In Shane Warne's shadow: The first spell |

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  • Опубликовано: 18 сен 2024
  • Download Wicket Cricket Manager: playwicketcric...
    Jarrod looks at the many spinners who came after, or even during Shane Warne's career. This episode looks at Peter Sleep, Allan Border, Craig Howard, Stuart MacGill and Brad Hogg.
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Комментарии • 41

  • @ericcartmansh
    @ericcartmansh Год назад +10

    My gosh, this has to be amongst your best videos yet. The music, the graphics. So well done

  • @monitor-mindtheover-void6712
    @monitor-mindtheover-void6712 Год назад +9

    Further shows what a legend Shane Warne was.

    • @DublinDragon
      @DublinDragon Год назад +2

      He was so good he made everyone else look bad during that time. What a legend...

  • @mikespearwood3914
    @mikespearwood3914 Год назад +13

    That post MacGill era was weird: Brad Hogg, Beau Casson, Nathan Hauritz, Jason Krejza etc. Nathan Lyon was a complete punt based on half a dozen Shield games or so!

    • @alucard81
      @alucard81 Год назад +13

      not to mention Lyon's main job at that time was a groundsman at the Adelaide Oval, the goat has come a long long way

    • @mikespearwood3914
      @mikespearwood3914 Год назад

      @@soulsphere9242 Hogg was still playing tests in 2008. Played in that notorious "monkeygate" test at the SCG, where he and Roy had a big partnership which saved Australia's innings.

  • @SirSamTheThird
    @SirSamTheThird Год назад +7

    Steve Smith, I liked the cut of his jib. Whatever happened to him. Crazy coincidence that a batter with the same name came along just a few years later.

  • @jedfenwick4754
    @jedfenwick4754 Год назад +1

    Excellent video Jarrod, probably your best yet. Well done to you, Muku, Cheyenne and the team.

  • @PotatoHead-v9o
    @PotatoHead-v9o 11 месяцев назад

    One of my favourite Jarrod Kimber videos so far, right alongside the England spin dilemma one. Applause.

  • @klweth5439
    @klweth5439 Год назад

    Im super glad ur making this series. You talk abojt it a lot on podcast so im excited

  • @baileymclellan3673
    @baileymclellan3673 Год назад +6

    cannot wait for the Bryce McGain episode

  • @pbfamous07
    @pbfamous07 Год назад

    pulitzer stuff. fantastic research and presentation. world class. thanks

  • @GaneshPatil-ip4kl
    @GaneshPatil-ip4kl 6 месяцев назад

    Great annalysis .

  • @klausn7267
    @klausn7267 Год назад

    Great video. Beutifully produced too.

  • @Hungry883
    @Hungry883 Год назад +1

    Great video

  • @sushreyomisra3261
    @sushreyomisra3261 Год назад +1

    I remember back when I was very young, I used to envy this one “all-rounder” Australia would play every time they toured the subcontinent. He would share the new ball with Mcgrath, bowling brisk fast medium. Then as the ball grew older, he would switch to a skiddy off spin to accompany Warne. We don’t think of allrounders this way, but this is literally having two cricketers in one, exactly like an allrounder. Of course I am talking about Colin Miller, who is more popular now for his hairstyles! I wonder if you could do a video on him and other bowlers with multiple skills that they used simultaneously?

    • @JarrodKimberYT
      @JarrodKimberYT  Год назад +1

      This is only part one remember.

    • @sushreyomisra3261
      @sushreyomisra3261 Год назад

      @@JarrodKimberYT Ah! I look forward to the sequel(s) then! Excellent video by the way!

    • @anirudhviswanathan3986
      @anirudhviswanathan3986 Год назад +1

      In India, our equivalent, as loose as it is, was Karsan Ghavri, during the 70s, when we didn't have many new ball bowlers in particular, he'd bowl left arm medium pace opening, then he'd switch to be a part-timer off spin alongside our spin quartet. Of course he's way more known for his fielding at short leg.

    • @sushreyomisra3261
      @sushreyomisra3261 Год назад

      @@anirudhviswanathan3986 Yes, Karsan Ghavri is an excellent example, I believe there’s a RUclips video of him getting two wickets with pace and spin in the same Test in Australia. Are you confusing the short leg fielding with Eknath Solkar though? I believe Solkar also bowled both seam up and spin, although his would have been more in the Symonds category. Apparently it wasn’t so uncommon in the 60s and 70s, possibly inspired by Sir Garfield Sobers?

    • @anirudhviswanathan3986
      @anirudhviswanathan3986 Год назад

      ​@@sushreyomisra3261 oh yeah it was Solkar who was the forward short leg great. My bad 😅😅

  • @bigbadbyrnes
    @bigbadbyrnes Год назад

    Very cool

  • @EmsThaBreaks441
    @EmsThaBreaks441 Год назад

    When is the J Kimber episode of this series coming?

  • @meaderanizer228
    @meaderanizer228 Год назад

    No Michael Bevan!

  • @francissreckofabian01
    @francissreckofabian01 Год назад +1

    I was there when AB took the 11 wickets., Oh how we laughed. The batting was poor.

    • @rw-xf4cb
      @rw-xf4cb Год назад +1

      WI in their day could declare their first innings without a run on the board and still win - their pace attack was first class! In ODI it was survival until Richards came on.

    • @anweshchatterjee7595
      @anweshchatterjee7595 Год назад +2

      ​@@rw-xf4cbagainst, say, New Zealand or India, that's actually probably true. Scary.

    • @rw-xf4cb
      @rw-xf4cb Год назад

      @@anweshchatterjee7595 Australia in the Kim Hughes days? Australia only played due to Border's sheer stubborn bloody mindedness - a tough little nugget....They suffered a lot from Chappell, Marsh and Lillee leaving at the same time...

    • @rw-xf4cb
      @rw-xf4cb Год назад

      @@anweshchatterjee7595 India took their time to find their off sub-continent success, Dhoni is probably the guy I admire to turn them around.

    • @anweshchatterjee7595
      @anweshchatterjee7595 Год назад

      @@rw-xf4cb yes that wasn't the best Aussie team, but you can never be too sure when Lillee and Thompson are running in with the new ball. As for Dhoni, his team got whitewashed and humiliated in England then Australia the same year we won the world cup, and he retired mid series next time in Australia. Not the greatest showing. Everyone admires him for his limited overs prowess, quite possibly the greatest white ball captain ever of any team, but overseas tests weren't his forté. Ganguly and Kohli are the men i credit for India's test revolutions.

  • @yetanothercsstudent
    @yetanothercsstudent Год назад +3

    Frist?