Burgey
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Yeah, in all seriousness mate, be kind to yourself, eh.I can't, Doctors told me to cut down on screentime, I haven't gotten 5 hours of sleep in the last week, don't have much choice in it.
Yeah, in all seriousness mate, be kind to yourself, eh.I can't, Doctors told me to cut down on screentime, I haven't gotten 5 hours of sleep in the last week, don't have much choice in it.
The reason is self-evident if you listen to Kimber for more than about 15 minutes tbfespecially Kimber's always put me to sleep for some reason
I have not come across any fan who could confuse Steyn and Vern class due due to looking at their career avg. No one puts Jadeja with Warne looking at their career average. It's does not take more than 2 minutes to see break up of any player stats, see it raw break up in different conditions and also compare them with their peers.Philander/Steyn is the exception, not the rule. They are vastly different bowling styles (also Philander's average is as low as it is because of conditions he played in, that bridged the gap in average between the 2. Steyn would have a significantly lower average and strike-rate on most pitches IMO)
Try History for sleep(Drowsy historian)I can't, Doctors told me to cut down on screentime, I haven't gotten 5 hours of sleep in the last week, don't have much choice in it.
I'd like to apologise for the above post (which I can no longer delete). Earlier today, I did a Search on Johan's Member name, and his name did not appear:
I only do that to the extent of checking to see if they were actually a regular frontline bowler.So if it's a bowler you aren't familiar with, what are the first things you check in his record?
You're telling me you don't notice the tally of wickets compared to games played just as a reflex?
I find that hard to believe.
Great post.There were posts about Ambrose's WPM about 11 pages back so I thought I would look into that in more detail.
Ambrose before shoulder injury (his shoulder might have been troubling him even during this time, I don't know):
View attachment 49230
Ambrose after shoulder injury:
View attachment 49231
1 = before shoulder injury
2 = after shoulder injury
WPM1 = 4.56
WPM2 = 3.72
WPM2/WPM1 = 0.816 so his WPM was 18.4% worse after his shoulder injury.
Reasons for the decline in his WPM:
WPM = wickets/matches
= (wickets/balls) x (balls/innings) x (innings/matches)
= BPI x (I/M)/SR
WPM2/WPM1 = (BPI2/BPI1) x ((I/M)2/(I/M)1) x (SR1/SR2)
= (117.0/129.8) x (1.76(0)/1.896) x (53.9/55.3)
= 0.901 x 0.928 x 0.975
= 0.815 (same as before, within rounding errors)
BPI = balls/innings = workload per innings
I/M = number of bowling innings bowler is getting per match
SR = strike rate in balls/wicket
You can see that the main contributor to Ambrose's WPM decline was his reduced workload per innings (maybe because his shoulder just couldn't take too much work anymore or they didn't want to risk his breaking down again).
The next major contributor was the drop-off in his number of bowling innings per match. Maybe when Ambrose returned after the shoulder injury, the WI attack (including Ambrose) wasn't as penetrative as before and they found it harder to bowl sides out or maybe the opposition batting improved or maybe the pitches became more placid. Or maybe Ambrose just wasn't bowled and like Garner, was picked for his batting!
The least important factor was Ambrose's SR getting worse. Maybe his SR got only a bit worse despite his pace being down because his accuracy might have improved slightly (as suggested by his smaller Econ) which helped to compensate somewhat (e.g. being able to put the ball in the right place better when the wicket was doing a bit).
I should point out that these factors are not independent, e.g. if Ambrose had bowled a lot more after his shoulder injury and not broken down then his BPI would have gone up but I would anticipate that his SR would have got worse, i.e. also increased.
The specific context I have given above can be expanded upon or corrected by others more knowledgeable about Ambrose or WI cricket.
Individual impacts of the three factors:
1 - 0.901 = 0.099
1 - 0.928 = 0.072
1 - 0.975 = 0.025
Note: 9.9% + 7.2% + 2.5% = 19.6% > earlier 18.4% because of higher-order terms due to the three factors operating simultaneously.
0.099 : 0.072 : 0.025 gives:
Workload per innings: 50.51% --> 51%
Number of bowling innings per match: 36.7% --> 37%
SR: 12.8% --> 13%
(some rounding errors going on here with the final percentages as their sum exceeds 100%)
If this analysis is regarded as being useful for identifying factors involved in why WPM changes (and their relative importance) then, of course, it can be applied to other bowlers as well. I'm tempted to apply it to my favourite, Hadlee, but I would divide his career up into three parts: 1973-77 (inconsistent), 1978-82 (great but (nearly always) off the long run) and 1983-1990 (greater and off the short run).
Lillee before WSC:Great post.
Yes it's true, Ambrose for half his career after his shoulder injury essentially bowls below par as far as a workload is concerned.
Compare that to Lillee who was bowling way more as his career proceeded, after injury and after WSC towards the end. Almost ten overs more per match on average.
Still a fair distance from what Lillee was regularly bowling.Ambrose's workload picked up towards the end:
His last two years seven months:
View attachment 49235
BPI before shoulder injury: 129.8
BPI after shoulder injury: 117.0
BPI last two years seven months: 121.6
BPM before shoulder injury: 246(.0)
BPM after shoulder injury: 205.9
BPM last two years seven months: 222.9
What's your top ten pace bowling list?Ambrose's workload picked up towards the end:
His last two years seven months:
View attachment 49235
BPI before shoulder injury: 129.8
BPI after shoulder injury: 117.0
BPI last two years seven months: 121.6
BPM before shoulder injury: 246(.0)
BPM after shoulder injury: 205.9
BPM last two years seven months: 222.9
Subsz, I see posters like Luffy with (semi-)ordered lists of 100 or even 200 cricketers and others like kyear2 with his multiple tiers and ordering within these tiers and I have no idea how they do that. Even if I had the knowledge, I would struggle with the ordering. With pace bowling, there are many variables to consider: quality, longevity, performance across conditions, different eras, lone wolf versus pack leader, diciness (patriotic umpires and/or overly dedicated ball management), etc. What weightings do we assign to those things? How do we put it all together? I have no clue. Anyway, giving it a go:What's your top ten pace bowling list?