Some interesting comments from Middlesex spinner Ollie Rayner.QuoteWithout wishing to sound full of self-pity, it is not easy being an English spin bowler at this moment in time. All we ever hear is that the cupboard is bare, but the simple truth is that we don't play in conditions that help young spinners to develop.The current schedule packs half the Championship matches in before the end of May, a notorious time in terms of the weather and certainly not a period in which you'll find bunsens being prepared.All you can hope to do as a spinner is bowl as much as you can, keep it tight and earn the right to stay in the side for the drier months of the season. But then, just when you'd expect spin bowlers to come into their own in July and August, there's a big block of one-day cricket to disrupt your rhythm before the Championship comes to the crunch in September.In addition, there are T20s dotted all through the season, which I am not a fan of, to be brutally honest. The schedule forces you to go from one extreme discipline to the other, and many spinners have totally different actions in each form to deliver what they need to. The plight of the English spin bowler
Without wishing to sound full of self-pity, it is not easy being an English spin bowler at this moment in time. All we ever hear is that the cupboard is bare, but the simple truth is that we don't play in conditions that help young spinners to develop.The current schedule packs half the Championship matches in before the end of May, a notorious time in terms of the weather and certainly not a period in which you'll find bunsens being prepared.All you can hope to do as a spinner is bowl as much as you can, keep it tight and earn the right to stay in the side for the drier months of the season. But then, just when you'd expect spin bowlers to come into their own in July and August, there's a big block of one-day cricket to disrupt your rhythm before the Championship comes to the crunch in September.In addition, there are T20s dotted all through the season, which I am not a fan of, to be brutally honest. The schedule forces you to go from one extreme discipline to the other, and many spinners have totally different actions in each form to deliver what they need to.
Oh Mo you really needed to fill your boots there.
Quote from: PaulWinch again on October 15, 2015, 08:31:43 AMOh Mo you really needed to fill your boots there. It's not a massive score but I think he's done his job here, if we can get the openers regularly facing 40ish overs then we'll be much stronger than we have been for years, having over a hundred on the board when you lose your first wicket is a good habit to get into, regardless of how those runs are shared out. If all Mo does is block up and end for 40 overs and let Cook be a little more expansive at the other end then I'm happy with that, he's one of the best openers in world cricket, if we can get him confident in his partner so he plays his natural game then everyone wins.
I see the focus from the press appears to be on Rashid's 'worst ever Test debut' figures, not much mention of Ali's figures. Giving him his debut on a pitch like that when they had the poor bloke carry the drinks in the West Indies without giving him a bowl wasn't the greatest way to blood a player they are obviously still not convinced by. How many runs did the two dropped catches and the no ball wicket end up costing the team?