After hibernating
for long, I decided I should do a post on this one.
To give a
background, a good friend posts a video of Curtly Ambrose running through the
Australians 23 years ago. A friend of that friend posts a nice piece of stat
showing the top wicket takers in the world and bemoans the fact as to why
Ambrose is not among the highest wicket takers in the world. In the post below,
I try to reason why his anguish might be a little misplaced.
To get things going, that is the link for the video and see below for the nice piece of stat this friend of my friend had posted.
And now,
what do I think about Ambrose the bowler ?
Top bowler
in cricket is a warped term. We see top from the perspective of the number of
wickets taken.
If you go
by that, yes Ambrose ended up with 405 wickets.
Let me show
you how he compares with Muralidaran
Number of
Matches: Ambrose (A) = 98 Murali (M) = 133
Number of
innings: A = 179 M = 230
Wickets
taken: A = 405 M = 800
Strike rate
(balls taken per wicket): A = 54.5 M = 55
Number of balls
bowled: A = 22,103 M = 44,039
What can we
see from there ?
- Murali has played 35 more matches than Ambrose (51 innings more)
- Murali has taken twice the number of wickets (almost)
- The two bowlers have taken more or less the same number of balls per wicket
- Murali has bowled almost twice the number of balls Ambrose bowled
Keeping in
mind the fact that their strike rate is almost the same, we should note the
following
- Ambrose played less number of matches / innings compared to Murali
- But the clincher, Murali had twice the opportunity Ambrose had to get his 800
Now, there
could be other counter arguments like
- Murali took 5 wickets an innings 3 times more than Ambrose (A = 22 M = 67)
- Murali took 10 wickets per match 7 times more than Ambrose (A = 3 M = 22)
According
to me there are three (actually two) types of bowlers (and their ways of
getting test wickets)
- An assiduous one who keeps working for his wickets
- A gifted one who strikes at will (Dale Steyn for example)
- A combination of both
Most of the
bowlers belong to the first category, where if you wanted to use a cricket cliché,
they hunted in pairs. Murali was a combination, may be mainly because he didn’t
have anyone to combine with for most part of his career.
The problem
while hunting in pairs is that you are sharing the workload and hence the fruit
too. If you compare for example Walsh with Ambrose (and discount the fact that
Walsh played more tests compared to Ambrose) you will see that both have produced
very similar results. The important fact there is that Ambrose has a better
strike rate or wicket taking ability among the two. But he has still ended up
with lesser wickets compared to Walsh (519) thanks to the fact that he played
lesser games than him (Walsh = 132, Innings = 242).
The fact
that most of the bowlers in the list of
top wicket takers are fast bowlers again plays a huge role in the workload per
match / innings (in other words the number of overs they bowled).
So considering
the fact that Ambrose was a genuine fast bowler let us discount the comparison
on the number of overs bowled vis-à-vis Murali. He couldn’t have bowled that
many overs.
Then we can
conclude that had Ambrose played a bit more (even to the extent Walsh did), he
would have surely broken into the Top 5 if not the 3.
For the
time he has spent on the field, he has done extraordinarily well. Just that we
are trained / conditioned to look at the wrong piece of stat to decide who /
what a best bowler is
Hence
Ambrose is surely among the best of bowlers Cricket world has seen,
irrespective of 400 or 800.
Stats: Courtesy Cricinfo
1 comment:
after I read your article , I think this article is very nice interesting and easy to read .. luck always friend
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