ICC World Cup 2019: Batsmen likely to shine in not-so-cloudy England

Following last year’s bright days and a similar forecast for this year, experts feel bowlers will have a tough time in the World Cup.

Published : May 17, 2019 22:04 IST , Mumbai

India wrist-spinners Kuldeep Yadav (left) and Yuzvendra Chahal have an economy rate of less than 5 in England. Photo: Getty Images
India wrist-spinners Kuldeep Yadav (left) and Yuzvendra Chahal have an economy rate of less than 5 in England. Photo: Getty Images
lightbox-info

India wrist-spinners Kuldeep Yadav (left) and Yuzvendra Chahal have an economy rate of less than 5 in England. Photo: Getty Images

The weather bureaus have predicted balmy days during the World Cup in England and hence experts feel bowlers will have a tough time. A happy rider, though, is that the slow bowlers will make an impact as the competition grinds into the second half.

Run glut

The first hints from England have shown batsmen are having a jolly good time. The willow wielders of England and Pakistan have been putting the bowlers in their place, plundering 1,451 runs in two matches at the cost of 23 wickets.

However, the English weather can be fickle; a day of fine weather can be followed by a day of heavy rain. But, following last year’s bright days and a similar forecast for this year, everyone believes glorious stories will unfold under sunshine and not low-hanging clouds.

Of the 180 ODI wickets that have fallen in England post the ICC Champions Trophy of 2017, 118 have fallen to seamers and 62 to spinners. Except the odd case of Liam Plunkett, no fast bowler has made any exceptional impact, either.

Read | Kuldeep Yadav, the accidental chinaman

The leader of the English pack in this period has been leg-spinner Adil Rashid with 26 wickets in 15 matches at 5.45 runs an over. The average economy rate of 50 bowlers (fast and spin) who featured in ODIs in England in the last two years is 6.3 an over — 6.61 for seamers and 5.75 for spinners.

The India picture looks good. Left-arm wrist-spinner Kuldeep Yadav has an economy rate of 4.93, and leg-spinner Yuzvendra Chahal has 4.50 (both from three matches). The two accounted for 11 wickets in the three-match ODI series last year.

Related | World Cup classics: 11 matches to remember

Left-arm spinner Ravindra Jadeja has 27 wickets (2011 to 2017) in England at 5.13. Australia’s off-spinner Nathan Lyon has a low economy rate of 4.12, but has played only one ODI in England. Among seamers, England’s Archer has an economy rate of 1.5, but has also played just one match.

plunkettafpjpg
Liam Plunkett has been the highest wicket-taker in England after ICC Champions Trophy 2017. Photo: AFP
 

The highest wicket-taker post ICC Champions Trophy 2017 has been seamer Plunkett — 24 wickets at 5.96.

India’s pace attack has some experience of the conditions, but Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Shami did not feature in last year’s ODI series.

The numbers

Bumrah played five matches of the Champions Trophy in 2017, took four wickets at 52.50 with an economy rate of 5. Bhuvneshwar Kumar has taken 18 wickets from 15 matches with an economy rate of 4.48 and Shami eight wickets at 19 with an economy rate of 4.68.

Hardik Pandya has dismal figures of five wickets from eight matches at 77.80 with an economy rate of 6.33.

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment