shahidrazzaq
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1a. Mohammad Amir - 15 wickets in 5 innings
1b. Jofra Archer - 15 wickets in 6 innings
1c. Mitchell Starc - 15 wickets in 6 innings
4. Lockie Ferguson - 14 wickets in 5 innings
5. Mark Wood - 12 wickets in 5 innings
These are the top 5 wicket-taking bowlers of the 2019 CWC and all teams except India are done with at least 6 matches. I thought the best way to describe his efforts are to compare him to the other 4 bowlers.
It is undeniable that Mohammad Amir has found almost miraculous form at the start of this tournament in retrospect of his dreadful statistical stretch in the last two years. But through the perspective of many fans and cricket analysts, Amir's performance isn't as special as it appears to be. I am here to partially debunk this downplay.
One of Amir's greatest critiques is that he hasn't been able to strike with the new ball. Behind Jofra Archer's 5 powerplay wickets and Sheldon Cottrell's tournament leading 7, Amir is tied at 3 with a couple of others (such as Boult, Cummins, Malinga) but ahead of Starc's 2. I don't believe his bowling to open the innings is that poor (against SA, his opening spell read 4-1-9-1).
As for the critique that Amir's wickets feel empty because they aren't making the team win -- In Pakistan's three losses, Amir arguably had the best performance from the playing XI in all of those contests (3/26 vs WI, 5/30 vs AUS, 3/47 vs IND). The 5-fer against Australia restricted them to 307, when at one point Australia stood at 223/2 in 33.3 overs, proving his performance to be a valiant one as most modern teams are looking to push for at least 120 within the last 15 overs while Australia lost 8 wickets in the midst of scoring 84 from their last 92 balls faced. Also, Pakistan's 2nd to 5th bowlers have not been taking as many big wickets as other teams (although Wahab has been bowling rare and somehwat inspirational spells at times.)
Economically, between the top 5 wicket-takers, he is ahead of Archer and Starc in runs per over. He is marginally ahead of Ferguson and just barely behind Wood -- but I would say he has had the best economy as Wood hasn't bowled as many overs as Amir has in the first 10 overs when there are strict fielder restrictions.
Out of the 5, Amir's has gotten out the least amount of tail-enders. Fergie, Starc, and Archer have all taken 4 and Wood has taken 3. Mohammad Amir has only gotten 2 out. This builds on to the value of his wickets.
Another key thing to note is that Amir's match-up against Sri Lanka was washed out. Ferguson, Archer, and Wood all took 3 wickets against SL, as Starc took 4. Amir still also has to face AFG and BAN, two teams the others have already faced.
Amir has yet to be taken apart as well (66/2 in a match where both teams crossed 330), while the likes of Starc struggled for his 1 wicket against India conceding 74 runs and Jofra Archer went wicketless, being dispatched by Pakistan for 78 runs in his 10-quota.
Out of his 15 wickets, 10 were taken against top 50 batsmen in the world (according to ICC ODI Rankings as of June 1, 2019), while 8/15 are placed in the top 25 -- consisting of Virat Kohli, Shai Hope, Faf du Plessis, Aaron Finch, Jos Buttler, Hashim Amla, Usman Khawaja, and MS Dhoni. This is impressive even if you wish to statistically exclude the result of Virat Kohli's dismissal.
Is Mohammad Amir the best bowler in international cricket right now? Most likely not. But is he having the best tournament? I'd say it's hard to argue against it.
1b. Jofra Archer - 15 wickets in 6 innings
1c. Mitchell Starc - 15 wickets in 6 innings
4. Lockie Ferguson - 14 wickets in 5 innings
5. Mark Wood - 12 wickets in 5 innings
These are the top 5 wicket-taking bowlers of the 2019 CWC and all teams except India are done with at least 6 matches. I thought the best way to describe his efforts are to compare him to the other 4 bowlers.
It is undeniable that Mohammad Amir has found almost miraculous form at the start of this tournament in retrospect of his dreadful statistical stretch in the last two years. But through the perspective of many fans and cricket analysts, Amir's performance isn't as special as it appears to be. I am here to partially debunk this downplay.
One of Amir's greatest critiques is that he hasn't been able to strike with the new ball. Behind Jofra Archer's 5 powerplay wickets and Sheldon Cottrell's tournament leading 7, Amir is tied at 3 with a couple of others (such as Boult, Cummins, Malinga) but ahead of Starc's 2. I don't believe his bowling to open the innings is that poor (against SA, his opening spell read 4-1-9-1).
As for the critique that Amir's wickets feel empty because they aren't making the team win -- In Pakistan's three losses, Amir arguably had the best performance from the playing XI in all of those contests (3/26 vs WI, 5/30 vs AUS, 3/47 vs IND). The 5-fer against Australia restricted them to 307, when at one point Australia stood at 223/2 in 33.3 overs, proving his performance to be a valiant one as most modern teams are looking to push for at least 120 within the last 15 overs while Australia lost 8 wickets in the midst of scoring 84 from their last 92 balls faced. Also, Pakistan's 2nd to 5th bowlers have not been taking as many big wickets as other teams (although Wahab has been bowling rare and somehwat inspirational spells at times.)
Economically, between the top 5 wicket-takers, he is ahead of Archer and Starc in runs per over. He is marginally ahead of Ferguson and just barely behind Wood -- but I would say he has had the best economy as Wood hasn't bowled as many overs as Amir has in the first 10 overs when there are strict fielder restrictions.
Out of the 5, Amir's has gotten out the least amount of tail-enders. Fergie, Starc, and Archer have all taken 4 and Wood has taken 3. Mohammad Amir has only gotten 2 out. This builds on to the value of his wickets.
Another key thing to note is that Amir's match-up against Sri Lanka was washed out. Ferguson, Archer, and Wood all took 3 wickets against SL, as Starc took 4. Amir still also has to face AFG and BAN, two teams the others have already faced.
Amir has yet to be taken apart as well (66/2 in a match where both teams crossed 330), while the likes of Starc struggled for his 1 wicket against India conceding 74 runs and Jofra Archer went wicketless, being dispatched by Pakistan for 78 runs in his 10-quota.
Out of his 15 wickets, 10 were taken against top 50 batsmen in the world (according to ICC ODI Rankings as of June 1, 2019), while 8/15 are placed in the top 25 -- consisting of Virat Kohli, Shai Hope, Faf du Plessis, Aaron Finch, Jos Buttler, Hashim Amla, Usman Khawaja, and MS Dhoni. This is impressive even if you wish to statistically exclude the result of Virat Kohli's dismissal.
Is Mohammad Amir the best bowler in international cricket right now? Most likely not. But is he having the best tournament? I'd say it's hard to argue against it.