Tom Shines
First Grade
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If the great man Nathan Hauritz can carve out a 17 test career without turning them, let alone chucking 'em, then so cab everyone else.
This is ridiculous.
http://www.espncricinfo.com/pakistan/content/story/780127.html
42 degrees, over twice the legal limit and he's been allowed to bowl for 10 years.
Wtf is going on ?
It's because the ICC are all racist Twiz, there's nothing wrong with his action. Cricket Australia just wants to rub him out!
Pakistan ban 16 domestic bowlers
Pakistan cricket officials on Thursday suspended 16 domestic bowlers with suspect actions in a major crackdown against chucking following the ban of ace spinner Saeed Ajmal.
http://www.cricket.com.au/news/2014/9/25/pakistan-suspend-16-bowlers-amid-action-crackdown
Everyone trying to copy Ajmal ?
What did they expect after letting him get away with this shit action for 10 years.
PAKISTAN coach Waqar Younis has questioned the timing of cricket authorities’ crackdown against chucking, just months away from the World Cup, and suggested that rules on bowling actions be relaxed for spinners.
In an interview with AFP, the former pace great said key all-rounder Mohammed Hafeez’s confidence was left shattered after he was reported for a suspect action in the T20 Champions League, a fresh blow to Pakistan following the loss of Saeed Ajmal to a chucking ban.
Ajmal, the world’s leading one-day bowler, faces a race against time to complete remedial work by the World Cup, to be held from February to March in Australia and New Zealand.
He was suspended earlier this month after he was found to straighten his elbow up to 43 degrees — well beyond the 15 degree limit prescribed under the rules, the point where a kink becomes noticeable to the naked eye.
Since then, Hafeez and West Indies spinner Sunil Narine have been among four players reported during the Champions League.
Though the action has no direct bearing on international cricket, Waqar said the bowlers would now be under intense scrutiny.
“Is this the right time to enforce the protocols and the technology?” he said.
“I am asking this because every team plans ahead of the World Cup, and the suspensions will badly hit the teams whose bowlers got suspended or questioned.
“I mean the protocols and the technology should have been enforced after the World Cup,” he added.
Ajmal’s suspension came as part of a wider drive by the International Cricket Council against bowlers with suspect actions, with Sri Lanka’s Sachitra Senanayake and Kane Williamson suspended in July this year.
Bangladesh’s Sohag Gazi and Al-Amin Hossain along with Zimbabwe’s Prosper Utseya were all reported after Ajmal.
The bans have thrown a spotlight on the controversial “doosra” delivery, which turns in the opposite direction to orthodox offspin but is delivered using the same wrist action.
Waqar suggested that the delivery could not be bowled legally and the ICC should amend their laws to accommodate it.
“When a bowler bowls a doosra, his elbow must bend beyond limits, that’s natural and I think a solution must be found.”
That’s despite the inventor of the delivery and Waqar’s former teammate, Saqlain Mushtag, insisting the delivery can be bowled legally.
“It can easily be delivered within the allowed rules,” Saqlain said last month. He has since been hired by the Pakistan Cricket Board to fix Ajmal’s action.
Waqar added that Hafeez, who is a major part of Pakistan’s limited overs teams, had been left scarred by the experience of being reported.
“I know they have reported him under a process but that is confidence-shattering for one of our key bowlers.”
The Pakistan Cricket Board is facing something of a chucking crisis at home, suspending 16 bowlers last week after 30 were reported for suspect actions.
http://www.news.com.au/sport/cricke...-after-world-cup/story-fndpt0dy-1227076220387