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Where is Atul Sharma now ?


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6 hours ago, MCcricket said:

Some bowlers do few don't, Tyagi was promising fast bowler, he was over bowled n ground to dust by Kaif where he took record wkts n I think won Ranji trophy or something.When you have no option you gotta take a chance, soccer players have knee surgeries, so do baseball players n other athletes have surgeries .with advancement in Science ,reconstructive surgery n other things it's more in your favour.

"Tommy John" surgeries are high probability for success, but they don't help cricket bowlers.  Shoulder is a very complex joint, and surgery is not a no-brainer choice for patients I would think.

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On 5/13/2017 at 10:57 AM, Cricketics said:

He will play for USA soon, he bowls here in club games. 

Looks like he has found his calling...he can bowl his 170k thunderbolt to rotund uncles wearing jerseys sponsored from ranging anywhere between Patel brothers,Paradise Biryani to Indian chat bhandaar,Devi bhjan gift shop.

 

uncles who have time to play this weekend because of no i.t release or development work

 

uncles who want to get away from being a helicopter parent to their kids for that weekend.

 

Atul Sharma has found his calling :nice:

 

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2 hours ago, sandeep said:

"Tommy John" surgeries are high probability for success, but they don't help cricket bowlers.  Shoulder is a very complex joint, and surgery is not a no-brainer choice for patients I would think.

Tommy John surgery is common but baseball knows what it is doing. Cricket does not. No starting pitcher is going to start the next game. They rest them.

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58 minutes ago, Khota said:

Tommy John surgery is common but baseball knows what it is doing. Cricket does not. No starting pitcher is going to start the next game. They rest them.

Starting pitchers hurl the ball about 100 times in the game - without a run-up.  Bio mechanics are completely different.   Plus warm-ups - that's a work-load comparable to test matches - not one-day cricket or T20.     Btw, there are a lot of differing schools of thought on workload management for pitchers in Baseball.  The Japanese have a completely different regimen for example.  So no need to unnecessarily glorify American sports methodology.   Not everything that glitters is gold.  

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3 hours ago, sandeep said:

"Tommy John" surgeries are high probability for success, but they don't help cricket bowlers.  Shoulder is a very complex joint, and surgery is not a no-brainer choice for patients I would think.

It is a no brainier in terms of athletes career span, he cannot wait it out, or it won't self heal, maybe he tried alternative route, but what other choice did he have, if the only choice he had was to be operated then off course it is a no brainer

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5 hours ago, sandeep said:

Starting pitchers hurl the ball about 100 times in the game - without a run-up.  Bio mechanics are completely different.   Plus warm-ups - that's a work-load comparable to test matches - not one-day cricket or T20.     Btw, there are a lot of differing schools of thought on workload management for pitchers in Baseball.  The Japanese have a completely different regimen for example.  So no need to unnecessarily glorify American sports methodology.   Not everything that glitters is gold.  

If you are serious about sports there is only one country that can teach you. U.S.A.

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16 hours ago, sandeep said:

"Tommy John" surgeries are high probability for success, but they don't help cricket bowlers.  Shoulder is a very complex joint, and surgery is not a no-brainer choice for patients I would think.

Srinath had a shoulder surgery in late 90s and he could only throw the ball underarm after that.

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13 hours ago, Khota said:

If you are serious about sports there is only one country that can teach you. U.S.A.

USA sports is built on the concept of specialization - they are the masters of sub-dividing physical skills and specialization.  Look at baseball, "american" football - each of this sports creates specialist positions by skill and related physical traits - A starting pitcher will be a very different body type than a designated hitter.  NFL players are almost like different species - compare a 350 pound lineman to a lithe wide receiver and you'll see what I mean.   But ask the USA to put together a Rugby team that can compete at the highest level and see them struggle.   

 

Of course there's no denying the peaks of scientific training, medicial treatment and other expertise in American sport - but that's a direct result of being able to provide the most funds.  Thrown enough money and priority on a task, and a society will soon start seeing results - case in point - the chinese olympic efforts.  

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5 hours ago, G_B_ said:

I can reveal I used to bowl 170mph. I too was signed by RR but just before IPL I had a groin injury from all the attention I got from the ladies due to my pace.

 

Worth it

I recall seeing you bowl at the pace of light :agree:  I was the one who used to hit you out of the park regularly during our practice matches. Unfortunately Dravid had a masterplan of saving me for playoffs but we never got there :sad:

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