PhoenixFire
International Coach
So what? That is totally beside the point. Hayden has nothing to do with the fact that you were calling Hussain a crap player.
Pollock doesn't seem to enjoy bowling to Hayden too often.Hayden is only intimidating for bad bowlers - good ones would be licking their lips (and were, when they were around) at the chance to bowl at him. If you try and dominate good bowlers, the chances are you'll pay for it, and the Hussain way is generally more effective.
And if Hayden been born the same time Hussain was there's a substantial chance he'd have had a career of 10 Tests or so with an average of around about 20. Give me a "blocking the ****ing **** out of it" player who's managed to average in the 40s against top-quality bowling over one like that any time.Be that as it may, Hayden still scores an average 15 more runs per innings than Hussain, 15 runs, that's huge, Hayden is more consistently helping his side win matches than Hussain who's "block the ****ing **** out of it" attitude seems to have been mistaken by you for actual ability.
Can i have some evidence that Hussain was acctualy any good please?
wouldn't ramprakash and hick be better than hayden as well?And if Hayden been born the same time Hussain was there's a substantial chance he'd have had a career of 10 Tests or so with an average of around about 20. Give me a "blocking the ****ing **** out of it" player who's managed to average in the 40s against top-quality bowling over one like that any time.
Hayden's ability to pound rubbish bowling seems to have been mistaken by many for actual ability.
this is justa joke..I half expect you to turn around like you normally do and say that you were being 'sarcastic' all the time, and imply that you are so misunderstood, and all that garbage.And if Hayden been born the same time Hussain was there's a substantial chance he'd have had a career of 10 Tests or so with an average of around about 20. Give me a "blocking the ****ing **** out of it" player who's managed to average in the 40s against top-quality bowling over one like that any time.
Hayden's ability to pound rubbish bowling seems to have been mistaken by many for actual ability.
its strange isnt it...hayden has been a lynchpin in the success of one of the greatest teams thats ever been played, and Hussain, Hick,and Ramprakash basically sum up the underacheivemnt of the England set up in the 90s, and you can honestly hint at even one of them being a better bat than Hayden.Maybe. We'll never know.
One thing for sure - they are as good at the domestic level.
How on earth was Hayden the 'lynchpin'? He was on the verge of being dropped before he scored a load of runs on those flat decks in the West Indies, against ****e bowlers on small grounds.its strange isnt it...hayden has been a lynchpin in the success of one of the greatest teams thats ever been played, and Hussain, Hick,and Ramprakash basically sum up the underacheivemnt of the England set up in the 90s, and you can honestly hint at even one of them being a better bat than Hayden.
It just keeps getting better
I don't normally do. I've never said I was misunderstood on things like Harmison, Yousuf, Hayden, etc. etc. Purely on the many times I pretend to take things seriously, and people think I actually am taking them seriously. Which happens about 4 or 5 times a day...this is justa joke..I half expect you to turn around like you normally do and say that you were being 'sarcastic' all the time, and imply that you are so misunderstood, and all that garbage.
There's precisely sod-all you can do to change the fact that Hussain did average over 40 for two extended periods - you can call it balls and all that crap, but you can't revoke history.Hussain has definate technical issues and the reason why he averaged 37 (actually 36.92 not including vs Bangladesh)(not in the 40s, although no doubt you will dazzle us with some utter balls about such and such a period) was because he was a typical average test match batsman, nothing more.
Except that Hussain didn't struggle against all bowling, which is patently obvious to anyone with half an eye...Hayden also has his weaknesses, but he scores runs by the bucketful, and he has done it against good bowlers as well. And even if Hayden was as bad as you make out, what would you rather, a batsman who struggles vs good bowling and scores massively vs poor bowling, or a batsman who struggles against all bowling!!!!????
As I repeat - for perhaps the 50th time - doesn't matter, I've never said Hussain was better at pounding rubbish attacks. Purely that had Hayden been born the same year Hussain was, he'd almost certainly not have had the chance, as he'd have been 33 by the time the required period rolled around, and almost certainly by then he'd have been written-off as the failure he was at the time.By the way, Hayden is only 3 years younger than Hussain, dont make out that they are players from completly different eras, coz they werent, and as I showed early in the time from 2000 to when Hussain retired, they both played about 50 tests, and Hayden basically did everything Hussain did, but doubled.
I don't doubt he would, he's a self-affacing guy.And I tell you, if Hussain himself got to hear about this debate, he would probably as embaressed as I think you should be
Don't judge a player by his team. Hayden would not have had the chance to be the lynchpin if he'd not been allowed by the rubbishness of the bowling to be such a thing.its strange isnt it...hayden has been a lynchpin in the success of one of the greatest teams thats ever been played, and Hussain, Hick,and Ramprakash basically sum up the underacheivemnt of the England set up in the 90s, and you can honestly hint at even one of them being a better bat than Hayden.
It just keeps getting better
Hayden is indeed special - few have his prowess at grinding rubbish bowling into the dust. However, most of the time such traits aren't required in a top-quality player.Hayden was/is a very special player that is heavily underrated by many.
There is NO fathomable way anyone could make an argument based on any cricketing reason or fact that the former is even close to being in the same league as the latter.
and what is an adequate summation of Englands batting in the 90s....either quite good or absolutely useless....you took the words right out of my mouthHick and Ramprakash don't sum-up anything, least of all England in the 1990s. Both were either quite good or absolutely useless, depending on the time in question.
thanks for clarifying that richard...Maybe. We'll never know.
One thing for sure - they are as good at the domestic level.
seriously what did you expect when you started this thread?its strange isnt it...hayden has been a lynchpin in the success of one of the greatest teams thats ever been played, and Hussain, Hick,and Ramprakash basically sum up the underacheivemnt of the England set up in the 90s, and you can honestly hint at even one of them being a better bat than Hayden.
It just keeps getting better
and as a number of people have said, yes Hayden has his weaknesses, but why do his bashers only focus on those weaknesses. Have a look at the success!!!I can't really understand why people rate Hayden so highly. Ever seen him try all of the front foot smashing bollocks on a green pitch, when the ball is swinging, and against a half decent fast bowler. A classic example of this is where Hoggard totally owned him in the 2005 Ashes series.
Nobody is doubting that he is an excellent player when it comes to medium pacers (who are ****e), and flat pitches, where he murders them into oblivion.
Haha, there were soooo many more classic examples before the 2001\02 season, when near enough every seamer who bowled at him totally owned him.I can't really understand why people rate Hayden so highly. Ever seen him try all of the front foot smashing bollocks on a green pitch, when the ball is swinging, and against a half decent fast bowler. A classic example of this is where Hoggard totally owned him in the 2005 Ashes series.
Nobody is doubting that he is an excellent player when it comes to medium pacers (who are ****e), and flat pitches, where he murders them into oblivion.
dont worry Dicky, I think it has gone right over your headExcept that it rarely coincided with Hick and\or Ramprakash's fortunes.