Shaggy Alfresco
State Captain
I don't know much about Les Ames. His test average certainly seems impressive (43.40 when keeping wicket), how good was his wicketkeeping though?
Alan Knott was light years ahead of Stewart as a wicketkeeper.Absolutely no way was Knott a proverbial mile ahead of Stewart, and certainly not even ahead at all IMO.
Well I suppose "highly doubting" makes a change from someone coming up with a blaze of statistics.As a wicketkeeper he may have looked better but I highly doubt he dropped many fewer catches or missed many fewer stumpings.
As a wicketkeeper-batsman, as I say, Stewart has a substantial case for being the better of the two.
Funnily enough tho quite a lot of folk who were around at the time reckon it was Knott's batting that kept out the (supposedly) superior glove-work of Bob Taylor. It's a shame luckyeddie isn't around still (for all sorts of reasons, actually, but particularly here) as I'm sure he'd have an opinion on it.Alan Knott is the best keeper by the proverbial mile and until the recent generations produced Gilchrist and Sangakarra he was also a contender for the greatest keeper/batsman of all time. He now falls behind those two although he stays ahead of Flower just for his far superior keeping.
Sanga is a genuine keeper as well IMO.Anyway, Gilchrist clearly. Has redefined the role completely & is a genuine keeper too rather than a batter who's been lumbered with the job (as one suspects Sanga & Flower are).
Four years averaging 38. Would you really say that's mediocre? Obviously it's not up to the standard that Gilchrist had set himself in the first segment of his career, but it's still pretty good.Therefore, Gilchrist, with 4 years of phenomena and 4 years of mediocrity, has to top the list.
AWTA, big fan of Alan Knott. Off school once with the flu and they had something on ESPN and I had taped the legends of cricket and great Test matches, and they showed some high-lights of and Ashes tour either in the 70's or 81 (I can't remember), but he came in with England not looking good and got a century with Geoff Boycott. Still have him in my all-time team though.Alan Knott is the best keeper by the proverbial mile and until the recent generations produced Gilchrist and Sangakarra he was also a contender for the greatest keeper/batsman of all time. He now falls behind those two although he stays ahead of Flower just for his far superior keeping.
There's always plenty of nonsense written on this board, often deliberate and often tongue in cheek, but if that's meant to be taken as a serious observation it qualifies as the most clueless thing ever written.being a good wicketkeeper is a fairly short scale based almost exclusively on the ability to catch a ball and, very very occasionally, whip off the bails.
Gilchrist has averaged 36.89 in his last 61 innings over the last 4 years. Looks impressive enough at first glance, but nearly all of that came in 9 innings in the space of a few months. In the other 52 innings he averages just 26.67. So the last 4 years has been made-up of one very short sensational period and plenty of extreme mediocrity in between. However, like Botham, the memorable has tended to be very memorable and hence due to past glories the for-the-most-part inadequacy has been glossed-over.Four years averaging 38. Would you really say that's mediocre? Obviously it's not up to the standard that Gilchrist had set himself in the first segment of his career, but it's still pretty good.