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| Welcome to the World-A-Team Cricket Forum. We promote friendly, good-natured, quality cricket discussion. |
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| ODI and Twenty/20 Cricket Discuss current and forthcoming matches; general ODI and 20/20 issues, women's ODI cricket and ODI matches involving Associate and Affiliate members. |
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| Most wickets in the series so far: G B Hogg 8 wickets, average of 13, strike rate 16.5 S LMalinga, 7 wickets, average of 10.8, strike rate of 16.3 A.Razzak, 7 wickets, average of 20, strike rate of 20 M Muralitharan, 6 wickets, average of 14, strike rate of 25.67 McGrath, 6 wickets, avg of 18.17, strike rate of 23 M Mortaza, 6 wickets, average of 18.7, strike rate of 23 E Chigumbura, 6 wickets, average of 19.33, strike rate of 22.67 Hall, 6 wickets, average of 20.5, strike rate of 26 3 of the top 4 bowlers in the World Cup are spinners |
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| I believe the difference between Australia and South Africa was the Bowling of Hogg - South Africa did not have a quality spinner to turn to while Australia could throw the ball to Hogg. Corrected to show correct player Last edited by Aussie-Yank : 26-03-2007 at 03:07 PM. |
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| Well it is actually Hogg but yes the spinners and bowlers that can mix up there pace to do better than a lot of one dimensional pace bowler’s
__________________ Bill Ponsford - The only one who could play in Bradman’s company and make it a duet. |
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| Pitches that are slightly "up and down" will normally tend to favour seamers, boundaries so short my two year old could clear them don't exactly help either......... |
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| I must admit the effect of Panesar in the West Indies has been average at best. The odd wicket in a match. Hasn't exactly ripped teams apart.
__________________ Frank Skinner: "You know when Glenn McGrath trod on that cricket ball? Don't you wish it would've been a landmine?" |
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Murali is a class on his own and will probably trouble batsmen on a glass pitch. He cannot be included in the equation. |
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| I would very much like to see Muralitharan bowl on a glass pitch "Oh the wicket keeper's slipped over"... But the spinners haven't played a big part as much as a lot of people have said. The wickets have been odd in my opinion.
__________________ Frank Skinner: "You know when Glenn McGrath trod on that cricket ball? Don't you wish it would've been a landmine?" |
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| Small grounds are not always bad for spinners, the batsman are encouraged to hit in the air trying to clear to rope which can get wickets for spin bowlers, especially wrist spinners or bowlers who toss the ball up with a bit of flight.
__________________ Bill Ponsford - The only one who could play in Bradman’s company and make it a duet. |
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South Africa wasn't the only game Hogg did well in. He has taken the most wickets in the competition (with 8) and is consistently picking up 2-3 wicket hauls. He turns the ball a long way and nobody can pick his wrongin. He's having a party. Harbhajan Singh is VERY overrated, but they persisted with him over Kumble (who is a brilliant spinner). Vettori isn't exactly an attacking spinner, he's more of a run-container. Gayle has bowled plenty but averages badly. I believe you're seeing (in this World Cup) just which spinners are World Class attcking spinners and which spinners aren't. It's no coincedence that Kumble, Murali and Hogg are LOVING the conditions, and Vettori, Panesar, Gayle and Singh are doing mediocre. The conditions may suit spinners, but you've got to have class to really take advantage of it. Last edited by draexem : 28-03-2007 at 03:34 AM. |
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