Smudge
Hall of Fame Member
Best KFC consumer though.Worst test player ever: Patterson Thomson (WI)
Best KFC consumer though.Worst test player ever: Patterson Thomson (WI)
Unfortunately for you and luckily for youing Patterson, he misses the criteria stated in this thread by 48 Tests and 98 ODIs respectively.Worst test player ever: Patterson Thomson (WI)
Hick was as good a player as you could possibly be between 93-96, and i wouldnt be surprised if he was amongst the top 5 batsmen in that period during that time. If that makes him the worst player ever to play 50 tests, then i must really have not been paying attention.Maybe if he's playing Test cricket for New Zealand, as a general sort of rule I think that anyone averaging under 40 has just been an average performer at Test level, but that is a very general sort of rule. There was a reason he was used as the scapegoat so many times, beacuse he was a poor performer at Test level. No real excuse for it IMO, he had all the potential to be one of England's greatest Test batsman but failed at the highest level.
Which is what some people have done with Ken Rutherford I thinkArgh, pet hate, people judging players on statistics alone.
Lets just search through some stats and find a guy with a certain amount of caps and a low average and mention him, even though we have hardly heard of them or never seen them play.
Blah blah blah
Lies, damned lies, and..................
Surprisingly?If Kim Hughes played 3 more ODis, he would certainly be up there. Suprisingly, his Test match record isn't all that bad and considering the situation he was facing, its even better than first thought.
Either him or K Eric Upashantha. Really a demonstration of taking the village-green to the Test arena. How on Earth either ever got anywhere near international cricket is beyond me.Worst test player ever: Patterson Thomson (WI)
Says the man with a statistic in his sigArgh, pet hate, people judging players on statistics alone.
Lets just search through some stats and find a guy with a certain amount of caps and a low average and mention him, even though we have hardly heard of them or never seen them play.
Blah blah blah
Lies, damned lies, and..................
His back foot technique was terrible. He squared up when playing defensively and became a sitting duck, he played off the ground (ie airbourne) more than most and develped into a compulsive hooker.Not terribly sure how Atherton had "huge holes" in his game, TBH - and if he did he did pretty damn well when playing with them.
Still has no relevance to the holes in his technique. A technical deficiency still has to be exploited and it doesnt happen every innings. His massive faults have him found out, but that didnt mean he was incapable of scoring a run. It still has to be exploited and given the number of games he player he was bound to have scored runs and played a number of good innings.But rarely because of the Hook - mostly it was being caught behind the wicket.
And as he said in his book - however many times Ambrose got him out, he also scored runs against attacks including him. Not to mention other fine bowlers like Donald, Waqar, etc.
(quickly changes sig)Says the man with a statistic in his sig
You should put his E/R in there. An amazing 2.58, much better than anyone else in the tournament.(quickly changes sig)
LoL, yeah but i don't want to be too much of a stats whoreYou should put his E/R in there. An amazing 2.58, much better than anyone else in the tournament.
He peaked at number 7 in November 1995.Hick was as good a player as you could possibly be between 93-96, and i wouldnt be surprised if he was amongst the top 5 batsmen in that period during that time. If that makes him the worst player ever to play 50 tests, then i must really have not been paying attention.
See, I don't think he did have average career production. I think averaging 41.55 over 10 years and 97 Tests (as he did between 1990 and the Pakistan tour of 2000\01, excluding the tours of Zimbabwe and Australia where he was never half-fit to bat) against bowlers of the calibre he was mostly facing is a damn magnificent effort. I couldn't give a hoot about 2 Tests in 1989 or his last 10 when he was on the way down (with, probably not coincidentally, the cortisone used to ease his ankyloising spondylitis [think that's how it's spelt] wearing off around that time).Still has no relevance to the holes in his technique. A technical deficiency still has to be exploited and it doesnt happen every innings. His massive faults have him found out, but that didnt mean he was incapable of scoring a run. It still has to be exploited and given the number of games he player he was bound to have scored runs and played a number of good innings.
The technical issues (which I repeat were considerable) meant that it couldnt be done consistenatly and impacted his career production. He had average career production because he had issues.