In Australia, conditions are generally more suited to wristspin than fingerspin, given that most pitches offer bounce but not so much turn. Five of Australia’s six leading wicket-takers among spinners are wristspinners; the exception is Lyon, who, with his high-arm action and his ability to generate overspin, gets enough dip and bounce to be a threat even when the pitch doesn’t turn much. The next-highest wicket-taker among fingerspinners for Australia is offspinner Hugh Trumble, who played during the days of uncovered pitches and took 141 wickets. Ashley Mallett is next with 132.In the decade in which Lyon has been playing Test cricket, Australia have been one of the toughest places for spinners to succeed in: spinners collectively average 46.64 in Australia since Lyon’s debut, which is the poorest among all countries which have hosted at least five Tests, except New Zealand (50.18).

Lyon has found a way to succeed in these conditions. It helps, obviously, that Australia have been dominant in this period with a 36-8 win-loss record in the home Tests he has played in; their pace attack has generally been relentless in these conditions, while the batters have been far more prolific in Australia than away. Those factors have obviously helped Lyon’s success rate by allowing him to usually bowl with attacking fields to batters under pressure.In isolation, Lyon’s home average of 32.87 doesn’t look too impressive, especially when compared to Asian spinners. But compare that to the averages of other spinners in Australia, and you realise just how convincingly he has outbowled them: exclude his numbers, and the average for the rest of the spinners in the home games he has played balloons to 62.09. The ratio of averages is 1.89, which means he is 1.89 times better than other spinners in home conditions. Also, he has taken more wickets in these matches (204) than all the other spinners who have played those games (182).

Among the spinners who have taken 100 home wickets since Lyon’s debut, no other bowler matches that ratio. Ravindra Jadeja is next – he averages 21.01 for his 162 home wickets, while other spinners have averaged 35.15 in those matches, for a ratio of 1.67. For Ashwin, the corresponding numbers are 21.41 and 33.08 (ratio 1.55). It is true that the ratio is a function of the quality of spinners who play in those matches – when Ashwin and Jadeja play together, each of those spinners has at least one other quality spinner in the line-up, due to which the overall spin averages will be relatively better – but even so, the numbers for other spinners in Australia indicate just how tough it has been for spinners there.

A series-wise break-up of his home numbers shows that very seldom has Lyon been outperformed by opposition spinners in a home series. Two of the three such instances have been against India, but the series in 2020-21 was a major disappointment, as India’s spinners bested Lyon by a distance: Lyon took just nine wickets at 55.11, while India’s spinners took 23 wickets at 27. Never before has Lyon been topped so comprehensively by the opposition spinners in a home series.Bowling in Australia has obviously been his strength, but his numbers in Asia are improving too. In his first eight Tests in the continent – three Tests each in Sri Lanka and India, and two in the UAE against Pakistan – Lyon averaged 49.11, and leaked 3.84 runs per over. The UAE tour, especially, was a nightmare: he returned figures of 3 for 422 in 110 overs.

In his last 11 Tests there, though, those stats have improved considerably: 69 wickets at 24.50, including 22 wickets in two Tests in Bangladesh, and 19 in four matches in India. The economy rate has dropped from 3.84 to 2.80. And if we do a similar comparison between Lyon and the opposition spinners in Asia, the improvement in the last three series is significant.

Still only 34, if he maintains his fitness and his rate of taking wickets, 500 is very much within reach.

About the Author

+300
+500
+1200
+1500
+750
$
JOIN NOW
Buddy Bonus
Sports Free Bets
Bonus