cricketfan90 wrote:lol arthur the theme tune bit cracked me up... i quite like it to be honest
WDL Bob's Beat - not my type of music but a fine theme tune noneoftheless, therefore I put it in the "Good" category.
cricketfan90 wrote:lol arthur the theme tune bit cracked me up... i quite like it to be honest

rich1uk wrote:which does not disagree with what I said
SKY did a segment last year where they took bats out of the lords museum that were actually used by players during the 70s, 80s and 90s and it was visible to the naked eye that those bats were smaller than modern bats
I repeat, because modern bats are using lighter technology, they can retain the same weight as old bats whilst still being bigger, this enables a bigger sweet spot which means timing isn't as important
its the same principle we have seen in golf clubs , club heads are significantly bigger than they were 20 years ago without being heavier, which creates bigger sweet spots
Durhamfootman wrote:rich1uk wrote:which does not disagree with what I said
SKY did a segment last year where they took bats out of the lords museum that were actually used by players during the 70s, 80s and 90s and it was visible to the naked eye that those bats were smaller than modern bats
I repeat, because modern bats are using lighter technology, they can retain the same weight as old bats whilst still being bigger, this enables a bigger sweet spot which means timing isn't as important
its the same principle we have seen in golf clubs , club heads are significantly bigger than they were 20 years ago without being heavier, which creates bigger sweet spots
I have a sneaky feeling that the world record distance a cricket ball has been hit was achieved a long time ago using a very old brown willow bat (is that right?). I seem to recall Luke Wright trying to beat the world record, a couple of years ago, with a modern white willow bat (is that also right?) and not even getting remotely close. My guess would be that an old fashioned brown willow would have been much smaller than their modern counterparts, yet were fashioned from an extremely dense piece of wood that could ping a ball much, much further than is achievable today
I might have misremembered the whole thing, of course
Durhamfootman wrote:do we know for certain that the bails are heavier?
Durhamfootman wrote:the reason I ask, is that I thought the flashing stuff worked pretty well when it came to runouts. it made it much clearer to the naked eye. I was also surprised that I quite liked it, because I don't normally like the jazzy stuff

Durhamfootman wrote:that sounds like a good idea, although ropes tend to move around a bit. I don't know whether that would affect it or not.... although I guess these sorts of things can generally be resolved
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