Earlier, bowlers went around the wicket when the ball was not moving, but now they are actually benefiting from seam-friendly pitches. It is not too different from Wasim Akram or Mitchell Starc going around the wicket to right-hand batsmen with the reversing ball. Just not as rare. Almost every bowler — Broad, Anderson, Ishant, Bumrah, Shami, Kemar Roach, Shannon Gabriel, Kagiso Rabada — is doing it, and he doesn’t need reverse to succeed.David Warner’s struggles against Broad in the ongoing Ashes are a good summation of how difficult it is when a bowler of Broad’s quality gets it right: he has fallen to this line of attack all eight times, beaten on the inside edge on four occasions and getting the outside edge on the other four. It is instructive that two of those outside edges came when Warner was actually trying to leave the ball. The seam movement and the angle back in was playing so much on his mind that he was just not able to decide which balls to leave.This barrage is unlikely to stop anytime soon, and yet the beauty of Test cricket is that two of its all-time great innings have been played in this year and both by left-hand batsmen. How they counter this angle will be fascinating to watch, but one thing is certain: just like their advantage was not permanent, this disadvantage of the left-hand batsmen will not last either.

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