shortpitched713
Cricketer Of The Year
I'm very interested in this topic, and how this was perceived and considered, historically.
Fast bowlers are the most likely to be injured and break down components of a cricket team, and a part of that is simply overwork over even a long period of time. This stuff is monitored pretty closely in baseball, but pitchers still get injured all the time, so I wonder what the "rules of thumb" are in cricket to protect fast bowler overwork.
My back of the envelope estimation using what I see on pitching workloads, is that for a fully fit fast bowler something like 70-80 "days of cricket played" per year would be a good benchmark. This rule counts all days of ODIs and Tests equally, although obviously there are different dynamics depending on how long the team bat/fields in a Test. T20 days could count as a half day for more recent fast bowlers (although this too is not perfect, as due to warm up, recovery process to bowl fast, over a short period it could be harder to bowl back to back days for T20 than ODIs with a day break.)
Anyway, want to see how many fast bowlers in modernish eras played in the 70-80 range of days per year. And if any even crossed 90 + days in a year , and if that correlated with injury prevalence the next year.
I'd guess that overbowling by this definition happened more in earlier years, and with more FC matches also being played.
Does anyone know good resources where I could find this sort of data, including FC/limited overs cricket? Please share your ideas and thoughts on this topic in this thread!
Fast bowlers are the most likely to be injured and break down components of a cricket team, and a part of that is simply overwork over even a long period of time. This stuff is monitored pretty closely in baseball, but pitchers still get injured all the time, so I wonder what the "rules of thumb" are in cricket to protect fast bowler overwork.
My back of the envelope estimation using what I see on pitching workloads, is that for a fully fit fast bowler something like 70-80 "days of cricket played" per year would be a good benchmark. This rule counts all days of ODIs and Tests equally, although obviously there are different dynamics depending on how long the team bat/fields in a Test. T20 days could count as a half day for more recent fast bowlers (although this too is not perfect, as due to warm up, recovery process to bowl fast, over a short period it could be harder to bowl back to back days for T20 than ODIs with a day break.)
Anyway, want to see how many fast bowlers in modernish eras played in the 70-80 range of days per year. And if any even crossed 90 + days in a year , and if that correlated with injury prevalence the next year.
I'd guess that overbowling by this definition happened more in earlier years, and with more FC matches also being played.
Does anyone know good resources where I could find this sort of data, including FC/limited overs cricket? Please share your ideas and thoughts on this topic in this thread!