The two best balanced bowling attacks have reached the final

By Tigerbill44 / Roar Guru

‘The batsmen win you matches; the bowlers win you tournaments’ has become a common cliche in modern ODI arena.

Even those who have doubts about this statement will at least admit bowlers can take you to the World Cup finals on the evidence of the recent semi-finals.

About a year ago, I predicted the 2019 World Cup would be decided by the bowlers, but my prediction was that the spinners would play a major part. Sadly, the likes of Kuldeep Yadav, Adam Zampa, Rashid Khan and others have badly disappointed me.

While I have been proven wrong on that count, there is no doubt the two teams with the most balanced bowling attacks have made it to the final.

Before considering the relative strength in the bowling department, I would first like to take a look at the bowling attacks of some of the other major powers in the World Cup.

Australia’s Mitchell Starc is certain to finish the World Cup as the highest wicket-taker and, in my mind, he has been the best bowler in the World Cup despite his failures in the semi-final.

The problem for Australia was that there wasn’t enough support for him. Initially, Pat Cummins did an excellent job but, just as Jason Behrendorff arrived on the scene, he lost his rhythm.

The biggest problem for the Aussies, however, was the lack of a fourth wicket-taking option; both Adan Zampa and Nathan Lyon failed in this regard.

After Zampa’s failure initially, Lyon offered some hope. But while Lyon is Australia’s undisputed GOAT, his average of 46.00 per wicket in ODIs would suggest he is not a great wicket-taking option in that format.

Australia will need to find a wicket-taking spin option to build their team for the future.

A strong ODI bowling attack should preferably have four major wicket-taking options. India certainly planned along this line, but their two wrist spinners in Yuzvendra Chahal and Yadav disappointed. Perhaps the conditions didn’t help them.

Their ineffectiveness allowed the oppositions to play Jasprit Bumrah without taking any risk. The classic example was the semi-final, when the New Zealand middle order managed to go after Chahal despite being under pressure.

(Photo by Michael Steele/Getty Images)

The Pakistan case was something similar to that of Australia, while the frontline seamers Mohammed Amir and Shaheen Afridi were superb, the spinners failed to make much impact. Sri Lanka depended too heavily on Lasith Malinga, while Mustafizur Rahman appeared as a lone hand in the Tigers’ attack.

Finally, much has been made of the AB de Villiers story – I think they missed Dale Steyn almost as much as him.

In both of their opening matches, they were set targets well over 300 and fell short in both cases. With a more balanced attack, they would have won their match against New Zealand.

So, now we are about to compare the two bowling attacks in the final. The three important criteria for me are the number of wicket-taking options, the ability to pick up wickets in the middle overs, and the overall depth in the bowling attack.

We will find out that both teams are almost evenly matched in every department.

Main wicket-taking options
It’s three each for the sides when it comes to main strike bowlers. Trent Boult, Matt Henry and Lockie Ferguson in the New Zealand camp matched by Chris Woakes, Jofra Archer and Mark Wood.

Both teams have excellent new ball attacks and plenty of options while it comes to slog overs’ bowling.

As for the back-up option, England has the slight edge with Adil Rashid and Ben Stokes in their squad. While neither of them has taken a great number of wickets in this World Cup, Rashid did pick up three vital wickets in the semi.

He was again expensive, but it’s important to go for wicket-taking bowlers and the England selectors have done well to go for him over Moeen Ali, who seemed the safer option in the eyes of many.

Stokes’ is presence is important in the bowling department as he offers a nice option as a Power Play three bowler if necessary.

Liam Plunkett doesn’t seem to pick up that many wickets, but just his presence is important for the home team.

The Black Caps’ backup bowling consists of Mitchell Santer, Jimmy Neesham and Colin de Grandhomme.

Now, excluding Neesham’s five-for against lowly Afghanistan they haven’t shown a great deal of wicket-taking potential – but we will see in the next section that they play a big part in the Kiwi success by being economical in the middle overs.

The middle overs
Somewhat unexpectedly, (at least for me) we have seen very few aggressive starts from opening batsmen this World Cup. For the most part, we have seen the top order batsmen negotiate the new ball carefully, then accelerate once they get their eyes in.

All these things mean that the middle overs have become vital in the modern game. Initially, I expected the spinners to be a great factor in these overs, but mainly we have seen bowlers like Archer, Starc, Boult, Amir and others come back for a second spell in the middle overs and do brilliantly.

Mark Wood has been good for England, while Lockie Ferguson impressed early on in the World Cup as the first change bowler.

But it is the role of the three back up bowlers in the New Zealand camp that deserves to be observed more carefully.

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As I mentioned earlier, they haven’t taken that many wickets, but they have been difficult to score off.

What they mostly do is bowl very straight and take the pace off the delivery. The batsman really has to improvise to play a forceful square of the wicket shot.

The fields are set accordingly. This tactic worked in at least three matches against Bangladesh, South Africa and England. I would say that it even worked against MS Dhoni.

However, I do expect England to have a plan on how to handle these bowlers in the final.

Depth in bowling
Both teams have off-spinners as an emergency requirement; Kane Williamson for New Zealand, and Joe Root for England.

Both coaches, however, would prefer that they are not required to bowl – unless the Lord’s wicket produces plenty of turn. Both players, especially Kane, have a great responsibility as the No.3 batsman.

So, with the teams being evenly matched in the bowling department, I expect the in-form English batting to make the difference.

But then again, I expected the Indian top order to dominate the Kiwi bowling as well…

The Crowd Says:

2019-07-13T17:41:46+00:00

13th Man

Roar Rookie


I agree with this. What I think sets these two sides attacks apart is their 5th bowling options. England have been using Plunkett and Stokes as their 5th bowler, NZ have been using De Grandhomme and Neesham. These guys are far better options than Maxwell and Stoinis were for Australia and Pandya was for India.

AUTHOR

2019-07-13T16:08:35+00:00

Tigerbill44

Roar Guru


It seems that Santner will open the bowling on Sunday; with some plans ready to combat Roy. That should be interesting.

AUTHOR

2019-07-13T15:50:22+00:00

Tigerbill44

Roar Guru


Bit More information about Jadeja. He has taken 192 wickets at an average of 23.68 in tests; and he has a batting average of 32+. Yet most people see him as the support bowler to Ashwin in the test team. And Jadeja often gets dropped in tests abroad. For the record, both Ashwin and Warne has average of over 25 with the ball; the great Bedi's average is 28.7. I am not suggesting the Jadeja is a better bowler than any of them; but his record is phenomenal. Regarding his relations with the media; one problem he has is that he bowls left arm orthodox; something that is viewed by most people as too mundane, too dull. I think that Mujeeb-Ur-Rahman the 'Mystery' bowler from AFG gets more media attention than him.

2019-07-13T06:37:31+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


Wow, that certainly not common knowledge in other parts of the cricket world, I'm sure. Thanks for this information.

2019-07-13T03:49:03+00:00

CSKERD

Roar Rookie


Jadeja is underrated...So good in the field that Kholi just can use him as a sub fielder alone (overlooking his two or three firstclass 300s and tight bowling).Wonder why he wasn't considered for No4 ,might have clicked like Steve smith...

2019-07-13T03:43:06+00:00

CSKERD

Roar Rookie


It's much more than media..India have 1)an invisible quota system.. 2) Captain's favorites are always preferred... Mayank agarwal would be first choice in any team but not here. Case in Rahul,Chahal,Kuldeep,Vijay are all Kholi's& Ravi's picks.. Ashwin,Jadeja,Raina,Rayudu etc were Dhoni's and as worldclass they are, India don't have a place in playing 11 for them.. It's how it goes.

2019-07-13T03:03:00+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


you've got me curious Rafiqul. Does the Indian media have that much pull over things like selections? I believe in Australia, the media likes to THINK it does, but in reality that's not the case. My impression was Kohli basically told the selectors who he wanted and they rubber stamped his wishes. Happy to be educated about the power of the Indian media. Perhaps you could write an article doing a comparison with the Australian & English press?

AUTHOR

2019-07-13T02:52:38+00:00

Tigerbill44

Roar Guru


It's not a perfect world.

2019-07-13T02:37:31+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


it's pretty sad if a guy was chosen in a team because of his popularity with the media, as opposed to the skills he could bring to the game.

AUTHOR

2019-07-13T02:28:22+00:00

Tigerbill44

Roar Guru


In the ideal world yes; but I think Chahal is far more popular among the Indian media than Jadeja; at least that was the case before Jadeja's brilliant all round show in the SF.

2019-07-13T02:03:15+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


I'm not sure about the Kiwi bowlers struggling in Aussie conditions either. James Faulkner was a great exponent of taking pace off the ball and was very successful in the Down Under World Cup. The Kiwi guys are pretty useful and I have no doubt they'd adapt quickly. Remember too, much bigger grounds so harder to get boundaries or sixes.

2019-07-13T02:00:52+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


Chahal as the one who should have been excluded Rafiqul. I was totally amazed he was chosen for that game.

AUTHOR

2019-07-13T01:18:52+00:00

Tigerbill44

Roar Guru


I should have made it clear in the main article that by the word 'Balanced' I meant balanced given the English conditions. I don't think the strategy of the NZ back up bowlers of bowling slow and straight in the middle overs would work well everywhere. For example, they would struggle badly in the fast, bouncy pitches in Australia.

AUTHOR

2019-07-13T01:15:22+00:00

Tigerbill44

Roar Guru


Thanks for your comments, Paul. I think India on paper had a balanced attack but it didn't work. I was really excited when they started with two wrist spinners; because I expected great things from the spinners here. But, it didn't go according to plans. They certainly should have played three front-line seamers in the SF; but interestingly Shami's inclusion would have possibly meant dropping Jadeja from the team. India also lacked in reserve bowling options. After Pandya the 5th bowler they had Kedar Jadav with his very round arm spin; and Vijay Shankar with his gentle medium pacers. Neither of them were available in the SF; so Chahal had to bowl his full quota despite being expensive.

2019-07-12T23:15:56+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


Not sure I can agree Rafiqul. India to my mind played the wrong guys but still had a more balanced attack than either England or New Zealand. Take out a spinner and throw in Shami and I'd suggest that last game against the Kiwis might have been a very different result. As for England, if Archer doesn't fire, this is back to being a mediocre attack at best. He showed his importance to the team in the losses they incurred in the preliminary rounds, when he took virtually no wickets and went for 6 an over. I'm also not sure how balance can be achieved when world class bowlers, spin bowlers, can hardly find a wicket that offers ANY kind of help. Throw in cold, damp conditions for the bulk of the tournament and it's a wonder they managed to contribute at all.

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