Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
Eh? No it's not.But that's the exact same argument you used when sayign that Hussain was better than Hayden.
Eh? No it's not.But that's the exact same argument you used when sayign that Hussain was better than Hayden.
FFS, stats tell you nothing of interest (or accuracy) if you don't "manipulate" them, and not in the totally random way you fuffle around with there.The old convenient manipulation of players stats. Oh if you take out his first 4 tests, and his 21st test, oh and the 10 at the end of his career etc etc
Hiding the truth a bit there Rich, it was only his third hundred he scored in which the attack didn't contain Warne or McGrath.You rate Brett Lee, Andrew Bichel and Stuart MacGill as such?
Yes it is, you reasoned Hussain was better than Hayden because you discredited the periods when Hayden scored all of his runs (and conversely Nasser scored none) due to them being in times of rubbish bowling.Eh? No it's not.
Not true. McGrath didn't bowl in the second-innings at The MCG, was injured by then, and Warne didn't play in either the MCG or SCG game. The only truly Test-class bowler he faced was Gillespie in the MCG knock (as I say, at The SCG Gillespie was bowling half-fit).Hiding the truth a bit there Rich, it was only his third hundred he scored in which the attack didn't contain Warne or McGrath.
Apart from the fact he didn't score "none" (not as many as Hayden, no, but I'd never said he did)...Yes it is, you reasoned Hussain was better than Hayden because you discredited the periods when Hayden scored all of his runs (and conversely Nasser scored none) due to them being in times of rubbish bowling.
FFS, stats tell you nothing of interest (or accuracy) if you don't "manipulate" them, and not in the totally random way you fuffle around with there.
The stats I provide give a far more accurate impression of Atherton's career than those any fool can look-up on CricInfo.
This post should go in the Joke of the Day thread, really.I couldn't give a **** about those stats, they're not important.
The more important stats, as I say, are those I show - of the greater part of his career when he was not playing 1\4-fit.
As that's the part that formed the vast majority. However, the irrelevant small minority part is so significantly different that it distorts the important picture, for those fool enough to fail to ignore it.
Trescothick's debut Atherton scored 1(16) c Campbell b Walsh & 28(63) c Jacobs b Walsh. Trescothick 66(163) b Walsh & 38*(101).I once saw a match between England and Windies. I think it was Tresco's debut match, IIRC and the way Athers batted in that match (flat track, over the hill Windies bowling, nothing to scare even a McGrath when batting on that track) made me wince. It is a testimony to how bad the Windies were at that time that they actually lost the match but Athers did a great job of trying to salvage it as much as possible for them by batting time. He was scoring less than 1 run an over in the first day's play and even the new boy, Tresco, was outscoring him comfortably and Tresco was scoring nowhere near as fast as he has sometimes done later on....
yeah, not exactly sure which test, but I think the first one was won by the Windies anyway, so def. not that one. I am juz talking from memory there, but I do remember the commentators saying that he was batting ridiculously slow on a good track.... I think I have seen him bat like that quite often.Trescothick's debut Atherton scored 1(16) c Campbell b Walsh & 28(63) c Jacobs b Walsh. Trescothick 66(163) b Walsh & 38*(101).
I think you may mean the 2nd test where Atherton scored 1(7) c Lara b Walsh & 45(143) lbw b Walsh.
I once saw a match between England and Windies. I think it was Tresco's debut match, IIRC and the way Athers batted in that match (flat track, over the hill Windies bowling, nothing to scare even a McGrath when batting on that track) made me wince. It is a testimony to how bad the Windies were at that time that they actually lost the match but Athers did a great job of trying to salvage it as much as possible for them by batting time. He was scoring less than 1 run an over in the first day's play and even the new boy, Tresco, was outscoring him comfortably and Tresco was scoring nowhere near as fast as he has sometimes done later on....
Trescothick's debut Atherton scored 1(16) c Campbell b Walsh & 28(63) c Jacobs b Walsh. Trescothick 66(163) b Walsh & 38*(101).
I think you may mean the 2nd test where Atherton scored 1(7) c Lara b Walsh & 45(143) lbw b Walsh.
Well I assure you there was only 1 particularly flat deck that series and it was indeed Old Trafford (Trescothick's debut match). Don't know how on Earth anyone could describe Ambrose and Walsh as "over the hill" that series, though, they patently were as good as if not better than ever. West Indies won the First Test of that series, England pulled level - just - at Lord's in IMO the greatest Test of all-time, and dominated the series from Trescothick's debut game onwards.yeah, not exactly sure which test, but I think the first one was won by the Windies anyway, so def. not that one. I am juz talking from memory there, but I do remember the commentators saying that he was batting ridiculously slow on a good track.... I think I have seen him bat like that quite often.
I'm not "manipulating" anything, I'm searching around for - and finding - the true story. An average of 37 is not an accurate reflection of Atherton's worth for the vast majority of his career, one of 41 is. You also seem to be getting certain parts of this muddled with the Bangladesh situation where I refuse to recognise that certain games deserve Test status, which has nothing to do with this here.Yet you are manipulating Atherton's stats and some how fabricating that he had an average of 41 (when clearly it was 37) and then you have the cheek to compare him to other players using their "real" averages...Isn't that contradiction? or is that suggesting that you do place value on "real" "offical" stats when it suits you.
I don't think his first innings 83 was anything special at all and of course Ambrose and Walsh were over the hill... They were comfortably better than the other West Indian bowlers coming up but that doesn't mean they were at their best. I did watch the series with great interest since I would usually come home from school around the time the matches used to start. I haven't really seen Athers whole career and that is why I am not participating much in the debate but from what I have seen, although he has played some good knocks with his back to the wall, esp. that Jo'burg effort and another one against RSA in 98 (even though he was plain lucky in that inning, and so were England to actually win that series thanks to Javed Akhtar), from what I saw of him, he was a guy who was also not very good on a flat track when it comes to adding value to the team. That is why I think the scales should be tilted even when comparing him with Vaughan.Well I assure you there was only 1 particularly flat deck that series and it was indeed Old Trafford (Trescothick's debut match). Don't know how on Earth anyone could describe Ambrose and Walsh as "over the hill" that series, though, they patently were as good as if not better than ever. West Indies won the First Test of that series, England pulled level - just - at Lord's in IMO the greatest Test of all-time, and dominated the series from Trescothick's debut game onwards.
Atherton, of course, had a poor series for the first 4 games (on, as I say, 3 very lively pitches against 2 superb opening bowlers) but made-up for it big-time with a sizeable double in the final Test of the series of 83 and 108 (the latter in which he almost carried his bat).