SL_Fan
Senior ODI Player
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See that's where you are going wrong. For you Rome was built in a day. Except it wasn't.
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See that's where you are going wrong. For you Rome was built in a day. Except it wasn't.
For the nth time this is simply untrue ~ take Dhyanchand, Court, Pele, Bolt as example from pre WW2 to 2017. Yes you can say in cricket he was way ahead of his peers atm but in (other) sporting history that statement is BS !After doing some research I wish to reply and I apologize for the delay.On batting tracks Bradman was simply a creature from another planet and evaluating him was the equivalent of having to create a separate handicapping system for a horse in racing.Not only his record put him on another street but his rate of scoring runs.However on wet wickets or sticklers Bradman was outplayed by George Headley,Victor Trumper and Jack Hobbs.Statistically Headley averaged 13 more than Bradman on wet pitches while Hobs and Trumper championed more causes.Bradman was also not fully tested against spin nor lethal pace which is relevant.In the 1970's it is anybody's guess how he would have tacked the great Caribbean quartet without a helmet , the great indian spinners of generations and the pre-first world war pitches.Many writers like Nevile Carduswho saw Bradman felt that for sheer genius the likes of Trumper were ahead.I agree with Geoff Boycott that in all conditions Jack Hobbs was the best while on good wickets Bradman was simply in another league.
Still I feel there were batsmen who had natural ability or talent in tthe league of the Don,or even marginally more.Watch videos of the other greats and one can hardly diferentiate Brdman for a Viv Richards.Brian Lara or a Rohan Knhai in term sof talent.I would have backed Bradman to average around 70-75 in the modern era but not neccesariliy overshadow the likes of Lara or Tendulkar on turning tracks,Viv or Bary Richards against brutal pace or Sobers or Kanhai on bad wickets.I doubt Bradman would mantain that same scoring rate in the 1970'sand 80's not wearing a helmet against the likes of Marshall and Imran or against great bolwers of the 1990's like Wasim,Ambrose,Waqar ,Ambrose and Mcgrath.
Relevant that there are innings rated even better than the best of Bradman,that the Don does not have the highest individual score ever and batsmen have scored 50's and centuries faster than the Don.What is unique about Bradman is the extent to which he was superior to his contemporaries and no athelete in any field has remained so head and shoulders above other greats even 5-6 decades later.
Bradman was the complete package and the perfect machine,not the most artistic or stylish.To me it was his temperament ,concentration that made him an immortal.
Brdaman's only dent was in the bodyline series but still he averaged above 56.Overall he has to be rated the greatest for the margin he was better than his contemporaries like no sportsman ever,let alone cricketer.
After doing some research I wish to reply and I apologize for the delay.On batting tracks Bradman was simply a creature from another planet and evaluating him was the equivalent of having to create a separate handicapping system for a horse in racing.Not only his record put him on another street but his rate of scoring runs.However on wet wickets or sticklers Bradman was outplayed by George Headley,Victor Trumper and Jack Hobbs.Statistically Headley averaged 13 more than Bradman on wet pitches while Hobs and Trumper championed more causes.Bradman was also not fully tested against spin nor lethal pace which is relevant.In the 1970's it is anybody's guess how he would have tacked the great Caribbean quartet without a helmet , the great indian spinners of generations and the pre-first world war pitches.Many writers like Nevile Carduswho saw Bradman felt that for sheer genius the likes of Trumper were ahead.I agree with Geoff Boycott that in all conditions Jack Hobbs was the best while on good wickets Bradman was simply in another league.
Still I feel there were batsmen who had natural ability or talent in tthe league of the Don,or even marginally more.Watch videos of the other greats and one can hardly diferentiate Brdman for a Viv Richards.Brian Lara or a Rohan Knhai in term sof talent.I would have backed Bradman to average around 70-75 in the modern era but not neccesariliy overshadow the likes of Lara or Tendulkar on turning tracks,Viv or Bary Richards against brutal pace or Sobers or Kanhai on bad wickets.I doubt Bradman would mantain that same scoring rate in the 1970'sand 80's not wearing a helmet against the likes of Marshall and Imran or against great bolwers of the 1990's like Wasim,Ambrose,Waqar ,Ambrose and Mcgrath.
Relevant that there are innings rated even better than the best of Bradman,that the Don does not have the highest individual score ever and batsmen have scored 50's and centuries faster than the Don.What is unique about Bradman is the extent to which he was superior to his contemporaries and no athelete in any field has remained so head and shoulders above other greats even 5-6 decades later.
Bradman was the complete package and the perfect machine,not the most artistic or stylish.To me it was his temperament ,concentration that made him an immortal.
Brdaman's only dent was in the bodyline series but still he averaged above 56.Overall he has to be rated the greatest for the margin he was better than his contemporaries like no sportsman ever,let alone cricketer.
A simple defensive shot he uses the full crease and a front foot powerful cut wristy in its execution suggesting he had subcontinental traits to play spin well.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=0lMx_ZebaBA
Look at the bat he used compared to today. The balls were the same but the bats were smaller and harder to hit power shots with and there was no protection at all apart from pads.
bat technology has changed only recently in the last 15 yrs or so. And there is big drawback to having big bats ... the leading edges will also carry to fielders. They left that bit of very inconvenient fact out of that video along with many others ... let me know if you want to discuss but I doubt you are interested.
but anyhow the bowling at 2:50 bought a chuckle : https://youtu.be/0lMx_ZebaBA?t=2m50s
Who can even dream of being a Test match bowler bowling like that today ? and then they had the cheek to include Mitch Starc ripper later in the video ... very cute![]()
It was a part timer turning his arm
over after Bradman had almost reached 100.
Its already been said a lack of 90-95mph bowlers is evident in Bradmans time but otherwise every bowler was in operation.
More like lack of 85-95mph bowlers. Most of the pacers would have operated in 70-80mph range at best and 65-75mph range after first session.
It was a part timer turning his arm
over after Bradman had almost reached 100.
Its already been said a lack of 90-95mph bowlers is evident in Bradmans time but otherwise every bowler was in operation.
Do you really think Tendulkar Ponting Richards are better than Bradman they averaged in the 30s in the last 25 tests they played no way the best ever can have such stats.
Bradman at 40 years of age averaged closed to 100 against bowlers that made Sobers look ordinary.
It's hard to gauge speed properly bowlers with short run up can generate speeds of 75mph+ but you can tell if it's genuinely quick.
Have a look at the video above by Chrish parts show Larwood bowling looks quick even to the naked eye especially bodyline.
Can generate, but they didn't. Even in bodyline they rarely seemed to crossing 80mph.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=6afPT1hbMLk
Shoaib Akhtar injuring Ganguly here the batsman in bodyline video has a similar reaction after being hit on an unprotected area by Larwood and is carried off maybe it is 80mph there were no speed guns then.
Bowling speed is overrated in the modern era how many great bowlers are there bowling express.
There are less express bowlers and very few great express bowlers. Most bowlers operate in the 75-85mph range so there isn't much difference from Bowlers in Bradmans era.
Bowling speed is overrated in the modern era how many great bowlers are there bowling express.
There are less express bowlers and very few great express bowlers. Most bowlers operate in the 75-85mph range so there isn't much difference from Bowlers in Bradmans era.
How many great medium pacers have there been in history of cricket? Most of them are fast or fast-medium. Most bowlers operate in 82-90 mph range and not in 75-85 range.
That is JUST sooo not true and it is very obviously visible on footage. Methinks you are just trying to argue for the sake of arguing. There can be no honest discussion that can be had here if you think the likes of Bedser, Voce,Tate, Bowes bowled in the 75+ Range. Thanks for the discussion.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=kuBC4g0kdG4
Darren Sammy can bowl 120kph+ without much effort one delivery is 128kph there were no speed guns in that era but this shows it's not too difficult is it.
Spinners with a quicker bowl can bowl close to 70mph without a run up why couldn't men who were tall with a decent build bowl 75mph+ and Larwood 80-85mph+.
Mcgrath Pollock Asif Philander are all bowlers in the 75-85mph range and better than most.
The art of bowling is more than just speed swing seam line and length play a big part.
I've said this before I'll say it again the only way to bring the modern day greats close to Bradman is by only including matches against minnows Bangladesh pre 2010 and Zimbabwe they're still not better but the best could average close to 90 over 50 matches.
Then compare the minnows to Australia England of 30s and 40s are they on a similar level?
Which team has fastest bowler bowling at 100-120 kph? Bangladesh used to have those in early those. Zimbabwe was better in this regards. At least in this aspect bowlers were not ahead of Ban and Zim bowlers.
100kph is 62mph that's stretching things a bit too much spinners bowl that quick without much effort.
I'm talking about the quality is M Rafique Bangladeshs best spinner in the first 10 years a better bowler than Laker and O'reilly?
Is Nazmul Hossain better than Lindwall Bedser Larwood?
Is Habibul Bashar better than Hammond and Hutton if yes then Bradman becomes close to the modern day greats.
I'm talking about the quality is M Rafique Bangladeshs best spinner in the first 10 years a better bowler than Laker and O'reilly?
Is Nazmul Hossain better than Lindwall Bedser Larwood?
Is Habibul Bashar better than Hammond and Hutton if yes then Bradman becomes close to the modern day greats.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=kuBC4g0kdG4
Darren Sammy can bowl 120kph+ without much effort one delivery is 128kph there were no speed guns in that era but this shows it's not too difficult is it.
Spinners with a quicker bowl can bowl close to 70mph without a run up why couldn't men who were tall with a decent build bowl 75mph+ and Larwood 80-85mph+.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=kuBC4g0kdG4
Darren Sammy can bowl 120kph+ without much effort one delivery is 128kph there were no speed guns in that era but this shows it's not too difficult is it.
Spinners with a quicker bowl can bowl close to 70mph without a run up why couldn't men who were tall with a decent build bowl 75mph+ and Larwood 80-85mph+.
To judge a bowler you have to watch more than one delivery I've seen Bedser bowling full overs.
Tall bowler extracting awkward bounce accurate economical on helpful wickets a handful with swing and seam like any good bowler today.
Bedsers strike rate was 67 economy under 2 work it out his accuracy and being always at the batsman was the reason he took wickets.
Being accurate on flat wickets is crucial which gives you the edge when there's a helpful wicket to be succesful.
Fielding standards were better in some ways watch the action and see how many misfields you see you'll struggle to see any bad fielding.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=eyhIIp_fffM
More in depth footage of Bradman his technique quick footwork can be analysed better here.
Also there's bodyline where Larwood is making batsman hop the speed must be decent to bowl bouncers like that.
How do you know Larwood is bowling a lot slower than Lee?
Just look at the no.of frames it takes for the ball to hit the stumps and compare it with Brett Lee... For Brett Lee the ball has already passed the bat by the time his right foot hits the ground.
You keep saying that bowling was already developed and just as good as today .... but never answer this simple question : Who is the 110K strike bowler *TODAY* that has 200+ wkts ?
How do you know Larwood is bowling a lot slower than Lee?
There were no speeds guns Lee bowling close to 100mph wasn't common he was in the 90-95mph range.
Tests done to measure Larwoods speed have it at over 90mph peak not sure one could believe that totally aswell but it shows Bradman didn't face bowling that Grace or maybe Hobbs would've faced by the 40s and 50s bowling was pretty much fully developed.
If it was all about pace Lee Sami Tait would be the best ever bowlers but they are not.
Comparing the ball to Lee is harsh the bowl is a rarity bowled at 99.4mph one of the fastest ever the frame rate of Larwood is similar to bowlers bowling 85-90mph.
Bedser was not a strike bowler a strike rate of 67 tells you he worked hard for his wickets mostly down to his economy rate of under 2.
He bowled most likely 115-125kph average and was very accurate could swing the ball in and bowl leg cutters that's why he's more succesful than others.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=ayUIvcETUwM
Here is Shoaib Akhtar bowling over 80mph with a short run up it is very much possible to bowl decent pace with a good build and action without a long run up.