Richard said:
You see, I don't think so.
There are very few decent bowlers around ATM - very few good bowlers capable of keeping the runs down, which is why ODI scores are so appallingly high ATM.
Test-match scores have followed a similar trait.
Yet the problem is not the lack of attacking bowlers - it's the lack of defensive bowlers!
I do agree the standard of bowling is lower than in the past, but i think it is exagerrated.
The reasons it's lower is because what i stated above. Every law change the game see's is to benefit the batsmen.
Therefore less people taking up cricket want to be bowlers, meaning the talent pool in the bowling is less. This doesn't neccesarilly equate to better batting because poor bowling will mean batsmen don't have to play proper cricketing shots.
And the rules in one day cricket make it impossible to bowl defensively. The bowlers are given such tight lines and lengths for which they have to bowl, and the pitches are just made for batsmen to be smashing the living daylights out of it. A batsmen can just plonk his front foot down the wicket and swing through the line of the ball with a lot of confidence.
There is no help for bowlers any more, and that is why the standard of bowling is lagging a bit. And it will until cricket administrators wake up and realise there is little joy in being a bowler these days.
I can see that batsmen are more marketable. It's much easier to market to the masses a couple of big sixes.
A batsmen plays every ball on it's merits, therefore he can just pull a six out of no where. That is marketable.
But a good bowler has to get a wicket through good consistent bowling more often than not - the wicket ball is actually quite boring, and is just the culmination of 3 overs hard work. That isn't really marketable.
So I can see the game will always be slanted to batsmen, but it's just gone too far now.