Originally posted by: 9tankiI don't know much about cricket but I feel its unfair to penalize bowler like Narine or Hafeez for bowling action. If batsman can play reverse sweep, or all kind of crazy sweep, I heard they call it improvisation, so why can't bowler improvise ?
Originally posted by: HippoSucks
Bowling action makes a big difference. Narine, Ajmal etc have been successful for so long because of it.If you allow such things, ball tampering would also need to be allowed. That would turn this into a bowler's game within a decade and then batsman will request stronger bats and shorter boundaries.There have been many great bowlers who have achieved great heights without any additional help (Warne, Kumble, Swann etc).This is cricket, not baseball. There are better ways to balance batting and bowling such as standardizing pitches and bat size.
Originally posted by: BeingBluntCompletely Agree with everything except the first line. First line IMHO is being bitter about chucking because a player of your fav team is affected. No way the bowlers you mentioned are legal . The rules have been relaxed to 15 degrees before that even it was even less ,if i remember 7 degrees for spinners and 5 degrees for pacer. And this rule has been from a long time. There have been many great spinners who were never called out for chucking like Warne, Swann, Vettori, Kumble and the old age spinners. You are making the chuckers look like a victim instead they are cheats and using unfair means.
Originally posted by: -Robin-Likes of Bedi openly bash Bhajji, Murali, Ajmal etc for chucking and you are saying they are targeted by retired batsmans 😆
And about reverse sweep batsman is taking risk to play that shot, What kind of risk chuckers taking while bowling with illegal action??
Yes ICC need to think about the size of boundaries, Bat size, New rules ( specially in ODI ) etc. Because its irritatting to see batsmans hitting sixes for fun which should not be the case.
Originally posted by: .Vrish.
Nope, what I said was that retired batsmen make the rules. Which is why everything I mentioned in that post about bowlers being penalized but batsmen walking on water is true. I never said that retired batsmen are the ones criticizing the bowlers in question: I just said that they make rules that have since the 90s made life easier for batsmen, and now, are focusing on getting rid of the few effective ways a spinner can unravel a batsman.What risk is there w/ the reverse sweep, or better yet, the flip hit? At all times during a match, there is a limit to the number of fielders you can have outside a circle. (I recall in test matches during the 80s, when batsmen would be raining 6s, the fielding side would put ALL their fielders on the boundary, and only the keeper and the bowler would be there in the middle. The batting geniuses of yesteryear have pretty much banned that, so that they can, like proud parents, cheer whenever their successor generation breaks their records like a bull in a china shop.) Had there been no such limit, I'd agree w/ you that there'd be a risk, since a fielder could be placed at the boundary behind the keeper w/o upsetting the remaining field placements. But you can't do that when there is a limit of at least 4 people within the circle.When pace bowlers bowl beamers and bouncers, those get banned in the name of safety. When Trevor Chappell bowled underarm, there was an uproar, even though that delivery was legal, albeit just impossible to hit a 6 off, even though safety wasn't an issue there. Now, when spinners hold their arms and deviate a few degrees, they are chucking. Oh, the helpless batsmen - poor babies, who'll protect them? 😲
Originally posted by: .Vrish.Moved this aspect of the discussion to a new thread, where we can discuss it more at length
- I have 4 fav teams, not 1. Yeah, I'm from Kolkata, but that's the only reason I support KKR at all (otherwise, I too would be a KKR hater like most here 😆). I'm just as happy when DD, KXIP and RR win, and in matches involving them v KKR, I'm almost neutral. However, when KKR gets good players like Narine, Morne, Botha or Russell, my support for them does go up. Too bad their Indian players largely suck, w/ the current exception of Umesh
- I've never approved of actions against Murali or Ojha either: this was way before Narine entered the scene. Ajmal, I never cared for one way or the other.
- The law about chucking states that the elbow can't be a pivot - only the shoulder joint and wrists can. The angle b/w the forearm and the triceps have to be constant - regardless of what it is. If one moves the forearm wrt the upper arm, that is what would qualify as chucking
Nope, what I said was that retired batsmen make the rules. Which is why everything I mentioned in that post about bowlers being penalized but batsmen walking on water is true. I never said that retired batsmen are the ones criticizing the bowlers in question: I just said that they make rules that have since the 90s made life easier for batsmen, and now, are focusing on getting rid of the few effective ways a spinner can unravel a batsman.What risk is there w/ the reverse sweep, or better yet, the flip hit? At all times during a match, there is a limit to the number of fielders you can have outside a circle. (I recall in test matches during the 80s, when batsmen would be raining 6s, the fielding side would put ALL their fielders on the boundary, and only the keeper and the bowler would be there in the middle. The batting geniuses of yesteryear have pretty much banned that, so that they can, like proud parents, cheer whenever their successor generation breaks their records like a bull in a china shop.) Had there been no such limit, I'd agree w/ you that there'd be a risk, since a fielder could be placed at the boundary behind the keeper w/o upsetting the remaining field placements. But you can't do that when there is a limit of at least 4 people within the circle.When pace bowlers bowl beamers and bouncers, those get banned in the name of safety. When Trevor Chappell bowled underarm, there was an uproar, even though that delivery was legal, albeit just impossible to hit a 6 off, even though safety wasn't an issue there. Now, when spinners hold their arms and deviate a few degrees, they are chucking. Oh, the helpless batsmen - poor babies, who'll protect them? 😲
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