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March 31, 2006

Not the greatest match ever

Posted by Sambit Bal on 03/31/2006 in The age of batting

Earlier entries: Intro, 1, 2, 3.

Though this discussion is titled "The age of batting,” inevitably, the starting point has been that match. I caught the last 25 overs on television. I had spent the whole day out, and when I first found out the score on my mobile phone, South Africa were about 100 in 12 overs. And since I thought it was a day-and-night match, it took me a while to figure out that they were chasing, and chasing 434.

I watched every ball after I reached home, and even my little daughter, who, despite my best efforts, has rarely betrayed any affection for cricket, was hooked. And on cricinfo.com, we called it the Greatest Ever Match, and we were perhaps the first ones do so because our headline went up a few seconds after Mark Boucher hit the winning four.

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March 30, 2006

Treating the ball

Posted by Bob Woolmer on 03/30/2006 in The age of batting

Earlier posts: Intro, 1, 2.

I was interested in all of the feedback to my original article: thank you! On reflection I felt it necessary to qualify some of my statements, and indeed to respond to those who mentioned the type of ball involved! The ball story is close to my heart: amazingly the cricket ball over the years has virtually remained the same in manufacture and content, with only minor changes.

Historically it was for many years a cottage industry plied by excellent craftsmen maintaining a very high skill level; this is all but finished now. There were two main ball manufacturers in the UK in the 1970s: Tonbridge Sports Industries, based at Chiddingstone causeway near Penshurst, and Readers of Teston. Both factories operated in the heart of Kent cricket, and the balls were all hand-made. As the demand for cricket balls increased, coupled with spiraling labour costs, both companies started sourcing the subcontinent, where the labour was cheaper and more intensive, vastly reducing the price of the balls. Jalandhar in India and Sialkot in Pakistan today produce 98% of all balls used in club cricket, and even Kookaburra have a factory in the subcontinent. In addition sports shops and mail-order companies have their own balls, and prices to the consumers are much cheaper.

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March 28, 2006

What makes cricket special

Posted by Gideon Haigh on 03/28/2006 in The age of batting

Earlier posts: Intro, 1.

Amit Varma’s preliminary remarks are unexpectedly poignant, as some of us in Australia have been experiencing Rip Van Winkle moments of late. A month or two ago, the ABC’s barely-watched pay channel replayed at length the 1984-85 Worrell Trophy series. Past masters strutted their stuff anew: Lloyd, Richards, Greenidge, Gomes, Dujon, Marshall, Garner v Border, Wessels, Lawson and, all too briefly and forlornly, Hughes. It seemed both only yesterday but, in the character of the play, also long, long ago. Bowlers enjoyed the ascendant. The ball moved and bounced. In order to reach boundaries set right on the fence, batsmen really had to find the middle. I felt a wave of nostalgia, in fact, at the sight of bats that were obviously favourites of their owners, exhibiting heavily marked middles and signs of repair.

It was actually a better series than I remembered, with a strong sense of contest and commitment. There were letdowns too: the slow bowling was nugatory and the fielding was ordinary. But the contrast with what was on show in Australia last summer, when runs were in plentiful supply and bowlers bore a hunted look, could hardly have been more acute. If you studied modern average tabulations, I dare say you’d not only find a higher proportion of batsmen averaging 50 than at any other time in Test history, but a higher proportion of runs being obtained in fours and sixes. And in one-day cricket, as Bob Woolmer suggests, the ante seems to be upped weekly.

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March 27, 2006

Of pitches and balls

Posted by Bob Woolmer on 03/27/2006 in The age of batting

Earlier post: Introduction.

After the second one–day international against Sri Lanka, played on a worse-than-average one-day pitch at the Premadasa stadium, Inzamam-ul-Haq turned to me and said that batting on this wicket to score 130 was like scoring 438 at the Wanderers (only different!).

One of the great strengths of cricket is that pitches around the world offer variety, and therefore you are never sure what you are going to get – as a spectator, coach or TV commentator. Some great predictions have been made as to how the pitch might play, what the score might be, or how many runs this wicket will concede. Some have been spot on and some have been extremely wide of the mark.

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Spectacle and contest

Posted by Amit Varma on 03/27/2006 in The age of batting

Imagine a modern-day Rip Van Winkle who goes to sleep sometime in the 1980s and wakes up on March 12, 2006. He is a fan of cricket, and the first thing he does when he wakes up is turn on the TV to see what game is going on. It’s a one-day match between South Africa and Australia. Australia make 434 in 50 overs. South Africa win. “Damn,” thinks Rip, “the world sure has changed.”

Well, yes. That SA-Aus game was not an aberration, but a sign of how cricket has been transformed in the last few years, and we have gathered a team of experts to discuss the implications of these changes on this game we love. Over the next few days, Bob Woolmer, Gideon Haigh, John Stern and Sambit Bal will discuss a number of knotty issues. Has the shift between bat and ball come because of market forces, or are other factors involved? Is it desirable? If not, should the men who run the game take some steps to restore the balance? What steps can the authorities take to turn things around?

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