False.
Away tests do not include 'neutral' venues. In terms of away record, the definition used is not 'away from my home' but 'in the home of the opposition'.Kindly modify your stats as thus and you shall find that it is identical to the ones i presented.
"What's in a name? That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet". Or in this case, stink like dog poo. I am talking about Warne/Murali not bowling in either Australia or Sri Lanka. When Warne bowls everywhere BUT Australia, those are the stats. When Murali bowls everywhere BUT Sri Lanka those are the stats. Don't hide from the relevance.
C_C said:
Yet again, false.
As i said and demonstrated through example, my home record is irrelevant to the discussion when comparing away records alone, as you've done.
LOL, do you think you just say something and it becomes a golden rule? The home record has everything to do with the discussion, it's used precisely as a contrast between Murali's REAL effort and Warne's. It shows exactly how inflated his figures are. As I said, I did a comparison before which swapped homes for both men, EVEN THOUGH Warne had a better record both in Sri Lanka and Australia, and Warne was out miles ahead.
C_C said:
And that 'rant' is inaccurate. Not just logically but factually. As i explained, operating as a part of a better bowling unit sees one take less wickets but concede less runs and thus end up with better averages. This is the reason Warne averages less when McGrath is present (and his wicket/match ratio also drops) but when McGrath is absent, Warne's average too bloats up but he also takes more wickets.
Except that it has happened much too fewer times and it also depends on Warne's form. Ashes 05 McGrath was out and Warne kept Australia in the game single-handedly and took 40 wickets in that series. That's a big dump on that logic. Also you can't disagree with basic numbers/logic. Murali's stats are inflated because he bowls so much yet has almost a negative impact on his team - as said in Francis' posts. He can bowl crap for half the match (which many times means more overs than a whole Warne match) and still end up cleaning them up and improving his figures even if that means his team loses. Warne doesn't have that. If Warne bowls poor, he isn't given as many overs to make it up, he ends his game and his stats are poorer for it. But still, despite all this, Warne is still competitive in all departments.
C_C said:
The similar pattern is also noticed amongst the four prong of the WI pace quartet- when Holding was operating before the rise fo Garner and Marshall, he took more wickets but his average was also higher.This pattern is true for most bowlers because, as i explained, when you are the lone gunman, the batsmen can afford to play you out and even though you take more wickets/match, you leak a lot more runs- ie, the difference between 3-33 and 6-90. You can work out the average if it isnt too hard for you.
I'm not talking about a quartet of fast bowlers, firstly. Secondly, Warne having support has terribly cut into his figures. How many fivers do you expect Warne to take in a match when McGrath has taken 29 in his whole career. How much momentum do you think it possible carries? By the time Warne walks onto the pitch the other team is usually 5 or 6 down and that leaves little to suggest that McGrath and co are doing Warne a favour. Therefore Warne has to make batsmen play and indeed that is the type of bowler he is. He doesn't defend and he surely isn't too caring of his average. There is also a difference between 1/5 and 4/20 but what it doesn't show is that while one has many chances to fix the average when bowling poorly, the other doesn't.
C_C said:
First, dont 'son' me- i doubt you have the required age pre-requisite or the knowhow to take that tone with me. Second, as i mentioned, Murali is Warne's equal even when you deduct the two 'substandard' teams. But the fact that he does it without the backup of bowlers anywhere in the same zone as McGrath + Gillespie + Fleming + Lee and having humongous runs on the board is sufficient enough for me to rate him comfortably ahead. You may whine about his 'home factor' but as is demonstrated through stats, his away performance is on-par with Warne's. And that is an area where Warne has a *huge* advantage- having bowlers like McGrath, Gillespie, Lee, Fleming, etc. to scythe through the opposition and expose the soft underbelly consistetly for Warne- or atleast far far more often than what Murali gets.
Once you learn to debate and lose the pompous tone I'll give you that respect, until then I'll call you son. Ok son, the problem isn't just bowling against minnows.
Roughly 40% of Murali's wickets are from Bangladesh, Zimbabwe and batsmen 8-11. Then you have to also mention that Murali plays more than half his games at home - a.k.a spinner's paradise. Then mention that he has no real competition for wickets and that shows indeed how inflated his record is.
The "Warne takes weaker batsmen and is helped when the other bowlers soften up the opposition" is just trash. Warne takes about 6-7% more lower order wickets than Murali - that's really nothing. But the difference is while Warne usually comes in after 5-6 have fallen, the mid-to-lower order batsmen are all that is afforded to him. So putting it into perspective, and acknowledging that Murali still gets so many lower order wickets, despite having more of a chance than Warne at bowling against the upper-order is actually damning to his case as he is only a bit less than Warne in that aspect.
C_C said:
As i said, just about the *only* factor in Murali's favour is the home-pitch factor. Everything else is in Warne's favour and Murali still is ahead/equal. If you do just as fine as me while sporting half a dozen more handicaps, yuo are comfortably better. Its just *that* simple that apparently is lost on your jingoistic brain. He is not just ahead statistically- the bulk of the intangiables and 'non-statistiscal factors' point towards murali being the superior spinner.
Besides, i am done talking to you on this - your allergy to reasoning and lack of a cricketing brain ( or concealed under the aussie flag) is painfully obvious to me. Over and out.
As before, you're always great for a laugh. No, if anything Warne is ahead in the intangibles. His character, charisma, and guile dwarf Murali. Murali can only compete on inflated statistics. It's like saying Ali Daei is the greatest international goal scorer, who has more goals than Pele, Puskas, etc, simply because he is statistically superior but in reality he is much inferior to those two.
I am actually not originally from Australia, and closer to Murali than you think. I just can't in good conscience not adore the greatness that Warne brings to cricket. And everyone on here knows you buddy. Don't kidd yourself.