PhoenixFire
International Coach
I've heard it talked about, but not sure what it is, anyone?
It is the single greatest method of analysis ever invented by man.
Basically, it is a batting average which is derived from the first chance (e.g. dropped catch, or LBW given not out which was out) that a batsman gives, rather than runs/dismissals. Also, if a batsman is given out when he was not out, then this is taken away from the denominator in the equation.I've heard it talked about, but not sure what it is, anyone?
Is that the royal "we"?So therefore, to get a fair interpretation of the performance of a batsmen, we simply count a chance as the same regardless of whether the fielding side \ Umpire was good enough to take it. And we don't blame batsmen who get unlucky for their misfortune.
The royal?Is that the royal "we"?
As in "we are not amused".The royal?
Don't go there.I've heard it talked about, but not sure what it is, anyone?
I don't understand why this applies to batsmen only. Surely a bowler is doing nothing different when a yorker is miraculously or perhaps fortuitously dug out and when one clean bowls a batsman? Or perhaps when an inside edge narrowly misses the stumps and when it hits them?What does the batsman do differently when a chance is caught and when it's dropped?
Answer: nothing. Nothing whatsoever.
Exactly. There are far too many factors that need to be considered to get an accurate "first-chance average" for a batsman. Off the top of my head, you'd have to look at the placement of the ball, the batsman's intention (guided through slips, etc), field settings, the power with which the ball is hit, the quality of the fielder, etc. Pretty much impossible and a utter waste of time. Dropped catches are a part of the game; you can take the quality of the fielding side into account qualitatively but a quantitative approach is ridiculous IMO.Its funny, I see the logic of it but it is flawed as it tries to look at luck but leaves as many questions unanswered as it addresses.
For example what if there is no second slip in place and the ball goes through the gap. That is still a mistake by the batsman and he would have been out if the fielding captain had put a fielder there.
An edge is still an edge whether there is no slip in place, a dropped catch or out. If you are trying to look at "luck" then false shots etc would have to be incorporated.
As it is, the system partially analyses a controversial idea and as such this partial data isnt enough to draw any real conclusions from.
Almost invariably? I can't see how in any way possible the first-chance average could be higher than the scorebook average.Nope, almost invariably a batsman's first-chance average will be lower (in the long-term, at least) than his scorebook one because, as I mentioned, almost all batsmen have more good luck than bad throughout a career.