The master of the pre-medicated six? Wouldn't that be Shoaib bowling an over?Good call nate-d, Hayden is the master of the pre-medicated 6 atm
The master of the pre-medicated six? Wouldn't that be Shoaib bowling an over?Good call nate-d, Hayden is the master of the pre-medicated 6 atm
Haha, quite scathing, but gold all the same.The master of the pre-medicated six? Wouldn't that be Shoaib bowling an over?
I was asking for harder (statistical, I suppose) proof that Hayden and co had actually specifically failed against tough attacks, and Lara/Tendulkar had succeeded against them. I suppose you're happy with broad generalisations.Eh ? i don't get what you are asking. Obviously not everyone has the same exact set of opportunities and variables, especially if they begin their careers several years apart. They peak at different times, against different players, etc etc.
I view cricket excellence in terms of 'what are the pluses and minuses you bring to the table overall'.
The simple fact is when Tendulkar or Lara hit their peak, bowlers like Wasim, Waqar, Ambrose, Walsh, McGrath, Warne, Murali, Donald, Pollock and Vaas were going around on pitches harder to bat on.
When Ponting, Hayden, Kallis, etc. hit their peaks, more than half those bowlers were gone or nearing retirement and thus far lesser players plus pitches are easier to bat on these days.
Regardless of what the justification is, the bottomline is top 10 bowlers against whom Tendulkar hit his peak are way way way better than top 10 bowlers these guys hit their peaks against.
What you don't seem to comprehend is that losing to Zimbabwe is therefore WORSE than losing to Australia. Therefore, performing in these games DOES matter. The players who fail to perform against these teams risk contributing to a humiliating defeat, just like a player who performs against Australia is praised for possibly contributing to a great victory.Cricket is a team game- a loss or a win shouldn't hurt player's credibilities and the very fact that cricket rankings have taken that into consideration in personal rankings show that its amatuer in its concept. And no, not all the stats or wins count equally. A world cup win is more important than VB series win. A win in Australia against Australia is worth more than winning vs Zimbabwe in your backyard. Same goes with personal performances.
I think i've answered your question- with the effective backing of one of the greatest sportsmen ever ( yes, Grestsky = Bradman of hockey) as to why performance against the best of the best count for more than performance against mediocres.
Ponting for me, no comparison as far as I'm concerned.At this point in time, Matthew Hayden is the best batsman in the world...
There...I've said it
You mean besides not having to faced them - since they play in the same team?This is the reason McGrath picks Lara and Tendulkar as the top batsmen of their generation, not Ponting or Hayden.
Yeah Ponting easily for me as well.Ponting for me, no comparison as far as I'm concerned.
yep, nice rebuttalPonting for me
South Africa today = 1/2 South Africa in the 96-2002 period.Well, apart from Australia, S.A. are the best one day squad and they got walloped by Hayden. He's had 3 of the best one-day innings anyone could hope to achieve in the spain of a couple months, how can you even doubt him? (that was rhetorical).
Pollock is a better bowler now imo, just look at his ODI rankingSouth Africa today = 1/2 South Africa in the 96-2002 period.
He may have faced them, but he did poorly against them. So there goes that theory out the window. Again, Ambrose didn't bowl to Sachin pre-Ponting. Warne was crap back then and so was Murali. Pollock debuted the same time as Ponting and Donald owned India. Only Walsh could have been said to be gotten the better of. The rest, nope.I view cricket excellence in terms of 'what are the pluses and minuses you bring to the table overall'.
The simple fact is when Tendulkar or Lara hit their peak, bowlers like Wasim, Waqar, Ambrose, Walsh, McGrath, Warne, Murali, Donald, Pollock and Vaas were going around on pitches harder to bat on.
Yet Tendulkar is having trouble against the same crappy bowlers. Here we go again...When Ponting, Hayden, Kallis, etc. hit their peaks, more than half those bowlers were gone or nearing retirement and thus far lesser players plus pitches are easier to bat on these days.
Regardless of what the justification is, the bottomline is top 10 bowlers against whom Tendulkar hit his peak are way way way better than top 10 bowlers these guys hit their peaks against.
How do you rate a 130 in the World Cup final against India? Or scoring a World Cup century in record time?Cricket is a team game- a loss or a win shouldn't hurt player's credibilities and the very fact that cricket rankings have taken that into consideration in personal rankings show that its amatuer in its concept. And no, not all the stats or wins count equally. A world cup win is more important than VB series win. A win in Australia against Australia is worth more than winning vs Zimbabwe in your backyard. Same goes with personal performances.
I think you've mixed apples and oranges.I think i've answered your question- with the effective backing of one of the greatest sportsmen ever ( yes, Grestsky = Bradman of hockey) as to why performance against the best of the best count for more than performance against mediocres.
Yet they're the 2nd best side in the world? Does that penny seem to drop? Being the "best" is just relative. Hayden has done it against the best in front of him. You're trying to denigrate his performances by not only generalising his era and comparing them with a decade or two ago, but by not even giving him credit in his own era.South Africa today = 1/2 South Africa in the 96-2002 period.
I'm sure even Ponting himself would admit that Haydos is...hell, Steve Waugh even said Justin Langer was the best batsman in the world at one stagePonting's comfortably the best batsman in the world today. Hayden's not even close. In sensational touch, though.
What's that got to do with it? There's no way you can be serious with this argument really. Ponting's made around 10 centuries in his last 15 or so tests, and has averaged around 70 odd in the last 4 or 5 years. In ODIs Hayden wasn't even in the Australian team six months ago because he got dropped for poor performance, while Ponting's a realistic contender for an all-time world XI.I'm sure even Ponting himself would admit that Haydos is...hell, Steve Waugh even said Justin Langer was the best batsman in the world at one stage
Hayden bombed utterly when he played against decent attacks on decent pitches in the 90s.I was asking for harder (statistical, I suppose) proof that Hayden and co had actually specifically failed against tough attacks, and Lara/Tendulkar had succeeded against them. I suppose you're happy with broad generalisations.
Individual failure against weak teams mean less because on average, a strong team will beat a really weak one 9 times out of 10 and a LOT more players will put their hands up.What you don't seem to comprehend is that losing to Zimbabwe is therefore WORSE than losing to Australia. Therefore, performing in these games DOES matter. The players who fail to perform against these teams risk contributing to a humiliating defeat, just like a player who performs against Australia is praised for possibly contributing to a great victory.
Not relative. Its also empiric.Yet they're the 2nd best side in the world? Does that penny seem to drop? Being the "best" is just relative.
False.He may have faced them, but he did poorly against them.
Tendulkar = averaged 57 in Ambrose's own backyard. Ponting = umm. nowhere close.Again, Ambrose didn't bowl to Sachin pre-Ponting.
False. Read my quote again. I am comparing the peaks of Tendulkar and Ponting and seeing who the top bowlers and how easy batting was when they hit those peaks.Warne was crap back then and so was Murali
It was okay. Seen several dozen better one-day innings, really.How do you rate a 130 in the World Cup final against India?
And i think you won't see sense even if an alltime great sportsman categorically tells you why/how performance against best of the best is the benchmark for alltime greats, not bashing weak mediocre opposition.I think you've mixed apples and oranges.
I think you have to drill some sense into your own head. You've explained nothing, you've generalised - shotty generalisations at that.Not relative. Its also empiric.
In a post-nuclear holocaust world, where cricket is played by spastic people and lepers, the second best or best side is really an irrelevant benchmark.
Sorry if i have to use extreme examples to drill some sense in your head.
I think i've already explained why being the best in relative terms for your era is utterly meaningless without an empiric benchmark.