CRICKET Australia v India Summer

Not that much

If it can be straight as it is during his run up, why not when delivering?

It can bend 15 degrees between horizontal and release. Does his elbow bend more than 15 degrees between those two points?
 
It's a chuck , seriously they changed the game to appease 1 man who became the best in the world now Bumrah is the best and he's a chucker too.
 
**** sake... first Marnus gets himself out and now Head bowled without offering a shot.

Mitchell "the walking wicket" Marsh heading to the crease now.

Aussies trying their best to not get to 350 on this deck after starts from everyone
 
Bumrah soon to be on with the new ball ... they will need to survive it to make 350 plus and capitalise on the great start put together by the top order.

450 was on the cards earlier but Marsh being useless and Head going for a duck has brought that way back
 
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350 would barely be ok.
450 plus was what we should have been looking at.
I thought Marnus killed our momentum if not the innings, certainly didn't help Khawaja.
Getting pretty much nothing from Head and Marsh put India back in the game.
400 would be a pass now but that's a long way off.
Marsh surely has seen his last test barring some second innings heroics or a major contribution with the ball which is highly unlikely.
 
It's a chuck , seriously they changed the game to appease 1 man who became the best in the world now Bumrah is the best and he's a chucker too.

It wasn't changed until 2004 and the old law wasn't workable or even detectable to the naked eye.

An expert panel comprising Aravinda de Silva, Angus Fraser, Michael Holding, Tony Lewis, Tim May and David Richardson found that most modern bowlers broke the rules in some way but the laws to determine whether their action was legal or otherwise were murky and unworkable.

The old laws effectively allowed spinners to legally straighten their arms by five degrees. The measurement was set at 7.5 degrees for medium pacers and 10 for fast bowlers.

However, the panel found those measurements were all undetectable to the naked eye so they recommended the levels be standardised at 15 degrees, the first point at which it is visible to the naked eye.
 
It wasn't changed until 2004 and the old law wasn't workable or even detectable to the naked eye.

An expert panel comprising Aravinda de Silva, Angus Fraser, Michael Holding, Tony Lewis, Tim May and David Richardson found that most modern bowlers broke the rules in some way but the laws to determine whether their action was legal or otherwise were murky and unworkable.

The old laws effectively allowed spinners to legally straighten their arms by five degrees. The measurement was set at 7.5 degrees for medium pacers and 10 for fast bowlers.

However, the panel found those measurements were all undetectable to the naked eye so they recommended the levels be standardised at 15 degrees, the first point at which it is visible to the naked eye.
Doesn't this just prove that Bumrah chucks? You can see his arm bend, therefore it must be greater than 15°.
 

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