Bletch
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- Dec 8, 2020
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Reckon he was the best between Benaud and Warne.Jim Higgs?
22 tests; 66 test wickets @ 31 not too bad but not in the class of those you mention.
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Reckon he was the best between Benaud and Warne.Jim Higgs?
22 tests; 66 test wickets @ 31 not too bad but not in the class of those you mention.
Tim May bowled magnificently on the 1993 Ashes tour of England. Made some of the English players (who were bought up on a diet of off spin) look stupid.Ashley Mallett averaged under 30 but had a SR of 75, not sure if that qualifies. Tim May was a good bowler but averaging 34 not sure if that qualifies as "genuinely good". Lyon has a shitload of wickets, I'm sure he does, not sure who else there is?
Tim May bowled magnificently on the 1993 Ashes tour of England. Made some of the English players (who were bought up on a diet of off spin) look stupid.
Took 21 wickets @ 28. Formed a great combo with Warne on that tour.
Johnny Gleeson was a right handed leggie, played 29 tests in late 60's thru to early 70's and took 93 wickets. Never saw him play, but as a kid I heard the guys on ABC radio always used to talk about him and his prodigious spin and I wondered if he was that good, why didn't he play more tests? Work reasons? Richie would talk about him a bit of TV.Complete (I think) list of test leggies who have taken 25+ wickets and averaged 35 or under:
View attachment 2202615
Just 31 players - 9 AUS, 6 ENG, 5 PAK, 4 IND, 2 SA, 2 WI, 1 AFG, 1 ZIM, 1 SL, 0 NZ.
Note, doesn't include left arm wrist spinners.
Bowling spin in Aust has always just been tough going.A quick look through the stats for Aussie Offies.
Lyon 539
Bill Johnston 160. A bit of a Funky Miller, bowled both
Hugh Trumble 141
Ash Mallett 132
Bruce Yardley 126
Ian Johnson 109.
I gave 6 cos of Johnston's duality. There's 2 blokes form the turn of last century next, then Tim May, then Funky
Tim May bowled magnificently on the 1993 Ashes tour of England. Made some of the English players (who were bought up on a diet of off spin) look stupid.
Took 21 wickets @ 28. Formed a great combo with Warne on that tour.
Not great either. But it will always be more tempting for Shield sides to play them, they are easier to captain, and they can bowl low and slow which wrist spinners cannot do as well. See O’Keefe and Kuhnemann.What does a list of Australia's genuinely good off spinners look like?
Not great either. But it will always be more tempting for Shield sides to play them, they are easier to captain, and they can bowl low and slow which wrist spinners cannot do as well. See O’Keefe and Kuhnemann.
Had their ages been reversed I don’t think Swepson would displace Kuhnemann.Kuhnemann moved state as he couldn't get a game ahead of Swepson, but I agree with you in general.
Had their ages been reversed I don’t think Swepson would displace Kuhnemann.
I totally get why the Australian selectors might now prefer him over Swepson. It is unfortunate though. Can even understand why they might want him over Murphy.
People lose their shit when a wrist spinner is taken over the fence. Warne debuting today (or even under Ponting) would have failed. He was very lucky to have Higgs on the selection panel and that Border was very patient.
Is QLD the only state right now whose first choice spinner is a wrist spinner? Says a lot about the attitude to, and aptitude for developing players.
You're drawing a long bow to say Warne would've failed debuting "today".Had their ages been reversed I don’t think Swepson would displace Kuhnemann.
I totally get why the Australian selectors might now prefer him over Swepson. It is unfortunate though. Can even understand why they might want him over Murphy.
People lose their shit when a wrist spinner is taken over the fence. Warne debuting today (or even under Ponting) would have failed. He was very lucky to have Higgs on the selection panel and that Border was very patient.
Is QLD the only state right now whose first choice spinner is a wrist spinner? Says a lot about the attitude to, and aptitude for developing players.
I am not disputing that Warne showed something early on.You're drawing a long bow to say Warne would've failed debuting "today".
It was brutally obvious to most cricket watchers that saw him in his first games that he was something special.
He bowled pretty well in both Sydney and Adelaide in his first 2 games, and spun it on what were both VERY flat pitches.
Hindsight is 20/20, but I, for one, knew we had something with a lot of potential, who was well and truly worth sticking with for a bit. And I don't reckon I was alone.
Didn't take him too long to show it at Test level either, did OK in Sri Lanka, then REALLY announced himself at the MCG, about 11 months after his debut.
More and better infrastructure today with far more development opportunities for players. He would have been rubbing shoulders with and learning from a far wider variety of leggies. But the big thing would be he would have arrived on the international scene with better drilled variations but his stock leggie wouldn't have probably been as drilled. And test cricket is still about landing the stock ball, so it might have taken him a bit longer to have the complete control over his leggie that he had.I am not disputing that Warne showed something early on.
I am saying the infrastructure around wouldn’t support his development today.
You're drawing a long bow to say Warne would've failed debuting "today".
It was brutally obvious to most cricket watchers that saw him in his first games that he was something special.
He bowled pretty well in both Sydney and Adelaide in his first 2 games, and spun it on what were both VERY flat pitches.
Hindsight is 20/20, but I, for one, knew we had something with a lot of potential, who was well and truly worth sticking with for a bit. And I don't reckon I was alone.
Didn't take him too long to show it at Test level either, did OK in Sri Lanka, then REALLY announced himself at the MCG, about 11 months after his debut.
The bloke was a freak. Freaks succeed in ANY era. He was also very well taught by a bloke that knew what he was talking about. TJ wasn't the bowler that his pupil was, but he sure knew WHAT to teach. You don't have to be a magnificent practitioner to be a great teacher. All it takes is good knowledge and a good student.More and better infrastructure today with far more development opportunities for players. He would have been rubbing shoulders with and learning from a far wider variety of leggies. But the big thing would be he would have arrived on the international scene with better drilled variations but his stock leggie wouldn't have probably been as drilled. And test cricket is still about landing the stock ball, so it might have taken him a bit longer to have the complete control over his leggie that he had.
The other factor today is better prep and rehab. Warney lost a bit of fizz after the shoulder injury. He might have been even better today due to better body and better variations.
The bloke was a freak. Freaks succeed in ANY era. He was also very well taught by a bloke that knew what he was talking about. TJ wasn't the bowler that his pupil was, but he sure knew WHAT to teach. You don't have to be a magnificent practitioner to be a great teacher. All it takes is good knowledge and a good student.
The real thing he lost with the shoulder injury was the flipper. There were a couple of years prior to his shoulder injury where there wasn't a batsman in Test cricket could pick it.
Probably the most "lethal" ball I've seen from any bowler, of any type, in my time. Notable close seconds, Wasim and Waqar reverse yorkers.
You got me thinking so i thought id reminisce. Beautifully deadly
With a First-Class average of 45 or 46...Adam Zampa should be nowhere near the Australian Test team. In a stronger era of Australian cricket, he wouldn't even be playing ODI cricket for Australia. He should be thankful he plays white ball cricket for Australia.
John “Cho” Gleeson was a folded finger spinner rather than a leggie. He flicked the ball off his middle finger rather than bowling it like a normal leg or off spinner thus he could spin the ball both ways. I became familiar with him after reading the Ian Chappell books as a kid “Chappelli has the last laugh” and “Chappelli laughs again” - bit of a character and very unconventional. The stories about him are quite funny.Johnny Gleeson was a right handed leggie, played 29 tests in late 60's thru to early 70's and took 93 wickets. Never saw him play, but as a kid I heard the guys on ABC radio always used to talk about him and his prodigious spin and I wondered if he was that good, why didn't he play more tests? Work reasons? Richie would talk about him a bit of TV.
He copied Jack Iverson's leg spinning grip. Jack only played 5 tests in the 1950's but took 21 wickets @15.23. Its still one of the lowest test averages for bowlers who have taken 20+ wickets.
Edit OK he averaged 36.20 so didn't make your list.
John Gleeson (cricketer) - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Zampa has a point about the sad lack of top quality leg spinners across the world in Test cricket. Unfortunately for him, he had no hope of being picked. If they were going to take a leg spinner, it would have been Mitch Swepson but his numbers don't stack up this season.
Was that one a flipper or a grubber that just didn't bounce?The one that really sticks with me was Richie Richardson, and not in that footage!!! Richie had no idea. Vs WI in 92/3 I'd say at MCG. Started a big collapse and that was Warne's real break out match.
It made him look third rate, and he was far from it.
The one that really sticks with me was Richie Richardson, and not in that footage!!! Richie had no idea. Vs WI in 92/3 I'd say at MCG. Started a big collapse and that was Warne's real break out match.
It made him look third rate, and he was far from it.