Yeah but ya could also take pride because the only reason he could even bowl vs you guys was because he was one of the only bowlers smart enough to see the beenfit of doing an offseason in county club cricket instead of the Aussie leagues. Something our bowlers today dont even really do anymore. And look at the luck since
Hey! I am a spin bowler and I live doing it. It feels like a super power being able to make a ball move from one place to another with your hands. And the fact that other people struggle and end up just bowling pace makes me feel special. I love spin bowling.
Physics of Spin Bowling : When you Spin the Ball , you give it a lot of Revolutions (RPM ) . When the Ball hits the ground (pitch ) , the Revolution comes to an abrupt halt . This causes difference in inertia and makes the Ball turn in another direction . It is helpful if the Ball is old and the pitch is dry and without grass . Pitches in the Subcontinent countries generally are made that way to facilitate Spin Bowling .
@SHATNER MOHANTY No. The 'spin', depending on it's attitude and the angle with which it strikes the pitch dictates it's travel after the bounce. It also curves the ball through the air without even touching the ground due to a twist of the wrist and the ball rolling off the fingers on delivery. This is also affected by polishing one side of the ball, therefore causing less friction with the air on the polished side. I have no idea why you mentioned RPM (Revolutions Per Minute), as that is a measurement. The 'revolution' (singular in your description, somehow), does not come to an abrupt halt. Much of the energy, indeed is converted to heat and sound as a result of an impact with the ground, but it is not entirely halted. There are some good 'slo-mo' videos of Snooker and Pool spin shots that demonstrate this very well, as well as videos concerning conservation of momentum that may be helpful.
@@Broken-Silencer I may be mistaken but you seem to be mixing up swing and spin bowling there and throwing them together as the same thing. In spin bowling, the faster the ball rotates the more it'll usually move in the direction of rotation after hitting the ground, which is in line with what Shatner had said, although he was incorrect in saying the spin comes to a halt as there'll still be a small amount of spin especially if the ball is newer and doesn't grip the pitch as much. The drift you see in the air in spin bowling is different to that of swing bowling. In swing bowling as you said, shining one side results in less friction, which causes the lateral movement of the ball. In spin bowling however, the rotations of the ball are usually at an angle close to perpendicular to the direction of motion. The resultant angular momentum from these two motion leads to the drift of the ball, which for a leg spinner would be to the right, and for an off spinner would be to the left. Hopes this helps clear things up.
Warne’s ball to Gatting was his first against England. The English batsmen knew very little about him, except for the fact he was a leg-break bowler - this means they knew what direction he would spin the ball off the pitch most of the time. Warne bowled the ball and it drifted well down past his legs, making it look easy to play, then it ripped off the pitch and took his off-stump. Gatting literally could not believe it, you can see his bewilderment in the video, he didn’t realise he had been bowled at first. I remember t-shirts were printed depicting this moment, with the caption ‘You’ve been Warne’d’ and they were very popular!
I always loved spin bowling. There are many different deliveries that you can bowl. The best bowlers have the same action but the ball spins in a variety of different ways.
0:57 Also well-aided by the footmarks by the pace bowlers slamming on the crease while bowling on the opposite end in other overs. 2:10 Same thing, but he also spun up to make Gatting ('Gat', rhymes with 'hat') adjusts the eye line, but it was the ball hitting on the footmark that gave the impact.
i respect the fact your learn about the sport and i notice you are mixing the different types of bowling. Pace bowling the ball travels about 120-150 km/h and either swing or go straight, whereas spin bowling the ball travels about 60-90 km/h and most time turns I like the energy u have towards learning this game. Its really fun
This era of Australian cricket was insane! The baggy green was invincible! Miss watching them as a kid I never watched or was interested in cricket at all unless Australia was playing because you know shit was gonna pop off!
Players near the bat often say that Warne's deliveries actually make a buzzing sound in the air so great is the spin. Few people can put that much spin on the ball,, and of those who can few get many wickets because they are not accurate enough. The Warne secret is the control and relentless accuracy. He can hit the same spot on the pitch over and over again, varying flight, spin, and spin type. Warne is an "orthodox" right-arm leg spinner, also called a wrist spinner. There are also finger spinners, or off spinners, whose normal delivery breaks from off to leg. Then there's a whole different nomenclature for left-arm spinners. In one of the most celebrated Ashes Tests in England, all of the 20 Australian wickets were taken by a pair of English finger spinners, Jim Laker, who took 19, and Tony Lock, who got the other one. The pitch in that match was "sticky" and particularly helpful to spin bowlers.
@average american... he bruv... Malinga does not belong to the spin category of bowlers. There are mainly just 2 types of bowlers : 1. Fast Bowlers (Malinga etc.) 2. Spin Bowlers (Warne etc.) Of course under both these basic categories there are sub categories but you should know that the confusion here is cause you were under the impression that "swing bowling" is the same as "spin bowling". That's not the case. Malinga can swing the ball but that does not mean he's a spinner.
Btw watch Muttiah Muralidaran... he's the leading wicket taker in the world and holds the Guinness world record for it. (Greatest known spin Bowler upto date... beating Shane Warne)
Every cricketer who played during the Warne era tried to emulate this master craftsman, even if it was just in the nets (where we would practice). Every 10 balls or so we might be able to get one to pitch in the right spot and spin in the right direction. The rest were either too short, too wide or didn't spin and would be absolutely smacked to all corners. Those who persisted and played at higher levels could never quite bowl with the same control, vary their deliveries sufficiently (if you bowl the same way every ball, the batsman can predict and play each ball easily) or maintain the mental strength that Warne did. The latter could almost be said to be his greatest asset. He was never out of a contest, a prime example being the Amazing Adelaide Test in 2006 when everyone, including his team-mates, thought the result a foregone conclusion. Amazing indeed!
I remember watching the Gatting ball live in 1993. I was sitting in my grandad’s kitchen watching it on an old 12 inch colour TV. When the ball swung to the leg side in the air, I remember thinking “that’s awful” lol, expecting it to continue on and go a yard down leg side. When it turned a mile i was amazed and didn’t believe what i’d seen. It’s hard to get across to non-cricket people just how incredible that ball was. Before Warnie, bowlers just didn’t do things like that. Leg spinners in those days were rare and had a reputation for bowling one or two bad balls an over. So when he first came on I thought great! We’ll get plenty of runs off this guy. This was 1993 though and there wasn’t the 24/7 global sports coverage that there is today. So hardly anyone outside of Australia knew anything about Warne before he rocked up in England for his first ever Ashes test. Gatting himself admitted afterwards that he’d never seen Warne bowl before. Imagine not knowing anything about your opponents in professional sport these days! I actually went to the last day of the last test at the Oval that series. England won the game but were already 4-0 down by then. R.I.P Warnie, another part of my youth gone.
Spin bowling is quite difficult to master, but it is very rewarding in wickets because it is so unpredictable. I’m a big spin bowler and I have the highest amount of wickets in my club. Shane Warne was a massive idol to me R.I.P the legend.
My favourite bowler of all time. It's worth nothing that most of these top 5 were in big moments in big games. He knew how to turn up the pressure on batsmen when it mattered most. It also helped that he had one of the best medium fast bowlers in Glenn McGrath at the other end most of the time. Those 2 were a deadly tandem.
There are 2 types of spin bowler, finger spinners and wrist spinners. Finger spinners are much more common and use their fingers to generate the spin. This is usually front and back spin with a little side spin, so the ball does not change direction on impact with the ground that much, but the speed and bounce after it pitches changes. Wrist spinners use the movement of their wrists as well as finger placement to generate spin. This generates the insane side spin that Warne was capable of, but it can really injure the bowler, hence why there are very few wrist spinners. Wrist spinners have a lot more different deliveries than finger spinners, but their deliveries are usually more unpredictable (for both the batter and the fielding team) than orthodox finger spinners.
You can't always tell what team it is by the colour of their strip. They change from year to year. We (Aussies) are usually in some form of green & gold bit not always. We had black once (maybe it was a VERY dark green). England have played in red & dark blue. A cricket tragic like me will know who is wearing what. Luv our lads!
Spin bowling is more technical based rather than speed. There's heaps of variations of spin, most common being off spin and leg spin. When bowled, your wrist has to twist while in the action to enforce revolutions on the ball (spin on ball). The next technical aspect is the magnus effect. The magnus effect induces drift on the ball. Then the last aspect is the flight. You can bowl loopy balls, so balls that float in the air, or you can bowl balls that drop.
Leg Spin as Warne is bowling is reckoned to be the hardest of the bowling styles. Very few legspinners master the art sufficiently to get to the top levels of the game, if they do, they can be incredible. The main difficulty is being accurate, if you pitch too short, the batsman can step back, see what the ball does and play it where he wants. If it is too long, the batsman can hit the ball before it bounces, usually out of the park in my experience. Warne was bowling around 50-55mph in these clips.
The number 3, the ball to Gatting was voted the ball of the century (The Gatting Ball). Shane Warne was an artist, how he could turn a ball, some would say he could make it turn on glass, was amazing but I think what made him so great was three things, his control, the drift he produced (meaning, he would put so many RPMs on the ball it would curve in the air before hitting the pitch), and how he used to 'set up' batsman for that one ball that would get them out.
Shane Warne's typical speeds were around 50mph. His faster balls were about 60mph. He was what is called a "leg spinner". That is, the ball spins from the leg to the off side. This is also known as "wrist spin", where the spin is imparted on the ball by the action of the wrist, rather than the fingers. All those in the video were his standard type delivery - the leg spinner. He also had a wrong'un (aka googly), which turns from off to leg, but he rarely bowled that, particularly later in his career after a shoulder injury, and a top spinner, which goes straight and is generally faster. The other major delivery Warne had was the "flipper". The above ones were similar techniques, varying by the position and angle of the wrist at release. The flipper used a different technique, with him flipping the ball out the front of his hand with his fingers. That was his fastest ball, 60 or so mph, and straight. He also regularly claimed to have developed a knew delivery. But that was all about psyching the opposition out. The amount of spin depends on several factors - the rpm of the ball, the angle of that ball (the amount of "side spin" and "over spin"), the pitch surface, the condition of the pitch and the condition of the ball. The foot marks of the bowlers create what is called the "rough". If the ball pitches in the rough its behaviour can be unpredictable - it can spin more or less, or bounce more or less, which creates doubt in the batsman's mind. #3 is known as "the Gatting Ball" and the "Ball of the [20th] Century". It was his first ball in the match, the first ball he bowled in a Test Match in England. The amount of rpm he put on the ball caused the ball to swing in the air from off to leg before pitching and spinning back to the off. The swing in the air is caused by the Magnus effect.
But he just like inda his favourite team is india and he thinks india is the best team and its not i think he gets more indian fans and makes money from that
A big part of spin bowling is deception also called "outthinking the batsman". Typically a spin bowler will bowl 2 or 3 very similar balls then vary the delivery in some way (speed, amount of spin) to deceive the batsman. Warne had the ability to vary the pace and spin without a noticeable change in his bowling action so the batsman has no idea the ball is different to the previous ones until it hits the pitch.
Getting that kind of turn is difficult but it can be done. I've done it a handful of times. What is really difficult is being able to do it with precision, accuracy and consistency. Leg-spin bowling (back of the hand spin bowling) is very difficult and getting the ball to land in the right area is a real skill. A small error means that the batter will be able to hit you away easily, so you have to be very good at it to play at international level. For that reason, there aren't that many real top-class leg-spin bowlers. Off-spin (from the front of the hand, which turns the other way) tends to turn less but is much easier to control (and can be very effective, too) and thus offspinners are much more common than legspinners.
Spin bowling is done at about 50-60 mph, medimum or swing is some where around 77 mph, but fast is 90+ mph, with fast you get about 1/3 of a second to react. Also there are different types of spin. Wrist spin or finger spin, then it breaks down again to off spin (right hand finger), Left-arm orthodox spin (left hand finger), leg spin (right hand wrist) and left-arm unorthodox spin (left hand wrist). Years ago I could do off spin, but due to indoor cricket I found I could do fast. With indoor cricket you get perfect pitches, which as a spin bowler is the last thing you want, as you want an area that has cracks or been scruffed up, it helps the ball come out in odd directions.
0:15 Malinga is a pace bowler, so he's not in this conversation. You're thinking of Muttiah (Mit-TIRE) Muralitharan (Moo-ra-LITH-a-run). Both spin bowlers, different mechanics. th-cam.com/video/vlWYcuaTosc/w-d-xo.html As I watched the late Terry Jenner's video again: Warne uses a relaxed split-finger grip and action with a screwball action but turned with the thumb going down. th-cam.com/video/Si48Ch1EbRQ/w-d-xo.html Murali (MOO-ra-lee, his nickname) uses a forkball grip, you turn outwards (pinky side down).
@@nuxxism Ah, yes. I lost that video on my list, but because I was playing an old baseball game on my PS2, I was trying to 'translate' back to baseball.
He bowls it around 80km/h. Shane Warne is nick named the king of spin. The ball he bowled to Mike batting is labbelled as the ball of the century. He was my all time favourite cricketer. He had an amazing cricket mind and he would have captained Australia but he was a little naughty off the field. 🤣
Warne was a leg spinner and that is the hardest form of spin bowling. It's a very high risk reward tactic. When conditions are right it can be unplayable, when conditions are bad you can be hit all over the ground.
up until Warne, most spinners were smacked around a lot, they'd get wickets through batters being too aggressive and misreading the ball. Warne was so consistent and could spin so much that he barely went for runs. He and Glenn McGrath were the best tandem act at either end. No one could hit McGrath's perfect line and length jamming them up one over, they'd get frustrated because Warne gave away nothing either the next over, but they could try and hit him as the ball was often in hitting zones that McGrath didn't give them, but because of his control and spin it just couldn't be played against defensively or offensively. This video shows his biggest spinners, but his biggest weapon was the Flipper, he'd put top spin on a straight ball after most of an over of massive side spin, the top spin would make the ball go dead straight, fast and low, best one I saw barely bounced 10cm off the ground. Caused so many bowled and LBW
Shane Warne is easily Australia's best spin bowler of all time, some would argue best bowler overall but that's a matter of opinion. #3 is classed as "The Ball of the Century". Spin bowling obviously has a different technique to Swing and Pace bowling, with all types focusing on particular things with their chosen style. For spin there's two types of spin: Off Spin (or Off Break) bowling and Leg Spin/Break. Off Spin is more of your finger heavy type of bowling to generate revolutions of the ball, whilst Leg Spin is more of your wrist type of technique. (Using a right hand as the example) An Off Spin delivery will come out of the hand via the index finger side of the hand, your arm is generally vertical and straight at the point of release. A Leg Spin delivery comes out around the fourth finger or even the pinky (depending on the bowler), your arm is typically less vertically inclined than an Off Spin bowler. Where spin bowlers differ in terms of ball placement in the hand compared to pace or medium/swing bowlers is that the ball is positioned with one side of the ball is facing the palm, and you have your index and middle fingers more spread out along the seam whilst using just your fingertips along it. Pace and medium bowlers tend to have the index and middle fingers run fully along the seam, and the ball positioned with the seam against the palm.
For #3 the ball is esp difficult to play as if you look very closely you will see the ball drifts after delivery and changes direction in the air due to the magnus effect @2:08. Then spins hard in the opposite direction. Spin speed varies typically 45-55 mph. Some bowlers will delivery as fast as the low 80s but rarely.
Spin bowling is an art, finger spinners are quite common but wrist spinners are rare. A wrist spinner like Shane Warne can put more spin on the ball but it is a much more difficult skill.
At 1:46 the umpire looking astounded is one of the best in the business, as well as being one of the nicest men in the worl, Dickie Bird. It is very rare for a sports umpire, judge or referee to be so universally loved by the public. I can't think of another, from any sport, who has a lifesize bronze statue erected in their honour. Dickie's statue in Barnsley, South Yorkshire is testament to a great impartial umpire.
Shane Warne from Australia and Muttaiah Muralitharan from Sri Lanka was the greatest spin bowling revelries. They played more or less the same era. They both could win matches single handedly. Warne is right-arm leg-spin bowler, Muralitharan is right-arm off-spin bowler.
It is not only spinning, it is about playing with batsmen mind , deceiving, making a plot and trapping, you should check how he bowled prior to that actual bowl
The average spin bowl goes at like 75-80 kmph u do the conversion to mph and it is easy to spin the bowl after some practice but not many people will even get close to the amount that he spins it. It’s insane
And it scared the English so much from ball 1 they lost confidence against him for the rest of the Ashes series, didn't really ever get that confidence back against him to be honest.
No 3 is the ball of the century. In that ball warne imparted greater spin due to which it drifted away from the batsman, so he thought the ball is coming at him towards his foot , but it landed outside and curved back in to hit the stump.
The first one was titled the ball of the century because it turned so much to almost 90 degree angle and it's completely impossible to do that as a bowler but Shane Warne did it.
It’s to be said it’s a combination of many things. They use the same ball until it wears out. So while it’s brand new it’s no good for spinning. As it wears out and side is shined and the other side remains rough. THAT combined with a quality spin bowler gets the incredible results you see there
I can bowl with both arms in every variation. I am a "switch hitter" batting also. Where i am better left foot forward at playing defensively in front and attacking off the backfoot and vs spinners. And when i go right foot forward im better attacking off the front foot and playing defensively off the back foot. But yeah i played as a Right arm medium fast all-rounder but i also bowled offspin if our spinners were having luck. I retired like 2 years ago(i am 33 now) But yeah Warney was one of a kind. Never seen another legspinner come close to him and i played basically 2 leagues down from him. So i saw alot. He literally made Legspin cool. Every kid wanted to be him and tried copying him to no avail
Malinga is a 'Seamer' and Shane Warne is a 'Spinner'. Two different things. Spin pretty much depends on the wrist work. Whereas for seam you just need a shine on the ball and good pace.
Is it hard to do? It's the most difficult art in cricket. The ball comes out of the back of the hand in a way that's really hard to control, and not only do they get the ball to spin one way, with a slight variation that most batsmen can't pick, they can get it to spin the other way (called googly) or top spin, or hurry on. In this history of the game there has never been a leg-spin bowler like Shane Warne. He mastered all of it. 2nd on the all-time list of test bowling wicket takers.
Number 3, was the ball which introduced Warne to the world, he had played a little without much success in Test cricket, then came on to bowl against Mike Gatting, the former England captain, who famously liked his food. It was voted the ball of the century, and there were a lot of balls bowled in the 20th Century! It was so good they wrote a song about it. Here it is: th-cam.com/video/wa_iG_W0gvk/w-d-xo.html
Few things Glad you did this video as i suggested because shane was an absolute wizard. The curving movement through the air in pace bowling is called 'swing' bowling and not spin bowling. Spin bowling as bowling like you have just watched in that video. Ita much slower and relies on the condition of the balll, seam placement amd the condition of the pitch. Its a real art form. I can spin the ball in both directions. The 'h' in MS Dhonis name is a silent 'h'. Finally i love that you are so passionate about this beautiful game. Love your videos.
The h is not silent. Hindi phonemes and most other Indian languages' phonemes are different than English phonemes. There are certain phonemes English language doesn't have ex- "dha" phoneme. Its pronounced by flicking tongue from alveolar ridge to the back side of the front teeth along with blowing air out. "Dh" in Dhoni is one single phoneme.
He is one of the best spin bowlers of all time but a few batsmen made mistakes as if the ball pitches outside leg stump you cannot be out LBW so they could have just padded those deliveries away
Spin is different swing bowling, swing happens in the air and fast bowlers do it at speeds around 80-90 miles per hour, spinners bowl slower and ball spins after it hits the deck, spin is better when slower but spinners use quicker ones too to deceive batsmen
Ok, been watching a few of your reactions, and reading the comments I'm disappointed nobody has pointed out a few things to you. Judging by your comments, there are a few things I'm not sure you are aware of, which you should know to further your understanding. Firstly, each change of over is bowled from opposite ends of the pitch. They are not all bowling from the same end, so depending on the condition of the pitch, the wind, and other variables, will dictate which bowler bowls from which end. Next, a couple of things about different types of bowlers. Spin bowlers like Shane Warne are looking for the footmarks from the bowler at the other end to help the ball grip and spin. Spin bowlers generally don't bowl in the early overs, because they are waiting for these marks to appear, and also for the ball to get a little rough, to also aid in gripping the ground. Medium pacers and quicks are generally bowling with the seam of the ball upright. They get movement through the air, and then aim for movement off the seam. So when a quick bowler achieves that turn off the ground, isn't spin, but movement off the seam. The especially aim for cracks in the pitch which open up as the game goes on. Look at a day 1 pitch compared to a day 5 pitch in a test match to see how much a pitch can change. When a quick bowls a slower ball, it can look like he is trying to spin it, but is actually looking to deceive the batsman in his change of pace. Medium pacers can occasionally add spin, but are generally also looking for the seam. Hopefully more people can add more here to help explain some more of the finer nuances of the different bowling styles. Loving watching your reactions, you always look like you are loving what you do!! Keep up the great work!! 😊😊
Generally with a leg-spinner, the ball will drift in the opposite direction to the spin. Warne was never a great bowler of the wrong’un (or googly), which looks to be a leg-spinner (spins from the leg-side) but the ball is bowled over the back of the hand, and spins in the opposite direction. He was a great exponent of the top-spinner (ball drops in the air and bounces straight through) and the flipper (ball skids straight through, faster and lower). It’s an extremely difficult craft to learn and very difficult to maintain accuracy. I used to bowl some, but left-handed, which are called Chinamen, for some obscure, historical reason. There are a lot more around these days in T20 cricket. The best in the world are probably Rashid Khan, a young Afghan bowler, and Yasir Shah, a Pakistani.
@@pauldobson2529 no the drift has do with the action along with the side spin imparted on the ball Stuart macgill wasnt able to drift the ball although his ball spun a lot, same goes for Muralidharan. Warne wasn't that good at Google but his flipper was a top notch, nobody can bowl flipper like him. Now bowling Google isn't that tough especially if you continously keep bowling it, So i don't rate Rashid khan and likes much high. But Yasir Shah seems good although his bowl doesn't drift either nor could he bowl flipper or other variation that well. His bowl just spins, that's all.
The Number 3 is actually termed as the "Ball of the Millennium" This the speed of a basic SPIN BOWLER won't more than 50mph but that's sometimes even more difficult to bat as batsman has to judge the spin and hit harder because the lack of pace on the ball EDIT: As T Croft pointed out it's "Ball of the Century"
It's easy enough to spin the ball so it turns - the real skill is in controlling it and getting it land where you want it. It's much harder to control the ball when you're putting a lot of revs on it.
Malinga is not a spin bowler.. he is fast swing bowler..fast bowlers have long run up and speed ranges from 125kmph to 160kmph...Spin bowlers doesn't have long runups and speed ranges from 60kmph to 100kmph but their bowls actually turns way more than fast bowlers...and there are more types of spinners
Some terms you might find useful are 'off stump' and 'leg stump'. So if the ball "pitched outside leg stump" it means that it bounced beyond the line of the stump nearest the batsmans legs. Great videos keep them up
Yea shane is famous for his leg spin. But theres alot more ways like off spin or the googly. Check out Tahir from South Africa. Truly one of the worlds best...
In my life time and I am in my 50's I have never seen anyone spin as sharply, accurately as consistently as Warne and Muttiah Muralitharan. Not many people can do that. Unfortunately you have not been able to see the set up of the wickets. An over in cricket is six balls, sometimes a bowler will set a batter for a number of overs before he takes his wicket. Shane Warne used to provide theatre in his bowling over a number of overs that used to bamboozle his prey. Test match cricket (played over 5 days in all white kit) is the pinnacle of the sport there are various levels of pyjama (coloured clothing) cricket which require less skill, some call these forms of cricket "hit and giggle" but that is not entirely fair. Shorter forms of cricket are played on flatter pitches allowing the batters to have the upper hand. Your rule of thumb should be that the shorter the game the less skill is required. But I am enjoying watching you have fun. You might want to look test match crowds and chanting at matches. Fancy dress day is Saturday.
I would leaves this here, you can agree or disagree but i see to two types of bowling like this: Fast bowling: easier to learn harder to master Spin bowling: Harder to learn but easier to master. Yet I will say again this is how I see it.
Truly incredible bowler. Joy to watch him, even as an Englishman, with him tearing us apart
Me too! But I aIways put my head in my hands when the commentator would say "Warne's coming on to bowl". I thought "Oh God, please no!"
What afterall, is a great artist who can't transcend boundaries.
Yeah but ya could also take pride because the only reason he could even bowl vs you guys was because he was one of the only bowlers smart enough to see the beenfit of doing an offseason in county club cricket instead of the Aussie leagues.
Something our bowlers today dont even really do anymore. And look at the luck since
In my view , Warne is the best spinner of all time .
@@Gamingwithshubham284 leg spin
Hey! I am a spin bowler and I live doing it. It feels like a super power being able to make a ball move from one place to another with your hands. And the fact that other people struggle and end up just bowling pace makes me feel special. I love spin bowling.
Physics of Spin Bowling :
When you Spin the Ball , you give it a lot of Revolutions (RPM ) . When the Ball hits the ground (pitch ) , the Revolution comes to an abrupt halt . This causes difference in inertia and makes the Ball turn in another direction .
It is helpful if the Ball is old and the pitch is dry and without grass . Pitches in the Subcontinent countries generally are made that way to facilitate Spin Bowling .
cool
@SHATNER MOHANTY No. The 'spin', depending on it's attitude and the angle with which it strikes the pitch dictates it's travel after the bounce. It also curves the ball through the air without even touching the ground due to a twist of the wrist and the ball rolling off the fingers on delivery. This is also affected by polishing one side of the ball, therefore causing less friction with the air on the polished side. I have no idea why you mentioned RPM (Revolutions Per Minute), as that is a measurement. The 'revolution' (singular in your description, somehow), does not come to an abrupt halt. Much of the energy, indeed is converted to heat and sound as a result of an impact with the ground, but it is not entirely halted. There are some good 'slo-mo' videos of Snooker and Pool spin shots that demonstrate this very well, as well as videos concerning conservation of momentum that may be helpful.
Broken Silence 👍👍
@@Broken-Silencer I may be mistaken but you seem to be mixing up swing and spin bowling there and throwing them together as the same thing. In spin bowling, the faster the ball rotates the more it'll usually move in the direction of rotation after hitting the ground, which is in line with what Shatner had said, although he was incorrect in saying the spin comes to a halt as there'll still be a small amount of spin especially if the ball is newer and doesn't grip the pitch as much. The drift you see in the air in spin bowling is different to that of swing bowling. In swing bowling as you said, shining one side results in less friction, which causes the lateral movement of the ball. In spin bowling however, the rotations of the ball are usually at an angle close to perpendicular to the direction of motion. The resultant angular momentum from these two motion leads to the drift of the ball, which for a leg spinner would be to the right, and for an off spinner would be to the left. Hopes this helps clear things up.
Topspin produces a dip in the pre-pitch trajectory of the ball due to Bernoulli's principle
Warne’s ball to Gatting was his first against England. The English batsmen knew very little about him, except for the fact he was a leg-break bowler - this means they knew what direction he would spin the ball off the pitch most of the time. Warne bowled the ball and it drifted well down past his legs, making it look easy to play, then it ripped off the pitch and took his off-stump. Gatting literally could not believe it, you can see his bewilderment in the video, he didn’t realise he had been bowled at first. I remember t-shirts were printed depicting this moment, with the caption ‘You’ve been Warne’d’ and they were very popular!
He passed away today... 😔
Rip Legend
#the king
I always loved spin bowling. There are many different deliveries that you can bowl. The best bowlers have the same action but the ball spins in a variety of different ways.
0:57 Also well-aided by the footmarks by the pace bowlers slamming on the crease while bowling on the opposite end in other overs. 2:10 Same thing, but he also spun up to make Gatting ('Gat', rhymes with 'hat') adjusts the eye line, but it was the ball hitting on the footmark that gave the impact.
i respect the fact your learn about the sport and i notice you are mixing the different types of bowling. Pace bowling the ball travels about 120-150 km/h and either swing or go straight, whereas spin bowling the ball travels about 60-90 km/h and most time turns
I like the energy u have towards learning this game. Its really fun
This era of Australian cricket was insane! The baggy green was invincible! Miss watching them as a kid I never watched or was interested in cricket at all unless Australia was playing because you know shit was gonna pop off!
Number 3 was Warne's first ever ball in International Test Cricket. Announced himself with what was called "the ball of the century"
Players near the bat often say that Warne's deliveries actually make a buzzing sound in the air so great is the spin. Few people can put that much spin on the ball,, and of those who can few get many wickets because they are not accurate enough. The Warne secret is the control and relentless accuracy. He can hit the same spot on the pitch over and over again, varying flight, spin, and spin type. Warne is an "orthodox" right-arm leg spinner, also called a wrist spinner. There are also finger spinners, or off spinners, whose normal delivery breaks from off to leg. Then there's a whole different nomenclature for left-arm spinners.
In one of the most celebrated Ashes Tests in England, all of the 20 Australian wickets were taken by a pair of English finger spinners, Jim Laker, who took 19, and Tony Lock, who got the other one. The pitch in that match was "sticky" and particularly helpful to spin bowlers.
@average american... he bruv... Malinga does not belong to the spin category of bowlers.
There are mainly just 2 types of bowlers :
1. Fast Bowlers (Malinga etc.)
2. Spin Bowlers (Warne etc.)
Of course under both these basic categories there are sub categories but you should know that the confusion here is cause you were under the impression that "swing bowling" is the same as "spin bowling". That's not the case. Malinga can swing the ball but that does not mean he's a spinner.
Btw watch Muttiah Muralidaran... he's the leading wicket taker in the world and holds the Guinness world record for it. (Greatest known spin Bowler upto date... beating Shane Warne)
One of the most underrated things about spin bowling is the speed at which they bowl it. People almost concentrate on just the turn the ball gets only
Every cricketer who played during the Warne era tried to emulate this master craftsman, even if it was just in the nets (where we would practice). Every 10 balls or so we might be able to get one to pitch in the right spot and spin in the right direction. The rest were either too short, too wide or didn't spin and would be absolutely smacked to all corners. Those who persisted and played at higher levels could never quite bowl with the same control, vary their deliveries sufficiently (if you bowl the same way every ball, the batsman can predict and play each ball easily) or maintain the mental strength that Warne did. The latter could almost be said to be his greatest asset. He was never out of a contest, a prime example being the Amazing Adelaide Test in 2006 when everyone, including his team-mates, thought the result a foregone conclusion. Amazing indeed!
I remember watching the Gatting ball live in 1993.
I was sitting in my grandad’s kitchen watching it on an old 12 inch colour TV. When the ball swung to the leg side in the air, I remember thinking “that’s awful” lol, expecting it to continue on and go a yard down leg side.
When it turned a mile i was amazed and didn’t believe what i’d seen. It’s hard to get across to non-cricket people just how incredible that ball was.
Before Warnie, bowlers just didn’t do things like that.
Leg spinners in those days were rare and had a reputation for bowling one or two bad balls an over.
So when he first came on I thought great! We’ll get plenty of runs off this guy.
This was 1993 though and there wasn’t the 24/7 global sports coverage that there is today. So hardly anyone outside of Australia knew anything about Warne before he rocked up in England for his first ever Ashes test.
Gatting himself admitted afterwards that he’d never seen Warne bowl before. Imagine not knowing anything about your opponents in professional sport these days!
I actually went to the last day of the last test at the Oval that series. England won the game but were already 4-0 down by then.
R.I.P Warnie, another part of my youth gone.
One of the best spinners to ever walk the earth 🔥🔥🔥
The best leg spinner for sure.
@@distortedsoul27 Ye the best not one of
Warne and Murli are the best ever
@@kaistoner2931 actually Murali is the best because he is equally good in both odi and test.
Murli was a better spin bowler
Spin bowling is quite difficult to master, but it is very rewarding in wickets because it is so unpredictable. I’m a big spin bowler and I have the highest amount of wickets in my club. Shane Warne was a massive idol to me R.I.P the legend.
My favourite bowler of all time. It's worth nothing that most of these top 5 were in big moments in big games. He knew how to turn up the pressure on batsmen when it mattered most. It also helped that he had one of the best medium fast bowlers in Glenn McGrath at the other end most of the time. Those 2 were a deadly tandem.
He turned a 1-0 ashes into 5-0 Amazing Adelaide was his doing and it ruined England.
RIP to Shane Warne, a legend of the game!
RIP Legend. He is why I bowl spin, my idol
There are 2 types of spin bowler, finger spinners and wrist spinners. Finger spinners are much more common and use their fingers to generate the spin. This is usually front and back spin with a little side spin, so the ball does not change direction on impact with the ground that much, but the speed and bounce after it pitches changes. Wrist spinners use the movement of their wrists as well as finger placement to generate spin. This generates the insane side spin that Warne was capable of, but it can really injure the bowler, hence why there are very few wrist spinners. Wrist spinners have a lot more different deliveries than finger spinners, but their deliveries are usually more unpredictable (for both the batter and the fielding team) than orthodox finger spinners.
You can't always tell what team it is by the colour of their strip. They change from year to year. We (Aussies) are usually in some form of green & gold bit not always. We had black once (maybe it was a VERY dark green). England have played in red & dark blue. A cricket tragic like me will know who is wearing what. Luv our lads!
Spin bowling is more technical based rather than speed. There's heaps of variations of spin, most common being off spin and leg spin. When bowled, your wrist has to twist while in the action to enforce revolutions on the ball (spin on ball). The next technical aspect is the magnus effect. The magnus effect induces drift on the ball. Then the last aspect is the flight. You can bowl loopy balls, so balls that float in the air, or you can bowl balls that drop.
Leg Spin as Warne is bowling is reckoned to be the hardest of the bowling styles. Very few legspinners master the art sufficiently to get to the top levels of the game, if they do, they can be incredible. The main difficulty is being accurate, if you pitch too short, the batsman can step back, see what the ball does and play it where he wants. If it is too long, the batsman can hit the ball before it bounces, usually out of the park in my experience. Warne was bowling around 50-55mph in these clips.
The number 3, the ball to Gatting was voted the ball of the century (The Gatting Ball). Shane Warne was an artist, how he could turn a ball, some would say he could make it turn on glass, was amazing but I think what made him so great was three things, his control, the drift he produced (meaning, he would put so many RPMs on the ball it would curve in the air before hitting the pitch), and how he used to 'set up' batsman for that one ball that would get them out.
Shane Warne's typical speeds were around 50mph. His faster balls were about 60mph.
He was what is called a "leg spinner". That is, the ball spins from the leg to the off side. This is also known as "wrist spin", where the spin is imparted on the ball by the action of the wrist, rather than the fingers.
All those in the video were his standard type delivery - the leg spinner.
He also had a wrong'un (aka googly), which turns from off to leg, but he rarely bowled that, particularly later in his career after a shoulder injury, and a top spinner, which goes straight and is generally faster.
The other major delivery Warne had was the "flipper". The above ones were similar techniques, varying by the position and angle of the wrist at release. The flipper used a different technique, with him flipping the ball out the front of his hand with his fingers. That was his fastest ball, 60 or so mph, and straight.
He also regularly claimed to have developed a knew delivery. But that was all about psyching the opposition out.
The amount of spin depends on several factors - the rpm of the ball, the angle of that ball (the amount of "side spin" and "over spin"), the pitch surface, the condition of the pitch and the condition of the ball.
The foot marks of the bowlers create what is called the "rough". If the ball pitches in the rough its behaviour can be unpredictable - it can spin more or less, or bounce more or less, which creates doubt in the batsman's mind.
#3 is known as "the Gatting Ball" and the "Ball of the [20th] Century". It was his first ball in the match, the first ball he bowled in a Test Match in England. The amount of rpm he put on the ball caused the ball to swing in the air from off to leg before pitching and spinning back to the off. The swing in the air is caused by the Magnus effect.
How has he still not reacted to Ben stokes ashes glory or Ben stokes 2019 World Cup performance final
@Mark Bronson dude he's making money from cricket fans. Don't be rude man when England won World Cup I was very happy
But he just like inda his favourite team is india and he thinks india is the best team and its not i think he gets more indian fans and makes money from that
Ben stokes isn’t that good
Rip Legend
A big part of spin bowling is deception also called "outthinking the batsman". Typically a spin bowler will bowl 2 or 3 very similar balls then vary the delivery in some way (speed, amount of spin) to deceive the batsman. Warne had the ability to vary the pace and spin without a noticeable change in his bowling action so the batsman has no idea the ball is different to the previous ones until it hits the pitch.
Getting that kind of turn is difficult but it can be done. I've done it a handful of times. What is really difficult is being able to do it with precision, accuracy and consistency. Leg-spin bowling (back of the hand spin bowling) is very difficult and getting the ball to land in the right area is a real skill. A small error means that the batter will be able to hit you away easily, so you have to be very good at it to play at international level. For that reason, there aren't that many real top-class leg-spin bowlers. Off-spin (from the front of the hand, which turns the other way) tends to turn less but is much easier to control (and can be very effective, too) and thus offspinners are much more common than legspinners.
Spin bowling is done at about 50-60 mph, medimum or swing is some where around 77 mph, but fast is 90+ mph, with fast you get about 1/3 of a second to react. Also there are different types of spin. Wrist spin or finger spin, then it breaks down again to off spin (right hand finger), Left-arm orthodox spin (left hand finger), leg spin (right hand wrist) and left-arm unorthodox spin (left hand wrist). Years ago I could do off spin, but due to indoor cricket I found I could do fast. With indoor cricket you get perfect pitches, which as a spin bowler is the last thing you want, as you want an area that has cracks or been scruffed up, it helps the ball come out in odd directions.
R.I.P Warnie
0:15 Malinga is a pace bowler, so he's not in this conversation.
You're thinking of Muttiah (Mit-TIRE) Muralitharan (Moo-ra-LITH-a-run). Both spin bowlers, different mechanics.
th-cam.com/video/vlWYcuaTosc/w-d-xo.html As I watched the late Terry Jenner's video again: Warne uses a relaxed split-finger grip and action with a screwball action but turned with the thumb going down.
th-cam.com/video/Si48Ch1EbRQ/w-d-xo.html Murali (MOO-ra-lee, his nickname) uses a forkball grip, you turn outwards (pinky side down).
Yess broo well explained
There is also an explainer video by Warne himself: th-cam.com/video/AyHX7GsrMlo/w-d-xo.html
@@nuxxism Ah, yes. I lost that video on my list, but because I was playing an old baseball game on my PS2, I was trying to 'translate' back to baseball.
He bowls it around 80km/h. Shane Warne is nick named the king of spin. The ball he bowled to Mike batting is labbelled as the ball of the century.
He was my all time favourite cricketer. He had an amazing cricket mind and he would have captained Australia but he was a little naughty off the field. 🤣
Warne was a leg spinner and that is the hardest form of spin bowling. It's a very high risk reward tactic. When conditions are right it can be unplayable, when conditions are bad you can be hit all over the ground.
up until Warne, most spinners were smacked around a lot, they'd get wickets through batters being too aggressive and misreading the ball. Warne was so consistent and could spin so much that he barely went for runs. He and Glenn McGrath were the best tandem act at either end. No one could hit McGrath's perfect line and length jamming them up one over, they'd get frustrated because Warne gave away nothing either the next over, but they could try and hit him as the ball was often in hitting zones that McGrath didn't give them, but because of his control and spin it just couldn't be played against defensively or offensively. This video shows his biggest spinners, but his biggest weapon was the Flipper, he'd put top spin on a straight ball after most of an over of massive side spin, the top spin would make the ball go dead straight, fast and low, best one I saw barely bounced 10cm off the ground. Caused so many bowled and LBW
Shane Warne is easily Australia's best spin bowler of all time, some would argue best bowler overall but that's a matter of opinion.
#3 is classed as "The Ball of the Century".
Spin bowling obviously has a different technique to Swing and Pace bowling, with all types focusing on particular things with their chosen style.
For spin there's two types of spin: Off Spin (or Off Break) bowling and Leg Spin/Break. Off Spin is more of your finger heavy type of bowling to generate revolutions of the ball, whilst Leg Spin is more of your wrist type of technique.
(Using a right hand as the example) An Off Spin delivery will come out of the hand via the index finger side of the hand, your arm is generally vertical and straight at the point of release. A Leg Spin delivery comes out around the fourth finger or even the pinky (depending on the bowler), your arm is typically less vertically inclined than an Off Spin bowler.
Where spin bowlers differ in terms of ball placement in the hand compared to pace or medium/swing bowlers is that the ball is positioned with one side of the ball is facing the palm, and you have your index and middle fingers more spread out along the seam whilst using just your fingertips along it. Pace and medium bowlers tend to have the index and middle fingers run fully along the seam, and the ball positioned with the seam against the palm.
For #3 the ball is esp difficult to play as if you look very closely you will see the ball drifts after delivery and changes direction in the air due to the magnus effect @2:08. Then spins hard in the opposite direction.
Spin speed varies typically 45-55 mph. Some bowlers will delivery as fast as the low 80s but rarely.
Spin bowling is an art, finger spinners are quite common but wrist spinners are rare. A wrist spinner like Shane Warne can put more spin on the ball but it is a much more difficult skill.
At 1:46 the umpire looking astounded is one of the best in the business, as well as being one of the nicest men in the worl, Dickie Bird. It is very rare for a sports umpire, judge or referee to be so universally loved by the public. I can't think of another, from any sport, who has a lifesize bronze statue erected in their honour. Dickie's statue in Barnsley, South Yorkshire is testament to a great impartial umpire.
Shane Warne from Australia and Muttaiah Muralitharan from Sri Lanka was the greatest spin bowling revelries. They played more or less the same era. They both could win matches single handedly. Warne is right-arm leg-spin bowler, Muralitharan is right-arm off-spin bowler.
@Aman Viroja corrected. Thanks for pointing it!
Malinga is a pacer
It is not only spinning, it is about playing with batsmen mind , deceiving, making a plot and trapping, you should check how he bowled prior to that actual bowl
The average spin bowl goes at like 75-80 kmph u do the conversion to mph and it is easy to spin the bowl after some practice but not many people will even get close to the amount that he spins it. It’s insane
1:35
For those who don't know, this was his first ever ball in international cricket.
And it scared the English so much from ball 1 they lost confidence against him for the rest of the Ashes series, didn't really ever get that confidence back against him to be honest.
Wasn't his first ball in international cricket . It was his first ball against England.
First ball in England
No 3 is the ball of the century.
In that ball warne imparted greater spin due to which it drifted away from the batsman, so he thought the ball is coming at him towards his foot , but it landed outside and curved back in to hit the stump.
Whoooooaaaahhhh!!!! Shane Warne is my fav Cricketer. Thanks for reacting to this.🥂🥂🥂
He sadly died today :( Only 52. RIP Shane Warne :(
RIP Legend 😭💔 God of Leg Spin Bowling 😭🙏
The first one was titled the ball of the century because it turned so much to almost 90 degree angle and it's completely impossible to do that as a bowler but Shane Warne did it.
Warnie is one of the best cricket players ever. Not a big fan of cricket but i LOVED Warnie growing up he was so good!
It’s to be said it’s a combination of many things. They use the same ball until it wears out. So while it’s brand new it’s no good for spinning. As it wears out and side is shined and the other side remains rough. THAT combined with a quality spin bowler gets the incredible results you see there
he looks like Guy Fieri. That cracked me up lol. Earned my subscribe there
I can bowl with both arms in every variation. I am a "switch hitter" batting also. Where i am better left foot forward at playing defensively in front and attacking off the backfoot and vs spinners.
And when i go right foot forward im better attacking off the front foot and playing defensively off the back foot.
But yeah i played as a Right arm medium fast all-rounder but i also bowled offspin if our spinners were having luck.
I retired like 2 years ago(i am 33 now)
But yeah Warney was one of a kind. Never seen another legspinner come close to him and i played basically 2 leagues down from him. So i saw alot.
He literally made Legspin cool. Every kid wanted to be him and tried copying him to no avail
Malinga is a 'Seamer' and Shane Warne is a 'Spinner'. Two different things. Spin pretty much depends on the wrist work. Whereas for seam you just need a shine on the ball and good pace.
I was a "spinner" that more of a slow bowler. Aiming at a cricket comeback, but looking to spin the ball more ready for the comeback.
Is it hard to do?
It's the most difficult art in cricket. The ball comes out of the back of the hand in a way that's really hard to control, and not only do they get the ball to spin one way, with a slight variation that most batsmen can't pick, they can get it to spin the other way (called googly) or top spin, or hurry on.
In this history of the game there has never been a leg-spin bowler like Shane Warne. He mastered all of it. 2nd on the all-time list of test bowling wicket takers.
Number 3, was the ball which introduced Warne to the world, he had played a little without much success in Test cricket, then came on to bowl against Mike Gatting, the former England captain, who famously liked his food. It was voted the ball of the century, and there were a lot of balls bowled in the 20th Century! It was so good they wrote a song about it. Here it is: th-cam.com/video/wa_iG_W0gvk/w-d-xo.html
Few things
Glad you did this video as i suggested because shane was an absolute wizard.
The curving movement through the air in pace bowling is called 'swing' bowling and not spin bowling. Spin bowling as bowling like you have just watched in that video. Ita much slower and relies on the condition of the balll, seam placement amd the condition of the pitch. Its a real art form. I can spin the ball in both directions.
The 'h' in MS Dhonis name is a silent 'h'.
Finally i love that you are so passionate about this beautiful game. Love your videos.
The h is not silent. Hindi phonemes and most other Indian languages' phonemes are different than English phonemes. There are certain phonemes English language doesn't have ex- "dha" phoneme. Its pronounced by flicking tongue from alveolar ridge to the back side of the front teeth along with blowing air out. "Dh" in Dhoni is one single phoneme.
Thanks for that. Always good to learn something new
Glad to help haha :)
RIP Warnie, we loved watching you :(
He is one of the best spin bowlers of all time but a few batsmen made mistakes as if the ball pitches outside leg stump you cannot be out LBW so they could have just padded those deliveries away
Yes he reduced the speed to get that amount of spin
He is not only an aussie cricketer but also Indian hero we love him like crazy
Spin is different swing bowling, swing happens in the air and fast bowlers do it at speeds around 80-90 miles per hour, spinners bowl slower and ball spins after it hits the deck, spin is better when slower but spinners use quicker ones too to deceive batsmen
Ok, been watching a few of your reactions, and reading the comments I'm disappointed nobody has pointed out a few things to you. Judging by your comments, there are a few things I'm not sure you are aware of, which you should know to further your understanding.
Firstly, each change of over is bowled from opposite ends of the pitch. They are not all bowling from the same end, so depending on the condition of the pitch, the wind, and other variables, will dictate which bowler bowls from which end.
Next, a couple of things about different types of bowlers. Spin bowlers like Shane Warne are looking for the footmarks from the bowler at the other end to help the ball grip and spin. Spin bowlers generally don't bowl in the early overs, because they are waiting for these marks to appear, and also for the ball to get a little rough, to also aid in gripping the ground.
Medium pacers and quicks are generally bowling with the seam of the ball upright. They get movement through the air, and then aim for movement off the seam. So when a quick bowler achieves that turn off the ground, isn't spin, but movement off the seam. The especially aim for cracks in the pitch which open up as the game goes on. Look at a day 1 pitch compared to a day 5 pitch in a test match to see how much a pitch can change. When a quick bowls a slower ball, it can look like he is trying to spin it, but is actually looking to deceive the batsman in his change of pace. Medium pacers can occasionally add spin, but are generally also looking for the seam. Hopefully more people can add more here to help explain some more of the finer nuances of the different bowling styles.
Loving watching your reactions, you always look like you are loving what you do!! Keep up the great work!! 😊😊
Yes sure we can all do spin ball if we practice, but Shane warne is an exception, he can turn nearly 90 degree
It's very hard to impart both drift and spin.
Some can impart as much spin as warne can but not the drift.
Generally with a leg-spinner, the ball will drift in the opposite direction to the spin. Warne was never a great bowler of the wrong’un (or googly), which looks to be a leg-spinner (spins from the leg-side) but the ball is bowled over the back of the hand, and spins in the opposite direction. He was a great exponent of the top-spinner (ball drops in the air and bounces straight through) and the flipper (ball skids straight through, faster and lower). It’s an extremely difficult craft to learn and very difficult to maintain accuracy. I used to bowl some, but left-handed, which are called Chinamen, for some obscure, historical reason. There are a lot more around these days in T20 cricket. The best in the world are probably Rashid Khan, a young Afghan bowler, and Yasir Shah, a Pakistani.
@@pauldobson2529 no the drift has do with the action along with the side spin imparted on the ball
Stuart macgill wasnt able to drift the ball although his ball spun a lot, same goes for Muralidharan.
Warne wasn't that good at Google but his flipper was a top notch, nobody can bowl flipper like him.
Now bowling Google isn't that tough especially if you continously keep bowling it, So i don't rate Rashid khan and likes much high.
But Yasir Shah seems good although his bowl doesn't drift either nor could he bowl flipper or other variation that well. His bowl just spins, that's all.
He was a great bowler of his decade.
Being a spin bowler its really tough to bowl like that he is insane
One in a million
The Number 3 is actually termed as the "Ball of the Millennium"
This the speed of a basic SPIN BOWLER won't more than 50mph but that's sometimes even more difficult to bat as batsman has to judge the spin and hit harder because the lack of pace on the ball
EDIT: As T Croft pointed out it's "Ball of the Century"
Century!
As I recall, it was Warne's first ball in England.
@@jsm2420 Yes it was and what a ball!
It's easy enough to spin the ball so it turns - the real skill is in controlling it and getting it land where you want it. It's much harder to control the ball when you're putting a lot of revs on it.
At most 65 mph, its more about revolutions with spin bowlers. Pace bowlers can hit up to 95 mph
Yes we can do it, but does not curve that much. But still curves well
Shane warne died yesterday .He died on 4th march,2022.
Malinga is not a spin bowler.. he is fast swing bowler..fast bowlers have long run up and speed ranges from 125kmph to 160kmph...Spin bowlers doesn't have long runups and speed ranges from 60kmph to 100kmph but their bowls actually turns way more than fast bowlers...and there are more types of spinners
Some terms you might find useful are 'off stump' and 'leg stump'. So if the ball "pitched outside leg stump" it means that it bounced beyond the line of the stump nearest the batsmans legs.
Great videos keep them up
Mallinga not a spinner, he is pacer or seam bowler, Spin bowler
have 70-80 kmph avarage speed and seam bowler have 140kmph
Only one man was his nightmare and he was Sachin Tendulkar. And I'm not kidding about it. Once he said that in a press conference
Shane Warne has accepted Sachin Tendulkar’s batting supremacy. He had him tormenting in his nightmares. Please react to Sachin vs Warne duel.
But warne is a bigger cricketer than Sachin.
RIP to the King of Spin ❤️
If Shane Warne played USA in 2004, you'd be all out for less than 60
Cool vid. Fun fact: The third example, the Gatting ball, was Warne's very first ball in a test match in England.
In fact there is a wikipedia article called "Ball of the century" just about that one delivery.
#2 was travelling at 85km/hr, the speed flashed up on the screen on the first play
Just heard that Warne passed away from a suspected heart attack 😢
Yea shane is famous for his leg spin. But theres alot more ways like off spin or the googly. Check out Tahir from South Africa. Truly one of the worlds best...
That's the ball of the century!! That No. 1 ball
And also number 3 in the video is known as the gatting ball and it’s known as the ball of the century ( which means it’s a pre good wicket)
Spin bowlers will bowl at about 50mph whereas pace bowlers are bowling up around 85-100mph
In my life time and I am in my 50's I have never seen anyone spin as sharply, accurately as consistently as Warne and Muttiah Muralitharan. Not many people can do that. Unfortunately you have not been able to see the set up of the wickets. An over in cricket is six balls, sometimes a bowler will set a batter for a number of overs before he takes his wicket. Shane Warne used to provide theatre in his bowling over a number of overs that used to bamboozle his prey. Test match cricket (played over 5 days in all white kit) is the pinnacle of the sport there are various levels of pyjama (coloured clothing) cricket which require less skill, some call these forms of cricket "hit and giggle" but that is not entirely fair. Shorter forms of cricket are played on flatter pitches allowing the batters to have the upper hand. Your rule of thumb should be that the shorter the game the less skill is required. But I am enjoying watching you have fun. You might want to look test match crowds and chanting at matches. Fancy dress day is Saturday.
Stuart MacGill spun the ball just as far as Warnie but he wasn't as consistent but he still got over 200 test wickets.
@@petefromoz7053 he was unlucky to be around at the same time as Warny.
@@petercurtis9297 Stuey wood have got 400 test wickets at least. There is some good footage of him on TH-cam.
He is one of the greatest spinners ever to play the game !!! No3 is known as the Ball of the century !!!
Finally! Some non indian content, and an absolute legend.
What do you mean?
True
When u open ur mouth for WHATT! Make sure there is no fly nearby . XD
I just started watching your channel and I am already subbed to it
About 85km/h and yes, I can do it, most people can, but nowhere near to the level of the legend that is SK Warne
You should 100% watch 'Every Mitchell Johnson wicket from the 2013-14 Ashes' video to see some of the best fast bowling ever
Bowling with accuracy and yet spinning the ball is very difficult to do, only the best of bowlers can do that.
I would leaves this here, you can agree or disagree but i see to two types of bowling like this:
Fast bowling: easier to learn harder to master
Spin bowling: Harder to learn but easier to master.
Yet I will say again this is how I see it.
Shane warne is the greatest leg spinner of all time
The ball to Gatting was the first ever ball he bowled in Test cricket.
Absolute rubbish. He had played 11 tests and bowled thousands of balls, but don't let little things like facts stop you confidently stating stuff, eh?
Guys stop telling him to react to videos he has gone again
where is he?