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Gilchrist named Australia's greatest ever ODI player

Son Of Coco

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Yes, to an extent. The primary task of a batsman is to score runs, if he looks good whilst doing it then it's just an added bonus.
It is, but in a one-day game how quickly they're scored is also of some importance. The job of an opener in the one-day game has increasingly become that of firing his team off to a good start. As a result, IMO the stats don't always tell the full story. If a current day batsman has a pretty decent average and a high strike rate then he's performed well.
 

Ikki

Hall of Fame Member
It is, but in a one-day game how quickly they're scored is also of some importance. The job of an opener in the one-day game has increasingly become that of firing his team off to a good start. As a result, IMO the stats don't always tell the full story. If a current day batsman has a pretty decent average and a high strike rate then he's performed well.
Just adding to what you've said...

The quicker a player scores the more balls he saves. Gilchrist may score 6-7 runs less than a Tendulkar or a Ponting but he saves a good 3 - and in other cases more - overs. If the difference of those runs came down to it, I'd back the number of balls saved - even if tail-enders were batting - to make that difference and by quite a bit.
 

Perm

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
and the speed at which they do it doesn't matter?
In an ODI or Twenty20, yes. However, Ganguly will score more runs than Gilchrist and by a reasonable margin too so the Strike Rate isn't quite as important. If I was selecting a team I would pick Gilchrist because of the added value of his wicket-keeping, and I also like watching him bat. But as pure ODI openers then I feel Sourav Ganguly is better.
 

Fiery

Banned
In an ODI or Twenty20, yes. However, Ganguly will score more runs than Gilchrist and by a reasonable margin too so the Strike Rate isn't quite as important. If I was selecting a team I would pick Gilchrist because of the added value of his wicket-keeping, and I also like watching him bat. But as pure ODI openers then I feel Sourav Ganguly is better.
Seriously? :wacko:
 
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Top_Cat

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While McGrath would probably be one of the names on my teamsheet, I'm not sure that he brings anything to the table that a Hadlee, Garner, Ambrose or Pollock doesn't bring. Wasim was special in that he was a genuinely aggressive wicket taking bowler, and probably the most destructive bowler in ODI cricket history. Plus his more than capable slogging in the lower order seals the deal for me.
Errr, last I checked, none of those guys played for Australia and this thread was about Australia's best ODI player. McGrath my number 1 ODI player for Australia closely followed by Dean Jones, Ricky Ponting then Adam Gilchrist.
 

Ikki

Hall of Fame Member
In an ODI or Twenty20, yes. However, Ganguly will score more runs than Gilchrist and by a reasonable margin too so the Strike Rate isn't quite as important. If I was selecting a team I would pick Gilchrist because of the added value of his wicket-keeping, and I also like watching him bat. But as pure ODI openers then I feel Sourav Ganguly is better.
More and by a reasonable margin? The difference is 5 on average. The question is, would you rather have 5 runs or 4 overs worth to get those 5 runs?
 

Perm

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
More and by a reasonable margin? The difference is 5 on average. The question is, would you rather have 5 runs or 4 overs worth to get those 5 runs?
5 runs is a reasonable margin I would have thought, especially when we are talking about two of the finest ODI openers ever.
 

biased indian

International Coach
I'm certain Gilly could average 40 plus if he was playing for a lesser team. But for Australia facing an average of 6 overs per game is enough due to the strong batting lineup.
he opened the inngs all the time rite..so how it will effect his batting ????

i didnt go and chk it..... but i think ponting who comes one down to him avg more than him
 

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