King Posted July 28, 2007 Share Posted July 28, 2007 NOTTINGHAM: Trent Bridge, where Ryan Sidebottom now earns his bread and butter, must have been the source of his nightmares as a child. It was on this pitch that his father Arnie bowled to the mighty Australians 22 years ago, when Ryan ... More... Pressure getting to Sidebottom? Ted Corbett — Photo: AFP Ryan Sidebottom. NOTTINGHAM: Trent Bridge, where Ryan Sidebottom now earns his bread and butter, must have been the source of his nightmares as a child. It was on this pitch that his father Arnie bowled to the mighty Australians 22 years ago, when Ryan was a gangling kid at primary school, and came away with only the wicket of Bob Holland, the night watchman whose Test batting brought him an average of 3.14. This lone victim cost 65 runs off 19 overs. Arnie never played again for England again and for a while it looked as if Ryan, shipped out of Yorkshire to play for Nottinghamshire, might be another one-Test wonder doomed to bowl forever in county cricket on a pitch built for batsmen. Transformation Instead the Notts committee built a media centre opposite the pavilion and a massive stand on the Hound Road side and, wow, the pitch that once guaranteed runs by the hundred, turned into a nasty, sneaky strip full of devilment. Sidebottom has prospered as a complete new ball bowler now, said one who knows him well when he was recalled to the England colours after the Ashes misery made some unfit to wear the England sweater. This summer his combination of swing and seam made West Indian and Indian batsmen crumble so that he had taken 24 Test wickets when he arrived for the second Test. I am guessing, of course, but in the last couple of days it is probable that someone in the England dressing room said: “Hey, Ryan, you’ll really enjoy bowling on your home pitch. Just look what the Indian swing bowlers have done. Now it is your turn. Go get ’em, son.†It looked on day two of this match as if the pressure was too much for Ryan in the same way that 20 years ago Arnie tried to leap the gap between county and country. By mid afternoon Ryan had figures of 8-1-26-0 and an expression that said he did not know where to direct the next ball against Danish Karthik and Wasim Jaffer as they laid the foundations for a mighty Indian score. (Not just a solid opening stand but an invitation to the trio of giants in the middle order to place their mark on the game.) Donald’s demands Chris Tremlett, all 6ft 7in of him, is also part of a minor cricket dynasty. Grandfather Maurice played for England and Somerset, his father Tim many years for Hampshire; Chris threatens to overshadow all their achievements if only he can find the aggression that the new England bowling coach Allan Donald demands. Sadly, the most frequent word used to describe the Tremlett life force is soft and on Saturday, for all he bowled an over of screaming, 86-miles-an-hour throat balls, he mixed in deliveries that went too high and too wide. As often happens when a side is bowled out cheaply, the tide began to run against England who could not convince either Simon Taufel or Ian Howell of their belief that the two batsmen were plainly lbw. James Anderson wasted his breath trying to intimidate Jaffer and a circle of close fielders could not undermine Karthik. I felt after Lord’s that England would rue its failure to finish off India and the change in fortunes here reinforces my view that India can still win the series. A run-out decision was refused too; only Monty Panesar kept his cool; for once Michael Vaughan could not find an answer. I cannot remember typing that phrase before, even when he 2005 Ashes tension reached fever pitch. Link to comment
King Posted July 29, 2007 Author Share Posted July 29, 2007 Tremlett bowled some unplayable deliveries. Sidebottom was rather ineffective yesterday. Apart from very few balls Sidebottom couldn't really get the ball to swing much. Link to comment
The Outsider Posted July 29, 2007 Share Posted July 29, 2007 Could make for some nice sledging material. Link to comment
MundaPakistani Posted July 29, 2007 Share Posted July 29, 2007 He is an average bowler who'll only take wickets in certain conditions. Link to comment
Chandan Posted July 29, 2007 Share Posted July 29, 2007 He is an average bowler who'll only take wickets in certain conditions. But the conditions were ideal. And any bowler can have an off day! Link to comment
MundaPakistani Posted July 29, 2007 Share Posted July 29, 2007 But the conditions were ideal. And any bowler can have an off day! Yeah but what i am saying is that he has the potential to do well in these conditions but in tough conditions he doesn't have the ability to do well and will remain a 'horses for courses' type bowler. Link to comment
observer1 Posted July 29, 2007 Share Posted July 29, 2007 I noticed though that they stopped that daft sledging and bad-mouthing when tendulkar and dravid were batting. resiudal good manners? Link to comment
zubinpepsi Posted July 29, 2007 Share Posted July 29, 2007 A run-out decision was refused too; when was tht?? the one involving kaarthik at non-strker's end.??.. but tht was really not-out, wasn it? Link to comment
King Posted July 29, 2007 Author Share Posted July 29, 2007 Yup that wasn't out. Don't worry about the writer, he may not have watched the game and would have heard the details of the game over a beer in a bar. Link to comment
sm332 Posted July 29, 2007 Share Posted July 29, 2007 he has been sensational to say the least .. Had Tendu in complete knots Link to comment
Chandan Posted July 30, 2007 Share Posted July 30, 2007 Yeah but what i am saying is that he has the potential to do well in these conditions but in tough conditions he doesn't have the ability to do well and will remain a 'horses for courses' type bowler. Could be. Can't expect him to succeed in places like Ind/Pak and Australia. But he did superbly today and gave Sachin a torrid time. I don't think I've seen Sachin playing and missing as much against any bowler as he did against Sidebottom yesterday! Link to comment
Cricketics Posted July 30, 2007 Share Posted July 30, 2007 this baal ki dukaan bowler has a good swing.....he has sealed his place now in this overrated english side.. Link to comment
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