Pakprideuk
Local Club Captain
- Joined
- Jun 4, 2010
- Runs
- 2,248
Lately, I've been watching videos of the likes of Waqar , Wasim, Ambrose etc. bowl and even bowlers who weren't as good as those named above and one thing that struck me was how these bowlers would ball yorkers to dismiss batsmen in Test Cricket, or bowl a batsmen with an inswinging good-length delivery.
Today, however we hardly see fast bowlers of the highest caliber out and out clean bowl batsmen or run through line-ups, especially in the past 6-8 years. I mean it is very rare, yes there may be the odd occasion but its a rarity. I tend to watch most test matches and I've noticed that a lot of batsmen get caught nicking off to the slips, or get trapped lbw with reverse-swing in the subcontinent and recently there's been a trend of aggressive short-bowling getting batsmen out too.
As exciting as it is seeing a batsmen getting bounced out or bullied through short-bowling, we don't see a set batsmen yorked mid-way through his innings out of nowhere. My question is what is the reason behind this?
1. Is it a case of simply the bowlers of this era not being up to the skill level of those in the 80s and 90s? OR
2. Are the batsmen of today far more capable of playing the yorker length inswinging delivery? OR
3. Were the bowlers in the 90s far quicker than the bowlers we have today? OR
4. Are the pitches and outfields simply not conducive to the sort of reverse swing that was available to those in the 80s/90s?
Feel free to put forward any other reasons!
Today, however we hardly see fast bowlers of the highest caliber out and out clean bowl batsmen or run through line-ups, especially in the past 6-8 years. I mean it is very rare, yes there may be the odd occasion but its a rarity. I tend to watch most test matches and I've noticed that a lot of batsmen get caught nicking off to the slips, or get trapped lbw with reverse-swing in the subcontinent and recently there's been a trend of aggressive short-bowling getting batsmen out too.
As exciting as it is seeing a batsmen getting bounced out or bullied through short-bowling, we don't see a set batsmen yorked mid-way through his innings out of nowhere. My question is what is the reason behind this?
1. Is it a case of simply the bowlers of this era not being up to the skill level of those in the 80s and 90s? OR
2. Are the batsmen of today far more capable of playing the yorker length inswinging delivery? OR
3. Were the bowlers in the 90s far quicker than the bowlers we have today? OR
4. Are the pitches and outfields simply not conducive to the sort of reverse swing that was available to those in the 80s/90s?
Feel free to put forward any other reasons!



. Great to see the LBW's have shot up since the 70s and the bowled's have dipped sharply from the 1950's. Indicating change in lbw rules and overall improvement in batting techniques.