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The absence of great bowlers during this period also puts a question mark on Sobers' feats IMO.
Some people rate him extremely highly as a batsman ahead of most modern all-time greats; unsure if he's worthy of that.
Or bowlers averaged high because of Sobers' batting.
Either way its foolish to rate people like him or Bradman where we have very little documentation and where they played against a handful of good sides, you get used to the bowling and it is easier
Fred Trueman was only bowler to average below 25 in 1960s. Otherwise all decades have 4-5 bowlers averaging below 25
Or bowlers averaged high because of Sobers' batting.
Either way its foolish to rate people like him or Bradman where we have very little documentation and where they played against a handful of good sides, you get used to the bowling and it is easier
The absence of great bowlers during this period also puts a question mark on Sobers' feats IMO.
Some people rate him extremely highly as a batsman ahead of most modern all-time greats; unsure if he's worthy of that.
All decades before the 70s were weak for bowling. Barring one or two, most wouldn't have made it in modern cricket.
Lol, you're telling me this Tyson is better than the modern bowler.That must mean modern bowlers averaging over 30 are better than these bowlers:
Trueman
Tyson
Lindwall
Millar
O'reilly
Laker
Davidson
The list goes on the main thing is bowlers did well pre 1970s when wickets became flatter and had very good economy rates which must mean they were accurate and better than the average modern day bowler.
Lol, you're telling me this Tyson is better than the modern bowler.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=gN1UAhYPByQ
The modern day 16 year old fast bowler can bowl faster than this guy.
Or bowlers averaged high because of Sobers' batting.
Either way its foolish to rate people like him or Bradman where we have very little documentation and where they played against a handful of good sides, you get used to the bowling and it is easier
All decades before the 70s were weak for bowling. Barring one or two, most wouldn't have made it in modern cricket.
F Trueman
A Davidson
K Higgs
P Sajjad
F Mahmood
J Statham
N Adcock
All the above bowlers played in the 60s and all averaged sub 25.
He faced a dozen bowlers who ended up averaging sub 25 in test cricket it wasn't so weak according to the average of the bowlers.
Let's see these bowlers because most bowlers can't bowl express pace and it takes extra to produce bowlers bowling 90mph plus something which would be very rare for a 16 year old.
For sure Tyson is better than the average modern day bowler.
If that's 90 MPH you sir really have no clue. For one the ball is barely carrying to keeper, and he isn't very far back either. If he's bowling 90 MPH with that action and weak follow through he's a super human, which you and I both know he is not.Let's see these bowlers because most bowlers can't bowl express pace and it takes extra to produce bowlers bowling 90mph plus something which would be very rare for a 16 year old.
For sure Tyson is better than the average modern day bowler.
That must mean modern bowlers averaging over 30 are better than these bowlers:
Trueman
Tyson
Lindwall
Millar
O'reilly
Laker
Davidson
The list goes on the main thing is bowlers did well pre 1970s when wickets became flatter and had very good economy rates which must mean they were accurate and better than the average modern day bowler.
If that's 90 MPH you sir really have no clue. For one the ball is barely carrying to keeper, and he isn't very far back either. If he's bowling 90 MPH with that action and weak follow through he's a super human, which you and I both know he is not.
He's about 115-120 km/h at best.
If that's 90 MPH you sir really have no clue. For one the ball is barely carrying to keeper, and he isn't very far back either. If he's bowling 90 MPH with that action and weak follow through he's a super human, which you and I both know he is not.
He's about 115-120 km/h at best.
[MENTION=145645]Cric1234[/MENTION]
"Necessity is the mother of invention" - Plato
Helmets did not become common until the 1970s because they were not needed. Once express fast bowlers who could bowl 90 mph emerged, helmets became a necessity for the survival of the batsmen. If the bowlers of the early 1900s, 1930s, 1940s, 1950s, 1960s etc. were express, helmets would have been invented much earlier.
If you look at the number of batsmen who got hurt or died by getting hit on the head, you will see that it simply doesn't add up to the logic that bowlers of those eras were genuinely fast.
If batsmen today bat without helmets against the genuine pacers, who are allowed to bowl bouncers without restrictions, a batsmen will get badly injured or perhaps die almost every series. However, that wasn't the case in the early to mid 20th century, which either means two things:
(A) the fastest bowlers were not quicker than 70 mph trundlers
OR
(B) batsmen from 1870s to 1960s had superhuman ability and courage against rapid short-pitched bowling, basically they were all clones of Viv Richards.
Common sense dictates that it is (A), and that is why helmets were not a necessity at a time when 70 mph bowlers were considered fast, and the generation of Lillee and Thompson were the first to break the 90 mph barrier. As soon the bar was raised, helmets became commonplace.
You don't need to deduce bowling speeds from grainy old videos. The timeline of the invention of the helmet - and its widespread use - is enough proof to deduce that the pre-1970 generations of fast bowlers were dibbly-dobblers like Gavin Larsen and Mark Ealham, and not the tearaway fast bowlers they are considered today.
This is partly true from the video evidence available from the 30s onwards there have been bowlers bowling over 80mph up to 90mph
I find it hard to believe there are better fast bowlers apart from the ATG who are better than Trueman Davidson or an average spinner in modern times is better than Laker O'reilly the quality has been there from the 30s onwards.
Cricket, like every single sport, is gradually improving in quality. Bowlers are bowling faster, batsmen are batting better, and fielders are fielding increasingly better. Cricketers now have greater endurance, have greater skills and are more athletic. There will always be exceptions, such as Michael Holding and Viv, but on average, the game has and will keep on improving.
It doesn't change the fact that people will keep overestimating the past and underestimating the present. That is just the fallible human nature.
Or bowlers averaged high because of Sobers' batting.
Either way its foolish to rate people like him or Bradman where we have very little documentation and where they played against a handful of good sides, you get used to the bowling and it is easier
[MENTION=145645]Cric1234[/MENTION]
"Necessity is the mother of invention" - Plato
Helmets did not become common until the 1970s because they were not needed. Once express fast bowlers who could bowl 90 mph emerged, helmets became a necessity for the survival of the batsmen. If the bowlers of the early 1900s, 1930s, 1940s, 1950s, 1960s etc. were express, helmets would have been invented much earlier.
If you look at the number of batsmen who got hurt or died by getting hit on the head, you will see that it simply doesn't add up to the logic that bowlers of those eras were genuinely fast.
If batsmen today bat without helmets against the genuine pacers, who are allowed to bowl bouncers without restrictions, a batsmen will get badly injured or perhaps die almost every series. However, that wasn't the case in the early to mid 20th century, which either means two things:
(A) the fastest bowlers were not quicker than 70 mph trundlers
OR
(B) batsmen from 1870s to 1960s had superhuman ability and courage against rapid short-pitched bowling, basically they were all clones of Viv Richards.
Common sense dictates that it is (A), and that is why helmets were not a necessity at a time when 70 mph bowlers were considered fast, and the generation of Lillee and Thompson were the first to break the 90 mph barrier. As soon the bar was raised, helmets became commonplace.
You don't need to deduce bowling speeds from grainy old videos. The timeline of the invention of the helmet - and its widespread use - is enough proof to deduce that the pre-1970 generations of fast bowlers were dibbly-dobblers like Gavin Larsen and Mark Ealham, and not the tearaway fast bowlers they are considered today.
But they had shorter careers for the most part. Sixty tests was a great career in those days. There was less cricket so teams did not get to see each other as much. Sobers was an exeption and sustained his performance for twenty years.
Sobers is still well within living memory. He didn't finish until 1974, it's not that long ago. He made people like Snow and Underwood (England's best quick since Trueman and best spinner since Laker) look rubbish.
Anyway, in the sixties there were Hall, Griffith, Gibbs, Snow, Underwood, Mahmood, MacKenzie, and the Indian Unholy Trinity were starting up.
I think cricket has reached a plateaue now for last 20-30 years.. The rate of growth of quality is minimal during this period and certain aspects like bowling has maybe regressed.. Batting and shot playing has improved but defensive batting may have regressed.. Fielding has improved 10 folds..
I think, it was indeed a poor bowling decade - even from your list, Mahmood (Fazal) retired by 1961, Hall & Griffith probably by 1963, while Bedi & Venkat debuted probably half way of the decade. Add PM Pollock, in that list still it’s no where close to previous or next decade.
Here I won’t go to comparison between generations, but compared to 50s (Truman, RR Lindwall, Mahmood, Miller, Davidson, Statham, Tyson, Neil Adcock, Peter Haine, Wes Hall, Bill Johnston, Khan Md... Laker, Lock, Mankad, Benaud, Ramdhin, Valentine, Tayfield..) 1960s was poor, then start 1970s with DK and Roberts, it’s not even a comparison. Among Indian unholy trinity, only Pras had a better career in 1960s, rest are actually more dominant in 1970s. Dudley was also more of a 1970s bowler than 1960s.
I disagree. They were not worn until Dennis Amiss' motorbike helmet in 1976 because they were thought unmanly.
There have always been bowlers quick enough to break bones. Players get hit far more these days because they wear helmets. Before helmets they learned to duck and weave, and didn't get hit so much. There are exceptions, such as Sutcliffe getting skulled by Heine and batting on with a burst eardrum, or Illingworth batting with blood coming from a head wound. Jardine got hit time and time again by the Windies bowling Bodyline, spat blood into the sink during the tea break and went back in to bat.
Blokes were just tougher then.
Disagree. The aggressive play has so clearly gone to another level. There are hardly many 90s cricketers that would make t20 sides of today. Remember the match India vs. England series in January. India were 63/4 and still chased 360. And then the Kolkata ODI, that pitch had seam and swing and both teams were still able to make 300+. Now, people can just be ignorant and call a pitch flat just because they see a 300+ score or put everything on bat sizes. But that pitch had a lot for the bowlers. It is just the sheer attitude of modern day batsmen, which is due to better skills, that allows them to take those chases on or score 300+ on those pitches. Also, the recent chase by NZ against a really good Indian attack in Wankhade (which was far from a flat pitch) shows how far those skills have come.
Compare that to the time when Gavaskar made 36* off 174 chasing 336 in a WC match against an average attack on a flat pitch. You can't imagine that happening now.
Since people recognize that fact, they like to put down todays batsmen based on their defense techniques (because that part is still arguable).
And bowlers on average are faster today. Even India and Bangladesh have 2-3 bowlers who can bowl 140+. We used to have so many trundlers in 90s in India, NZ, and other teams. Look at the skills of todays bowlers. Hardly any fast bowler who can't bowl reverse swing. The game is IMO definitely getting better.
I think cricket has reached a plateaue now for last 20-30 years.. The rate of growth of quality is minimal during this period and certain aspects like bowling has maybe regressed.. Batting and shot playing has improved but defensive batting may have regressed.. Fielding has improved 10 folds..
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=S7FEcLTdDZk
The 60s had the best ever left arm pacer of all time only Wasim could be better in the modern era.
Disagree. The aggressive play has so clearly gone to another level. There are hardly many 90s cricketers that would make t20 sides of today. Remember the match India vs. England series in January. India were 63/4 and still chased 360. And then the Kolkata ODI, that pitch had seam and swing and both teams were still able to make 300+. Now, people can just be ignorant and call a pitch flat just because they see a 300+ score or put everything on bat sizes. But that pitch had a lot for the bowlers. It is just the sheer attitude of modern day batsmen, which is due to better skills, that allows them to take those chases on or score 300+ on those pitches. Also, the recent chase by NZ against a really good Indian attack in Wankhade (which was far from a flat pitch) shows how far those skills have come.
Compare that to the time when Gavaskar made 36* off 174 chasing 336 in a WC match against an average attack on a flat pitch. You can't imagine that happening now.
Since people recognize that fact, they like to put down todays batsmen based on their defense techniques (because that part is still arguable).
And bowlers on average are faster today. Even India and Bangladesh have 2-3 bowlers who can bowl 140+. We used to have so many trundlers in 90s in India, NZ, and other teams. Look at the skills of todays bowlers. Hardly any fast bowler who can't bowl reverse swing. The game is IMO definitely getting better.
Not just cricket, pretty much every sport. Skill level and athleticism are comparable for the past 30 years.
And with benefit of hindsight we now know how stupid they were to attach bravado to facing fast bowling without Helmets. Today nobody thinks highly of a player if he doesnt wear Helmet. Or maybe you think the likes of Nari Contractor, Raman Lamba were the bravest people that ever lived.
The main reason for wearing helmets is common sense. If a player gets hit his career is over. And it can happen due to no fault on the players part. It is the player who suffers. Believe me none of the armchair critics and fans will look after that player.
You don't need to be quick to break bones. Anil Kumble has done that. It doesnt mean Kumble was quick.
As seen from how Larwood was un-ceremoniously dismissed from all cricket. Very tough indeed. And lastly why do the video footages tend to invariably paint a completely different picture of these said demonic fast bowlers from those ERA's ?
We live in a more and more risk-averse culture. Viv Richards never wore a helmet, not to Lillee and Thomson, not to Imran. Botham only wore one against WI. Perhaps he recalled Andy Roberts knocking his front teeth out when he was 18 (Botham spat them out, carried on batting and hit fifty].
What bones did Kumble break?
It was certainly tough on old Harold.
What is sooo exceptional about this footage that you are comparing it to Wasim Akrams bowling ? If it is Alan Davidson hitting stumps then I suggest you watch the footwork of the batsmen instead of the stumps. Most are stuck on the crease and are poking at the ball. Even tailenders today will have better technique than that.
We live in a more wiser/sensible/logical environment. Unless you think getting koncked on the head and losing your career - if not life- is such a wise thing to do even if it means you will attain some super ATG status ( which only a select very few will attain ). Cant believe we are even discussing such a simple thing in 2017. Do you think highly of Phil Hughes and Raman Lamba because what happened to them ?
This is the same like saying driving a car without wearing a seat belt, a bike without a helmet is the right thing to do else you are a wuss.
BTW Viv Richards did wear a helmet albeit only once or twice when facing Sylvester Clarke.
Graeme Smith. Rib fractures.
Yup but lets keep pretending that all players before 1980s were superhumans who did not know what fear was. It never existed in their vocabulary. Larwood's story is a shinning example of the high levels of hypocrisy that old era fans exhibit without realizing that their stories cannot hold up to even basic scrutiny.
Does it occur to you that Davo was deceiving batters, setting them up so they get stuck in the crease?
People were less risk-averse in those days. They had different approaches to risk management. They trusted to their reflexes instead of armour. And nine, ten, jack didn’t get bounced, it was considered dishonourable.
Kumble broke a big bloke like Smith’s ribs? Sounds wrong. Phil Edmonds took multiple hits in the chest from 100 mph Patrick Patterson (who made Marshall look slow in 1986) and didn’t get cracked ribs, just plate sized bruises.
No idea what your point about Larwood is.
thats politically correct way of describing what is otherwise nothing but fool hardiness. No matter how skillful you are a ball can climb from good length and get you in the teeth. We know this thru years of watching Cricket. And given how much faster bowlers are the odds of that happening are much much higher today. its just simply stupidity to pretend that bravado and skills have disappeared. Do you think the batsmen who wear helmets simply have no fear of the cricket ball? Let me tell you that is just not the case at all. See the video of Steyn Ending the NZ batsmans career and then there is Phil Hughes.
I can't believe that we are even discussing this in 2017.
This is like saying Nari Contractor survived a direct hit on his skull but Phil Hughes did not nor did Raman Lamba therefore something fishy. The thing is with a cricket ball even a gently lob if not caught can hurt you if it gets you in the wrong spot. Sometimes a Shoaib bouncer can leave you howling in pain and nothing broken ( Saurav Ganguly ). There is no explanation for such things. Just luck or the lack of it.
Why was he unceremoniously forced out of the game if batsmen were so valiant, brave and fearless ? Why was there such an unprecedented song and dance about a fast bowler bowling short ?
I would imagine that if you were a miner in constant fear of pit collapses and lung disease then the thought of being hit by a cricket ball held less terror. Or if you had just got through WW2 and so had all your mates. Of course they were scared of getting hit, but they didn’t show it because that would have been unmanly given the generally more harsh and dangerous life these blokes faced compared to their modern descendants.
Fair enough.
Because he was scapegoated by the Foreign Office and MCC for the Bodyline furore, which nearly saw Australia secede from the Empire. As you know it was not just a question of bowling short, it was almost a reinvention of the game into a nastier form of baseball. Bodyline wasn’t cheating but it was considered unsportsmanlike and ungentlemanly. Really Jardine should have been the one dropped but he was a gentleman while Larwood was a commoner.
Not all cricketers that played in those days were miners (certainly not most batsmen) and the Bodyline saga happened before WW2. So again your story does not pass basic scrutiny as always.
While I agree with the unmanly part. Those were the times of Bravado and Machoism. Smoking was considered cool and even prescribed by Doctors ( I kid you not) and so on and so forth. But how does one today defend that stupidity ?
I know all of that ... but isnt this against the entire concept of "Manliness" ? Diplomatic row because someone got bounced and that without violating any rules ? See the problem ?
The politicians had the problem with Bodyline, not the players.
But I'm unsure why you are conflating Bodyline with everything. Sir Len Hutton lost two inches from his arm fighting in WW2. His great adversary Miller was in dogfights. If you survived the war, work was full of hazards which would rip your arm off, burn or poison you in days or weak safety regulations Those sorts of activities were more dangerous than facing a cricket ball and blokes just got on with it.
Old footages are filmed at 16 FPS and played at 25 FPS . This is the only reason earlier era bowlers bowled fast.
Not true at all. Aussie captains words were ... only one team playing cricket. Bradman threatening to pull out of next Ashes in England if bodyline was not addressed are 2 simple facts that once again make these stories unreliable. Stories not checking out is a regular occurrence with most topics under the old vs new discussions.
Using bodyline because it is thrown around by fans of older ERAs as though there was nothing remotely close to that ever.
It caused a diplomatic crisis and a trade war. There was “nothing remotely close” to it since. The Bodyline series is singular in cricket history.
Iam aware of all that ... just find it hilarious that people went to that extent because a fast bowler bowled bouncers at 75mph at best 80mph. Therefore it is one thing to say there was "nothing like it" and quite another to substantiate it with proper facts and reasoning. The thing with these stories is that they require an audience that is willing to accept them as-is. As soon as someone is not willing to do that it becomes incredibly hard to substantiate the tall claims for the story teller.
BTW this is not going to happen today because nobody gives a rats behind about such things. If they do that they will get laughed at. Not because there is shortage of bowlers that can cause same harm even with helmets on. Sadly the old era fanatics will twist that into something else. Like nobody bowled faster than Larwood.
Anyhow no response to my comment about how the players were complaining ? Don't see anyone accuse the bodyline series players as being un-manly despite all the whinging. See the problem ?
Nothing like it insomuch as nobody has come up with a field like that since. It won't happen today because it was banned under the Rules as a result of diplomatic pressure.
OK, Sir Donald didn't like it. Do we know why? I doubt that it was because he was unduly scared of getting hit. It seems more likely that the MCC team was being unsportsmanlike. Bouncers weren't the problem, those were expected. It was the field that caused the grief. Woodfull: "There are two teams out there and only one of them is playing cricket."
We seem to have got off the subject, which is why sixties bowlers seem weaker than their fifties and seventies counterparts.
Nothing like it insomuch as nobody has come up with a field like that since. It won't happen today because it was banned under the Rules as a result of diplomatic pressure.
OK, Sir Donald didn't like it. Do we know why? I doubt that it was because he was unduly scared of getting hit. It seems more likely that the MCC team was being unsportsmanlike. Bouncers weren't the problem, those were expected. It was the field that caused the grief. Woodfull: "There are two teams out there and only one of them is playing cricket."
We seem to have got off the subject, which is why sixties bowlers seem weaker than their fifties and seventies counterparts.
Also Davidson we can see came in the 50s and 60s and is clearly the best or 2nd best left arm pacer of all time.
Trueman would be up there as one of the best right arm pacers and Laker one of the best off spinners although he played mostly in the 40s and 50s not the 60s.
[MENTION=7774]Robert[/MENTION] - are we done here (If so what will your admirers do now) ? As always big difference between words , stories and actual evidence. So thats yet another round of the OLD >>> New debate ... as I had said a longtime ago in this post ---> http://www.pakpassion.net/ppforum/s...ann-the-bowling-Bradman&p=7946216#post7946216
there is plenty of belief that they were the greatest players to ever set foot on a cricket field just as long as we don't ask for evidence beyond words and fairy tales.
Oh gawd, are we still doing this?
I thrill to the tales of the greats of yesteryear and hold the firm belief that a champion in one era would be a champion in any era. You don’t. Let’s agree to disagree. Come on, give us a hug.