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2nd Test: New Zealand v Sri Lanka at Hamilton on Dec 18-22, 2015

JJ

Immortal
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32,588
Surprised at how poorly the NZ bats handled the short ball.

WTF. Willamson f**ked up for the first time in forever , Taylor got a great ball... So you mean Southers struggled with the short ball???
 

African Monkey

First Grade
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8,671
If we were Australians, we'd cry and say that's just not cricket, and call it 'bodyline'

:lol: what a bunch of pussies.

Some disappointing dismissals today with Williamson and especially Guptill playing extremely poor shots. Disappointed with Watling as well after doing all the hard work.

Sri Lanka slightly ahead atm. A good test match between two world class sides.
 

ANTiLAG

First Grade
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8,014
1. As many as the rules permit

2. When Jardine did it it wasn't against the rules - bit like the underarm I guess... it's called leg theory, within the rules at the time, your lot just whined - bloody sooks

There was nothing preventing Australia from bowling fast leg theory 1932/33. So I do not understand their cries that it was "unfair". However, at that time, Australia's premier bowlers were not exactly Harold Larwood in pace. So that may have something to do with it.

Tiger O Reilley - the leg spinner used to regularly open the bowling. Clarrie Grimmett was a leg spinner and Bert Ironmonger was slow and Stan McCabe was a batsman who bowled some medium pace.

In that series Australia would typically play one fast medium, Tim Wall who was replaced in the last test by Harry Alexander. Alexander in that test unleashed bouncers at Jardine - but without the umbrella field on the leg side. The Australian crowd cheered.

After the war, Bradman had genuine fast fast bowlers who were good bowlers in Lindwall and Miller to unleash at England where Miller famously delivered 5 bouncers in an over and Lindwall with 4 and 5 bouncers an over was hitting heads and arms. Michael Clarke would have been so proud.

Then came Lillee and Thompson, who after bouncing the West Indies led to the West Indies four prong fast attack pitching short. This was a major change for a team that was once led to victory by its spinners, some of them, like Valentine, Ramadhin and Gibbs, absolute greats.

Unfair? No. Both sides could utilise fast leg bowling. Brutal maybe. Interestingly it leaves a big question mark against Bradman, how would he have feared against the West Indies and the hostile attacks of the 1970's and 80s? His Bodyline average was still healthy at 56, but not at his normal outlier best. And he played shots to the offside to counter the fielding. It was not an unsporting impossibility of certain failure as against say bowling underam when a team needs a 6.

But Australia certainly pissed and moaned about Bodyline.
 
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Pete Cash

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62,165
1. As many as the rules permit

2. When Jardine did it it wasn't against the rules - bit like the underarm I guess... it's called leg theory, within the rules at the time, your lot just whined - bloody sooks

thats not an answer JJ. so you dont understand why bodyline is vastly different to bowling bouncers. Shame i thought you knew a thing or two about cricket.

It was outlawed because it led to dumb, dangerous and boring cricket and because teams started bowling it at england.
 

Pete Cash

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62,165
There was nothing preventing Australia from bowling fast leg theory 1932/33. So I do not understand their cries that it was "unfair". However, at that time, Australia's premier bowlers were not exactly Harold Larwood in pace. So that may have something to do with it.

Tiger O Reilley - the leg spinner used to regularly open the bowling. Clarrie Grimmett was a leg spinner and Bert Ironmonger was slow and Stan McCabe was a batsman who bowled some medium pace.

In that series Australia would typically play one fast medium, Tim Wall who was replaced in the last test by Harry Alexander. Alexander in that test unleashed bouncers at Jardine - but without the umbrella field on the leg side. The Australian crowd cheered.

After the war, Bradman had genuine fast fast bowlers who were good bowlers in Lindwall and Miller to unleash at England where Miller famously delivered 5 bouncers in an over and Lindwall with 4 and 5 bouncers an over was hitting heads and arms. Michael Clarke would have been so proud.

Then came Lillee and Thompson, who after bouncing the West Indies led to the West Indies four prong fast attack pitching short. This was a major change for a team that was once dominated by spinners, some of the absolute greats.

Unfair? No. Both sides could utilise fast leg bowling. Brutal maybe. Interestingly it leaves a big question mark against Bradman, how would he have feared against the West Indies and the hostile attacks of the 1970's and 80s? His Bodyline average was still healthy at 56, but not at his normal outlier best. And he played shots to the offside to counter the fielding. It was not an unsporting impossibility of certain failure as against say bowling underam when a team needs a 6.

But Australia certainly pissed and moaned about Bodyline.

It was outlawed for being unfair you clown. There are three orthodox ways of playing a bouncer and two of them involve hitting the ball behind square and the other is avoiding it. Its considered unfair because the batsman to score needs to somehow swat the ball onto the offside or to hit the ball where every fielder is standing.

The west indies didnt bowl bodyline lol
 

Pete Cash

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62,165
The most important aspect of bodyline was cutting off run scoring opportunities. Cricket law is modified to prevent boring cricket if anything. Restricting bouncers in height and numbers, minimum overrates, fielders behind square laws are there to allow entertaining cricket.

Cricketers are famous cheats so the icc/governing body have had to introduce laws to stop boring cricket. The west indies did plenty of boring nonsense. Such as their criminally horrendous overrates but they couldnt stack the onside behind square. Making it possible to play attacking strokes.

But fast leg theory has been dead since the 50s. A batsman can actually take on a short ball without having 3 back on the hook and 2 leg slips.
 

ANTiLAG

First Grade
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8,014
The most important aspect of bodyline was cutting off run scoring opportunities. Cricket law is modified to prevent boring cricket if anything. Restricting bouncers in height and numbers, minimum overrates, fielders behind square laws are there to allow entertaining cricket.

Cricketers are famous cheats so the icc/governing body have had to introduce laws to stop boring cricket. The west indies did plenty of boring nonsense. Such as their criminally horrendous overrates but they couldnt stack the onside behind square. Making it possible to play attacking strokes.

But fast leg theory has been dead since the 50s. A batsman can actually take on a short ball without having 3 back on the hook and 2 leg slips.


It was outlawed for being unfair you clown. There are three orthodox ways of playing a bouncer and two of them involve hitting the ball behind square and the other is avoiding it. Its considered unfair because the batsman to score needs to somehow swat the ball onto the offside or to hit the ball where every fielder is standing.

The west indies didnt bowl bodyline lol

Fast Leg Theory was not "outlawed". Fast leg theory is alive and well today.

Fiedling restrictions of "only two fielders behind square" were brought into the rules you clown. That restricted fast leg theory field placements, it did not ban bouncers.

Fast leg theory with two behind square, and more at square was alive and well under Thommo and Lille, and the Windies of the 1970s and 1980s. It was alive and well today with Sri Lanka playing.

Further, you talk of it being considered "unfair". Who considers it unfair? Fairness is subjective when the objective assessment would say as long as the same rules apply to both sides, then that is fair. The rule change was to primarily to discourage excessive use of the tactic leading to further ugly injuries in the days before protective gear. Got to keep the game popular, broken noses and fractured skulls is not a selling point with the mums.

Batsman could well claim to this day that any short pitch bowling is unfair, and anything ribs or above should be a no-ball.

Australia pissed and moaned about it, but relished when they finally had fast bowlers in Miller and Lindwall bouncing England endlessly in 1948. In 1932 your attack consisted of your great slow bowlers - you had noone with the chops to bowl fast and short who was any good.

So yeah "get ready for a f**king broken arm" and all that.

"All Australians are an uneducated and unruly mob."
Douglas Jardine to Stork Hendry, Australia's wicketkeeper
[/QUOTE]
http://www.espncricinfo.com/bodyline/content/story/316186.html

With three square legs staggered, and two fine legs (and at others times a leg slip with a fine leg) the risk reward for the hook shot to the short ball is negligible. Put in a midwicket (or two staggered), and there is no point to the pull shot either. Bowling bouncers is fast leg theory with even just a fine leg on the catch.

But today with three square legs, two fine legs, on occasion a leg slip, and mid wicket, its either 6 or a chance for a catch, even with only two technically 'behind square'. Its very high risk cricket for the batsmen. Low risk runs are all but dried up with bouncers and that field.

I'd be slow to call bouncers boring cricket. The West Indies of the 1970s and 1980s were not labelled boring. They were labelled exciting. They were labelled "cool". But there was certainly an argument for restrictions being brought in to restrict the increasily intimidating nature of the game which was under fire - think Gatting and Malcolm Marshall. Negatively, they were labelled "brutal". The Windies by not playing an allrounder, and 4 pace men, by bowling slow over rates prevented easy runs from fill in overs. They effectively lessened the ammount of "fill in" overs. Keeping their 4 bowlers firing for the overs they did bowl. A lot less than in Larwood's day. Lillee and Thommo were never called boring. Brutal. Not boring.

Your focus is on the run scoring nature, but that has never prevented a bowler bowling wide of off with a stacked off side field, or an off spinner (or leg spinner) bowling leg theory to dry up runs. The real issue with bodyline in 1932-33 was the possibility of and actual brutal hits and injuries, as it was the West Indies. Brutal cricket.

You just sound like "Bodyline was unfair, waaaaaaah - but Lillee and Thommo, Miller and Lindwall, that was fine and dandy; but the West Indies was boring" when all the Windies did was find 4 fast and aggressive bowlers like Lillee and Thommo instead of 2.
 
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Hutty1986

Immortal
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34,034
Nigel Llong and the fearful pace of Angelo Matthews put them off.

They will be right the second dig, their batsman are fantastic on green wickets.

Its because their techniques are so magnificent. Really, really nice blokes to boot.
 

Pete Cash

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62,165
If a spinner keeps chucking the ball wide of leg an umpire will eventually call him for wide. At the adelaide test in 06 shane warne was told to stop bowling outside leg to slow englands run rate down.

The west indies were boring when they would bowl 60 overs in a day to draw tests matches on the rare occasion they needed to. They are the reason minimum over rate laws were brought in.
 
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ANTiLAG

First Grade
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8,014
If a spinner keeps chucking the ball wide of leg an umpire will eventually call him for wide. At the adelaide test in 06 shane warne was told to stop bowling outside leg to slow englands run rate down.

The west indies were boring when they would bowl 60 overs in a day to draw tests matches on the rare occasion they needed to. They are the reason minimum over rate laws were brought in.

I am beginning to suspect that you are just talking crap for the sake of talking. You're not even arguing anything on point anymore.

My understanding is that an umpire can only call a wide, if the ball is in fact a wide pursuant to the wide rules.

I cannot comment on your recollection of the Shane Warne Adelaide 06 because I'd need to know what rule that the umpire thought he was infringing. But there is nothing in cricinfo ball by ball commentary to suggest that the umpires told he could not bowl defensively to leg stump.

Over 118:

Warne continues. "Warne bowled this 'round the wicket crap to Kemp in Perth last year, wasting over after over. That match was the only draw in the series of 12 which Australia won after losing the Ashes. I was there, it was crappy bowling then and it is still crappy bowling. I don't know why Ponting is letting it go on if Pietersen is clearly not going to rise to the bait (like Kemp didn't)."

126 over

"This is a gutless way of playing cricket," says Michael Atherton but Nasser Hussain disagrees. Well, he would, as anyone who recalls his use of Ashley Giles against Sachin Tendulkar will verify

In fairness to Warne, he hardly looks thrilled at bowling this stuff to Pietersen...

"I think I'd rather give out bed pans all night than watch this," moans Jamie, a student nurse on a night shift back in Britain. Not sure it's that bad.

""It will be interesting to see how the Australian media reports this," says Atherton. "Because they are so one-eyed." Emails to Atherton not us , please!"

""Boring," chant the crowd

"This cricket has all the excitement of a bowl of cold tofu," observed Curly from Japan. "Why not give Gilchrist a bowl? Japanese TV is more interesting than this.""

Over 148

It'll be Warne now from the Cathedral End, persisting with that leg-side line as he prepares to bowl round the wicket. Pietersen bending his knees, limbering up

"Warne snatches his wide-brim hat off the umpire, frustrated, and walks off muttering some choice language to himself"
I'm skimming, but I cannot see any warning by the umpires to Warne for this economy rate tactic. Analysts and cricket fans may not think much of it and it seems quite a defensive strategy that is dull entertainment. But it appears to have been within the rules.

Bowling leg breaks pitching outside leg and turning into the batsmen are hardly wides. The batsman probably padded many of them away. Bowling what would be ODI wides in test cricket has always been a legitimate way to slow down the economy rate in test cricket. A seamer can bowl at 11th off stump if you want as long as its within the crease lines to achieve the same thing.

The umpires are authorised to intervene in cases of:
Time wasting
Damaging the pitch
Dangerous or unfair bowling
Tampering with the ball
Any other action that they consider to be unfair

There is nothing unfair about not giving away runs and bowling a wide of off stump or leg stump strategy to be economical. Boring for the viewer if the batsman is disciplined, but why unfair?

I do not disagree that the 80's West Indies was a leading force to the minimum over rate, but it had nothing to do with them seeking draws. That was more England and all other teams and was quite common already in the 1950s and 1960s. It was no balls and playing 4 fast seamers with no all rounder, at last until Carl Hooper, if you think of him as a test all rounder. Mix that in with all the no balls and some wides bowled - the Windies by bowling less overs kept their 4 main bowlers bowling more economical overs, limiting the amount of freebie overs from Viv Richards and co. It also kept the 4 main bowlers fresh and bowling fast, because they were not bowling 22 and 23 overs in a day.

The Windies got away with it for so long because not many innings against their attack would last a day, let alone a match going without a result being possible within 5 days but for rain given their aggressive batting and bowling. The West Indies were not dour and defensive as a starting point like many other teams of the era were. It may well have become a defensive ploy when it was Merv Dillion bowling and not Roberts, Holding, Croft, and Garner with Marshall as 12th man. But that I'm not talking about their fall from grace. I'm talking the the great Windies teams. And as I said, time wasting for draws was already well established, and continues to this very day. As you said it was "rare" that they needed to, I doubt the rule change was brought in to stop a "rare" problem with the West Indian team.

All these bowlers were greats, able to deliver the ball at speeds in excess of 90 mph. Teams have always had fast bowlers but never has a country been blessed by having so many at the same time. Therefore, under successive captains Clive Lloyd and Vivian Richards, the West Indies would deploy four fast bowlers who would take turns frightening the living daylights out of the batsmen. You may think nothing is wrong with this, but ex-players and cricketing authorities around the globe had a different outlook.

The West Indies’ fast bowlers used to take forever to bowl their overs – often they would struggle to bowl more than 11 or 12 an hour. Many people considered these slow over rates to be boring. What’s more, batting teams found it incredibly difficult to score runs due to the pace of the deliveries, regularly struggling to score 200 runs in a day’s play. Some players also felt that the bowling often targeted the batsman’s body, amounting in effect to intimidation.


For many cricket lovers the period of West Indian dominance was one long yawn. Even the West Indies’ fans annoyed the cricket establishment in England, blowing horns and beating drums as they watched their heroes triumph. In fact, whenever the West Indies’ cricket team toured England in the 1970s and 1980s the letters pages of the national newspapers would be chock-full of missives from retired colonels ordering umpires to get tough over slow over rates and intimidatory bowling.

http://www.dummies.com/how-to/content/10-great-cricket-controversies.html

It could be argued that once Roberts, Holding, Garner, Croft and Daniel had been replaced by Marshall, Ambrose, Walsh, Bishop and Patterson and a whole squad had been banned for touring South Africa of the likes of Sylvester Clarke and Franklyn Stevenson, the cricket world was quite concerned about the endless intimidation and success by the West Indian cricket team and knee jerked rule changes like one bouncer per over rule in 1991. Seems they need not have been so concerned after all. Oh and for the record, Dickie Bird thought that the one bouncer per over rule was stupid, and that umpires should determine what is intimidating bowling.
 
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JJ

Immortal
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32,588
Its because their techniques are so magnificent. Really, really nice blokes to boot.

1. No, the comments have been around the dire techniques of the Aussies- as seen in the Ashes

2. That nice stuff really burns eh - take it up with your media, they peddle that shit
 

TheParraboy

Moderator
Staff member
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68,413
Sri Lanka are lovely lads in cricket always have been, now with the super nice kiwis in tow, they really are two of super powers of world cricket in terms of being nice gentlemen (unlike the mean ork Australians or the arrogant ugly indians)

Hopefully the governing bodies of SL and NZ can rightly call this annual test series - The Nice Guy Trophy cup :D
 

TheParraboy

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Staff member
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68,413
3 days left in this test, SL need to get this early wicket and hopefully a 50 plus run lead

Then they need to bat all day today, and preferably most of the first session tomorrow to give themselves a chance. NZ should run down anything under 350 imo, lots of time left.

Go Lankan Lions :cool:
 

Twizzle

Administrator
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153,337
No, a memory of convenience would be suggesting that the match and teh series NZ was "rolled" 2-0 after the series finale at Adelaide swiftly implying a thrashing when even the Australian media humoured that the three wicket victory's man of the match should have been Nigel Llong for his match and series defining howler of a decision.

But the moment of 2015 was Australia's 18.3 over innings. Summed up everything JJ was eluding to about Australian batsman and the ball moving and you well know it.

and this has what to do with the Kiwis ?

dont remember playing you guys at Lords

tell us more about how good you are on green pitches again, at home against the might of the SL pace attack
 

TheParraboy

Moderator
Staff member
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68,413
SL lead of 55 runs in the first dig

Every dismissal this test has been caught out (except the 2 runs out in SL first innings)

Lead would be well over 100 if not for those stupid run outs

Carn Lankan Lions :cool:
 

Twizzle

Administrator
Staff member
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153,337
back to the actual cricket, I much prefer to see pitches like this where there is a game on and no doubt the Kiwis can win a session or two and get back into the game

not sure this pitch will change much over the 4 days or 5 if it lasts that long

could go either way atm
 

Iafeta

Referee
Messages
24,357
Some of the trends have been exacerbated in this test. Boult over the past 6 weeks has bowled left arm slow medium. Wagner gets wickets by bowling half tracker pies. Taylor's 290 seems to be masking an otherwise poor year. Southee was touted as an all round prodigy but bats like an absolute dunce and just smiles off his cheap giveaway of wickets and wasted potential. The way NZ batted was brainless, Guptill, Williamson, Watling, Wagner, Southee, Boult they all threw their wickets away with stupidly. Latham and Williamson knew the plan against them with the field set and played the strokes anyway with nil care.

NZ need to find someone with pace. Our bowlers are too slow.
 

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