Australia’s tempo spearhead Mitchell Starc has known as for a major change in ODIs, to “bring the bowlers back into the batter’s game”.
While speaking to reporters on Monday forward of Australia’s World Cup semifinal conflict in opposition to South Africa, Starc voiced his opinion on the rule of taking part in with two new balls from each ends in ODI cricket and talked about that “it should be one ball not two”.
“I still think it should be one ball not two,” Starc told reporters on Monday. The ball stays harder for longer. As we’ve seen here, the grounds are quite small, wickets are flat,” advised Starc.
Starc identified how pacers previous to the rule change bought the ball to reverse at the loss of life and the contest between bat and ball remained even.
“If anything in world cricket wickets have gotten flatter and I think if you look at some of that old footage when they bowled with one ball, reverse swing comes into it a lot more that actually brings the bowlers back into the game, and I don’t think it’s any secret that one day cricket and probably T20 cricket as well is a batter’s game and bowlers just have to hang on,” he added.
The 33-12 months-outdated speedster additionally opened up on his efficiency in the ongoing match and in contrast it with how he delivered in the 2015 and 2019 ODI World Cups.
“I feel there’s plenty of contributing elements, velocity’s not the be all and finish throughout right here in India as properly.
“So definitely the way you go about it (bowling) tactically and whether or not it’s variations or what time you bowl by a recreation or whether or not you win or lose a toss. I feel plenty of issues contribute to that and positively haven’t been in all probability at the degree that I might have preferred as properly.
“So I certainly take some (responsibility) myself there that (I haven’t bowled) to the same level as the last two World Cups anyway, but now have chance at the pointy end to I guess impact again,” he concluded.