My point is that those bowlers who were nearing the end of their career obviously weren't at the top of their game either. Why are you using their rep to make SUCH a distinction. I am not arguing whether the 90s had better bowlers or not, I am arguing the exact difference in that. I don't care that it is weaker, but how much weaker. 5 runs per wicket weaker? What?
Sorry, I honestly don't understand much of that. There were bowlers who were nearing the end of their career in 2001-2002 sort of time - are you agreeing or disagreeing with that? I'm saying precisely that their rep doesn't matter - "Donald & Pollock" instantly conjures a fearsome image, but the reality was nothing like that in 2001\02, in fact they were no real amount better than most that we've seen the last 6 years.
Actually, I showed that, and I showed you why - when you asked - his average of 50 fell. Tendulkar was on an obvious peak. Ponting was still a great batsmen who hadn't hit such purple patches. Now that he has and you're dismissing it simply because it came a few years later. That's the funny part. And as I said, whilst his peak in that era is held in such a regard then his trough should impact his record as well. To bat worse, in a possible better era for batting isn't such a negligible thing.
To bat worse is regardless of the era. I don't, as I say, myself hold much against Tendulkar for not being the force he once was. It doesn't impact on my judgement of him in the 1990-2002 time.
Ponting, however, is different - the 1996-2001 time
does impact on my judgement of him in the 2001-2007 time, because as I say with one it's a change in the calibre of the player himself, with the other it's a change in the calibre of what he was facing.
It doesn't matter if he wasn't as good. Every player has a period where they're better in one than the other. The fact is that you're being so simplistic about it, as were with Hayden, that you credit the era rather than the man.
I don't here, though, that's the point. In the Tendulkar case, I credit (or discredit, more accurately) the man - Tendulkar is clearly not the player he was previously. If it's more appropriate to make a distinction (whether crediting or discrediting) on the era, I do that.
It's not about the past mate, it's about the future. Maybe that should be the outlook.
I don't see why one matters any more than the other.
To be more clear:
Someone who was averaging 50, until he was reshuffled, in this harder era of bowling was WELL-equipped and isn't someone who was just benefiting off weaker bowling. I mean, for heaven's sake, people retire with that kind of average and are seen as great batsmen. Ponting peaked later in his career as he improved, the fact that no one touches him should show how in front he is.
As I say, for me he averaged 45 - that was his average at the combined five-six-seven in that time. Then he did a hell of a lot more when the quality of the bowling deteriorated, rapidly.
That's not simplistic, at all, as far as I'm concerned, it's perfectly plausible.