silentstriker
The Wheel is Forever
Again, so? And Sidhu didn't do much apart from that 201, and most of that wasn't against Walsh and Ambrose I think.
What do you mean so? If it were only two players hammering them around, having the best of them, that's one thing and they could take care of the rest. But when 4 batsmen are clearly having it good, it's not so much Tendi's pre-2000 class oozing through. Anyway, I already said I don't mean to say that the job was easy. But at their best, Walsh and, certainly, Ambrose were not.Again, so?
So? Anyone can play two innings, score a century in one and a duck the other. The average is 50. Scoring about 20 in all your innings and then a double century is still notable. It still contributes to the large tally of runs conceded by Windies bowlers.But there weren't four players. Only two, Sidhu had only one good innings and five horrible ones, and Jadeja played only two innings and failed in one of them.
But in a five test match series, he played two innings. So you think the average means anything?So? Anyone can play two innings, score a century in one and a duck the other. The average is 50. Scoring about 20 in all your innings and then a double century is still notable. It still contributes to the large tally of runs conceded by Windies bowlers.
Read the above.But in a five test match series, he played two innings. So you think the average means anything?
Sidhu's scores: 10, 0, 201, 26, 3, 36. He was hardly dominating the West Indies bowlers. He had one career best innings amidst being pretty horrible. Good for him. And regardless of what you say, playing two innings in a five test match series is not enough to make any type of judgment.Read the above.
give it a rest CC, Hayden is so obviously better than Srikkanth was its not funnyNo, not underrated- heavily, heavily overrated.
Hayden doesnt face any good pacer today (save for Bond) who'd make him pay for being the front-foot bully.
Against quality opening bowling, openers *MUST* be excellent on the backfoot- not a front-foot bully like Hayden.
I mean seriously - does it take a rocket scientist to figure out that his front-foot bashfest would've ended horribly if he tried that against Wasim,Waqar, Curtly, Walsh, Donald, etc ?
He is just cashing in on namby-pamby bowling that cannot force him on the backfoot with their speed and bounce (bowled with accuracy ofcourse).
In my opinion, Hayden is the most overrated cricketer ever- i don't see him averaging more than 35 in tests and barely 30 in ODIs if he were to play in any other era- because Hayden is nothing more than a slightly taller and buffer version of Srikkanth (another exclusive front-foot bully opener). We all know how his career went when real bowlers were around.
and whilst I agree with quite a bit of what you are saying, I would say that he is quite a way ahead of the likes of Wood and Hilditch. One thing is for sure, if those two were playing now, they ouldnt be averaging over 50.I don't think anyone's said he wasn't capable of the 3 consecutive astonishing innings we've seen from him in his last 3 ODIs. It's certainly surprised me that anyone would manage to pull-off such a feat, however.
Such things don't, obviously, change the fact that he was never that good at ODIs for much of his career - he's made several massive scores and had about 3 shortish bouts of impossibly big scoring. He's also, of course, cashed-in big-time on the substandard sides. Otherwise, in his other however-many-it-is games, he's not been anything remotely special.
As to Tests, I've said it a million times - Hayden is not a capable player of seam and swing, specifically back into the left-hander. Anyone prepared to take him seriously as a genuine modern great, because of his ability to relentlessly pound average bowling to a better extent than most, overrates him as far as I'm concerned. I've always said had he been born 5 years earlier (and hence been too old by the time the bowling standards dropped to the paucity levels they dropped to in 2001\02 to have any recall in that period) he'd almost certainly have no Test career to speak of - probably between 10 and 20 games averaging between 20 and 30. About the same as a Graeme Wood or Andrew Hilditch.
Judgement of what? That the Windies bled runs? To score a double ton as opener says enough about the attack. Looking at the scorecards, it was Rose who took most of the higher-order wickets, then probably Bishop. Funny that one of the few higher-order wickets Ambrose gets was Sidhu who was at 201.Sidhu's scores: 10, 0, 201, 26, 3, 36. And regardless of what you say, playing two innings in a five test match series is not enough to make any type of judgment.
without wishing to be controversial, but Tendulkar doesnt score runs , well certainly not in the way Hayden has done.I find it amusing how all bowlers suddenly become "useless medium pacers typical of the crap attacks of today" as soon as Hayden scores runs against them, but not if Lara or Tendy do.
I guess what CC is failing to see is that players do change over time...some get better whilst having the same fundamental style of play, other get worse.He would have. Tendulkar post 2002 is certainly no where near the player he was in the 90s.
How do you know that he has improved? He has faced ordinary bowlers on flat pitches (as a general rule), you don't know until you see him against quality swing/seam bowlers, on green/hard pitches.I guess what CC is failing to see is that players do change over time...some get better whilst having the same fundamental style of play, other get worse.
The fact that Hayden failed in the mid 90s in no way proves that he would have failed against similar quality of bowling now. My take on it is that he has developed as a batsman into a better player than 12 years ago.
In the same way as Tendulkars light has dimmed since his late 20's (which is in fact quite young for a batsman to 'lose it'), people/players change.
well are you saying then he has NEVER succeeded against quality swing or seam, or whatever, or on green/hard pitches.How do you know that he has improved? He has faced ordinary bowlers on flat pitches (as a general rule), you don't know until you see him against quality swing/seam bowlers, on green/hard pitches.
He lost it after 13 years of international cricket, which is not all that young. Its about miles put on the body as much as the age. Thats why you see two decade careers being seen less often now. Almost 400 ODI games and 130+ Test games take their toll, regardless of age.In the same way as Tendulkars light has dimmed since his late 20's (which is in fact quite young for a batsman to 'lose it'), people/players change.
I swear you have told Kaz that at least 15 timesHe lost it after 13 years of international cricket, which is not all that young. Its about miles put on the body as much as the age. Thats why you see two decade careers being seen less often now. Almost 400 ODI games and 130+ Test games take their toll, regardless of age.
Its nice to see that you ignored my post from where I explained in detail Hayden's early career or was there too many words for you.As Gretsky said - some of the lesser players are the ultimate masters of bashing substandard opposition. Hayden in that category.
Swervy- i dont see how Hayden could've succeeded against any worldclass pace bowling attack. Front foot play only gets you murdered as an opener on decent wickets.
Tendulkar's form has suffered massively through injuries. That much is obvious.