipment and laws on number of bouncers etc. No way would some of the current batsmen in the world feel comfortable and confident if it wasn't for helmets, modern gloves/pads and equipment. With the knowledge that a hit on the head wouldn't be lethal, it is easier to get in line with the ball than it is with knowing that the very next delivery you could be brain damaged/paralyzed/dead. Fast bowlers of the 80s put fear into the batsmen, fear causes the mind to clog up and make mistakes. But how can there be fear with the comfort of knowing that the bullet shall not kill but scratch.It's always been the case that batsmen will last longer in the game than fast bowlers. I think the 80s was an uncommonly dense period of great bowlers - but it was the aberration, not the time since. Batting against the quicks has got easier with helmets and body protection, and the limit on bouncers and hostile bowling that is allowed now - that's why we get tailenders sticking around more.
These factors, plus a trend towards 5 day pitches, mean that we need to cut today's crop a bit of slack in general when comparing them to their predecessors. I'd agree that of the current lot, Steyn is the only guy at the moment who looks on course to be an all time great, but there are plenty of good bowlers about. Johnson and Bollinger have shown enough to be counted as good. Johnson's promise has been blighted by inconsistency, and the jury remains out on just where he'll end up sitting. Asif and Aamer are very good bowlers. The English seems to have a pretty good stream of quicks to select from.
And its not like guys in recent times aren't having careers of decent length. Guys who have recently retired include real veterans like McGrath, Vaas, Pollock, and also guys who had good long careers (for fast bowlers) like Lee, Gillespie, Flintoff, Gough. Ntini has lasted a helluva long time. Even Akhtar and Bond, while obviously missing a lot of cricket, were on the scene for a long time. And some fast bowlers being injury prone and missing a lot of cricket isn't really a new development.
Massive storm in a teacup for mine. Yeah, they're playing more cricket. They're also being supported by better medical science, training, recovery etc than ever before. And more of the cricket is limited over stuff where they're bowling a set number of overs in a day, and rarely on consecutive days.
Bowlers are probably bowling faster in this era than in previous eras for 2 reasons:There are a lot of factors involved in making people believed that fast bowlers are less and far in between, it just isn't true, there are so many bowlers bowling above 90mph, and I think this is more than even in the 80's and 90's where you had maybe 10 bowlers touching that pace. Today there are bowlers in first class teams bowling those speeds for every country, apart from Bangla, NZ, India?? Pace is there and thriving , but the balance has been lost between bat and ball dramatically.
If Hilfenhaus was touching 94mph, the speed gun was broken.Kemar Roach
Fidel Edwards
Steyn
Morkel
Tait
Hilfenhaus was touching 94mph consistently recently against pak
Ryan Harris was touching 93-95mph against England recently
Akthar
Lee
Bond
Malinga
Wind assistedIf Hilfenhaus was touching 94mph, the speed gun was broken.
Bowlers are probably bowling faster in this era than in previous eras for 2 reasons:
1) the obsession with speed - With the advent of a reliable speed gun not to mention the contests across the world for finding the fastest bowler in the country and what not, lets face it, speed is king.When bowlers like Finn and Anderson were bowling at a touch above 80mph they were sent back for strength training and rigorous muscle exercises so that they could get their pace up closer to 90 mph. Same thing with Irfan Pathan. Lets face it, this would not have happened in previous eras.
2) Flatter pitches - Given the dearth in bowler friendly conditions, it is imperative to have speed in order to have any chance to succeed. Facts are that the only way to take wickets on certain pitches is that either you need to be as accurate as McGrath or you need to bowl 90mph. The odds are that if someone like Anderson played in the 70s and 80s, he would be one of the best bowlers around. Similarly, one wonders how well the likes of Lillee would have done in this era.
Seems to me like thats a logical consequence. Bowlers are bowling faster because that is what is required and expected from them in this day and age and it is also the answer to why they are getting injured more often.