Former New Zealand pacer expressed concern at the role of bowlers in modern-day cricket due to the new restriction stacking the odds against them, reported PTI on Wednesday.

“The change in fielding restrictions in the last 10 overs of a One-Day International has eased the pressure on the bowlers a little bit, but only a little bit,” wrote Bond in his column on the International Cricket Council website. “Five men outside the 30-yard circle from overs 41 through 50 is a welcome development, and I say this purely from a bowler’s perspective, but for the most part, the bowlers are pretty much second-class citizens in white-ball cricket.”

The Kiwi said it is this imbalance which has led to spinners using negative tactics. “The slow bowlers specifically are resorting to a more negative line of bowling, not because they want to but because they have to,” he said.

“In an era gone by, the pattern was to tee-off in the first 15 overs, build through the middle of the innings and then launch a final onslaught. That philosophy has now gone out the window,” he explained. Bond said bowlers cannot do without variety in the current scenario where every alternate game ends up being a run feast.

“The yorker is not just one of the most difficult balls to bowl, the margin for error is also extremely small. Therefore, it becomes vital to use that weapon judiciously.

“You must have the ability to change the length – bowl the yorker, yes, but also use the bouncer, the slower ball, the length ball,” he opined.

“You don’t bowl the full ball to certain batsmen, you don’t bang it in to certain others. All of it is very much opposition, ground, conditions and batter-dependent. If you are off even marginally, the yorker is probably the easiest ball to hit for a four or a six. You have to weigh up risk against reward,” he said.

Bond said bowlers in modern cricket should mix it up to make it difficult for the batsman to settle down. “As a bowler, you must be prepared to bowl different lengths at the death so that when you do bowl the yorker, it must come as a little bit of a surprise.

“I keep telling the bowlers to not be shy of bowling a bouncer, to have a field that creates doubt. At the end of the day, it not so much about the outcome; it is important to see how the bowlers have got their wickets at the death. What do you do when a David Warner or a Virat Kohli comes hard at you?” he said.