Dale Steyn might just be the best

By Garfield Robinson / Roar Pro

If you think about it, bowling is largely about deception. The bowler uses all the tools at his disposal to press the batsman into error.

The aim is to prompt him into playing too early, too late, to misjudge the bounce or the pace, or to fail to properly adjust for the extent of the lateral movement.

While batting, there is a point beyond which the batsman is unable to make adjustments in order to connect with the ball.

He makes judgments based on information he is able to process before the ball arrives at that point; he will try to asses factors such as pace, probable bounce and deviation before deciding where and when to play.

He, therefore, has to predict the path the ball will travel and arrange to have it meet the middle of his bat at a certain time and place.

The introduction of helmets in the late 70s and improvements in body armour for batsmen has significantly reduced the intimidation factor that fast bowlers once traded in.

Where once they ran scared when the likes of Jeff Thomson, Michael Holding and Sylvester Clarke bore down on them, batsmen now stand their ground and even fight back, secure in the knowledge that life and limb is not so much at risk.

Not that high pace is ineffective; in favourable conditions, it is still a highly useful weapon in the pacer’s arsenal, but batsmen no longer surrender their wickets out of fear of the hard cricket ball, travelling at great velocity, coming into contact with relatively soft body.

Now that searing pace is no longer the terrifying prospect it once was, many bowlers have had to employ other talents in their quest to perform their duties well.

The very accurate bowler that is highly adept in all or a few of the other skills of the trade – seam, swing, change of pace, etc. – can forge a very good career in the fast bowling business even if he is not express.

South African fast bowler, Vernon Philander, to give just one example, has already collected 89 wickets in 16 Tests at a stingy average of 17.13 and an almost unheard of strike rate of 36. 84, despite operating at only medium pace.

Yet while it is possible for pacers to be effective without being particularly fast, it follows that the bowler who combines high skill with great pace will be even more lethal.

Such a bowler is Dale Steyn.

Sitting at the top of the Test rankings, the South African is currently the most feared bowler in the world.

Armed with the new ball, he delivers an outswinger that is more rapid than most and changes direction probably as late as any the game has seen.

When at the top of his game, surviving his opening spell is as much a matter of luck as it is of expertise, and the batsmen who fall victim to his wickedly late movement are often blameless; it is simply too much to expect even highly accomplished batsmen to make the kind of delayed adjustments that would be necessary to confidently combat the South African spearhead.

In January 2011, Indian batting genius Sachin Tendulkar compiled a highly acclaimed 146 against South Africa at Cape Town.

Steyn handed him a searching test of technique and temperament that the master batsman was able to overcome as he crafted what was voted the innings of the year by an esteemed panel of judges.

In two five-over spells – one in the morning and one after lunch on the third day – Tendulkar faced 48 of 60 deliveries and only survived because of his unmatched skills and some good fortune.

He was comprehensively beaten a number of times and might have been lucky to survive at least one of two appeals for caught behind. When Steyn found his edge, the ball went to ground, once flying through slips for four.

So substantial was the threat posed by the speedster that the 12 deliveries that Tendulkar didn’t face yielded two wickets – Cheshwar Pujara and MS Dhoni – and should have accounted for a third, but the ball that was deflected by Harbajahn Singh’s off-stump failed to remove a bail.

It can be strongly argued that the 29-year-old has been the most effective fastman in history.

Others, like Michael Holding and Jeff Thomson, have been faster and more hostile; others, like Malcolm Marshall and James Anderson, have been better fast bowling artists, parading a wider range of capabilities; but there has never been a pacer more likely to dismiss his opponent than Dale Steyn.

His strike rate of 41.1 is better than all bowlers with over 200 Test wickets.

To put that in perspective, it is useful to note that Marshall’s career strike rate is 46.7 – Dennis Lillee’s is 52. Also, Steyn’s 21 five-wicket hauls are only one behind Marshall’s 22, despite playing in 16 fewer Tests. His 332 wickets in 65 Tests – over five per game – at an average of 22.65 tells the tale of a bowler fit to be bracketed with the elites.

Cricket fans and pundits are notoriously nostalgic, and so the tendency to apportion accolades disproportionately to the champions of old is clear. Conditions were tougher then and players were better – at least as far as many of us are concerned.

Factors such as superior bats, flatter surfaces and shortened boundaries indicate that there were better times to be employed in the bowling business.

And in this age of higher batting averages and faster scoring rates, the claims of today’s bowlers should not be diminished.

It is time to accord Dale Steyn his rightful place at the top of the heap.

The Crowd Says:

2014-02-24T12:47:40+00:00

Aldon

Guest


In few years time when Dale ends his career and looking back 30 years from now he is going to be seen as one of the greats to ever bowl a cricket ball.

2013-07-17T21:00:05+00:00

riccardo

Guest


Good post. The Proteas are for me the best team in the world right now and the rankings should be reversed to reflect that they edge England. While Philander is a great bowler in his own right it is the bowling group here that is successful. They bowl as a unit and garner a great deal of their success from the pressure they can exert at both ends over sustained periods. Morkel is also a handful in his own right. Couple this often brutal attack with a batting line up that includes Smith, De Villiers and the great Amla and it's a handsome line up indeed.

2013-07-17T20:54:14+00:00

Rapture

Guest


Anderson is a good bowler I agree, but the unfortunate part is him being in the Dale Steyn era. The closest bowler to Steyn is Philander who will only dominate cricket once Steyn retires. Also the Ashes was played over 5 days while SA tests always lasts for only 3 days which tells u something about the pace attack

2013-07-17T20:37:36+00:00

riccardo

Guest


Generally, I agree with your sentiment. Right now though, James Anderson would be right with him; at the peak of his powers and just got a 10 for in the first Ashes Test. Not as menacing but swings the ball late at resonable pace and extracts some seam as well...

2013-07-17T12:39:34+00:00

Rapture

Guest


Dale Steyn is the greatest of all time.He is the Lionel Messi of cricket. World No1 for 5 years in a row. Most importantly he is the BEST because no one is comparable to him in his era.

2013-06-27T10:34:59+00:00

Floyd Calhoun

Guest


Yeah, fair enough. I was being a bit harsh judging on one Test. He is a formidable bowler no doubt. I'll leave it at that.

2013-06-27T07:34:00+00:00

Red

Guest


True Garfield. Using that theory Don Bradman is useless because he made a duck in his last at bat!

2013-06-26T20:53:38+00:00

junior coach

Guest


Sheek you are absolutely correct with your comments about modern batsman , lets bring back the "Test" in test match and ban the top 6 batsman from helmets, arm guards and chest guards. That would get rid of a few flat track bullying, non- foot moving, I cant hook pretenders from all over the world!!! It would also return us to the days of the coloseum but bloody hell it would be good to watch!

2013-06-26T20:14:00+00:00

riccardo

Guest


I agree Junior. Those mid-field pitch stares complemented by a derisory dispatch of phlegm were legendary. And the mo? Well, there has never been as good a mo... surely...

2013-06-26T17:43:59+00:00

jonty23

Guest


The fact that Steyn is being mentioned among the Lillees,Akrams,Marshalls,McGraths,Hadlee and Ambrose is testament to how good he is, The stand out bowler of his generation who will be a contender in years to come in any "greatest ever" discussion

2013-06-26T16:00:02+00:00

Garfield Robinson

Guest


If we were to follow your line of argument then no player could be labelled great. At some time or other, often many times in every career, the very best players have very poor performances. You could go through every career and pick out a bad game or even many bad games that every player have to endure.

2013-06-26T14:30:16+00:00

pope paul v11

Guest


Geoff Lawson's epoch

2013-06-26T14:25:34+00:00

pope paul v11

Guest


I am totally sniping here peeeko but Ando is quality as those poxing english say

2013-06-26T14:22:46+00:00

pope paul v11

Guest


feking funny

2013-06-26T14:17:06+00:00

pope paul v11

Guest


Again Sheeky you are right, however it's not so much the batsmen pampering as the bouncer limitation. How about a 7 ball over for an extra half pitcher? Still those batsmen who stand up are a wonderful sight, The art of the fast bowler is varied. The fact remains, no one likes facing fast bowlers, long may they reign.

2013-06-26T14:05:01+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


Floyd, Dennis Lillee is often mentioned when discussing the best fast bowlers of all-time. But if his deeds in Pakistan in 1980 were brought up (three wickets in three tests at an average of 110 on feather-flat pitches) then he would never get a mention. Even the very best have their off days, or even an off series!

2013-06-26T14:04:10+00:00

pope paul v11

Guest


He was still on holiday. Morne and Faf carried them. Those wickets were deadarse as well.

2013-06-26T14:01:27+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


I am of the view that today's batsmen are pampered, with the helmets protecting their skull, face & jaw, the wrap-around padding everywhere, all reducing the fear factor & bats with an 80-90% sweet spot. It is logical therefore that with so many advantages in the batsmen's favour, if a bowler can come along with a strike rate superior to that of most who have gone before, then he must be pretty special. Such a bowler is Dale Steyn. Of course, stats are many & often contradictory, just to let us humans know we don't have as much control over our world as we might wish we had. Many of today's batsmen have 50-plus averages, but plenty of them are also pretenders. So a bowler with a minus 40 strike rate might also not be as good as we think he is, because he's bowling to inferior batsmen, despite all the advantages they enjoy. It's indeed confusing. But suffice to say, Dale Steyn is probably the real deal. He is definitely an all-time South African first XI member, sharing the new ball with Allan Donald & Mike Procter first change.

2013-06-26T13:48:37+00:00

brian drian

Guest


as much as I hate to admit it, I think Hadlee is right up there. His smarts as he aged and the adjustments he made were incredible. I,like many other Australians, reveled in chanting Hadlee is a w@nker, and detested him. you don't do that unless the opponent is truly formidable.

2013-06-26T13:21:14+00:00

Floyd Calhoun

Guest


What were his figures way back in Nov 2012, when Australia declared at 5-565?

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