Viv Richards would have made a lot more runs had he played in a weaker side and had been the only great batsman in the team. In England in 1976 when he was still trying to establish himself in the side and the West Indies were fresh from the hiding they took in Australia he was prepared to bat forever.......and nearly did.Gavaskar, Sehwag, Dravid, Tendulkar, Ganguly, Laxman
Man that would be a batting line up. Would give the all powerful West Indies pace attack of 70s and 80s a run for their money.
It been mentioned before when Lara and Richards were discussed and who was better. But it would be interesting to see how Richards would go in the same situations and having more ownership placed on his wicket. Would he be as free flowing if he didn't have the starts that Hayne and Greenridge were providing or knowing he had Lloyd to come if he failed. I'm sure he would be success, but it would interesting if he batted the same and how much that burden would have placed on his batting.
Are you kidding me? Gavaskar played in an era against Hadlee, Lillee, Imran, Willis and the West Indians. Bowling attacks nowadays are either inexperienced, erratic or flat out mediocre. The only bowling that has improved is spin, and Gavaskar was a master at combatting that. Are you telling me you would rather be a batsman in the 70s and 80s than now?Richards would have done just as well and I think if he were in the current WIndies team he would have batted more responsively; resulting in that higher average his detractors seem to want.
As for Sunil, I am not quite sure. Whilst the flat pitches would aid him, the bowling attacks are largely better nowadays and the requirement to score faster shift doubts over him.
Gavaskar faced Lillee for one series and completely failed. Never faced Thommo and Lillee together. Faced Thomson and a much weaker attack. Didn't do that well against the Windies in the 80s - when they actually had a good bowling attack - and failed altogether against England. Gavaskar averages 46 in the 80s. Well-enough, not great, against Hadlee and co, actually was very good against Pakistan.Are you kidding me? Gavaskar played in an era against Hadlee, Lillee, Imran, Willis and the West Indians. Bowling attacks nowadays are either inexperienced, erratic or flat out mediocre. The only bowling that has improved is spin, and Gavaskar was a master at combatting that. Are you telling me you would rather be a batsman in the 70s and 80s than now?
LOL, Collingwood and Bell are in the form of their lives, so doesn't impress me.They'd both average 55+. No Warne would help Viv as well.
And the fact that you don't think Gavaskar would do well in the 2000s era Kaz is ridiculous. He may not average as much as your God Ponting, nor score as quickly, but if Ian Bell and Collingwood can average mid-40s in this time, then Gavaskar will do just fine.
... you suggested that the answer as to whether they would do well in the 2000s is a 'no' for Sunil Gavaskar.Ooh, good catch. If by "today" the meaning is the immediate today, then yeah, both would do well. If "today" was in reference to the current era, then no, as said above in previous posts.
No, I said there would be doubts over Sunil - and I mentioned in which capacities whereas I think Richards would suit this era to a T. His strike-rate for THAT era is unbelievable, even now it would be amongst the best with that kind of average. And he was excellent against pace bowling against lively pitches, I really don't question him much on excellent bowling against flatter pitches.Firstly, Collingwood and Bell aren't supposed to impress you, they back up my point that if average to good batsman like those two can average mid 40s in this era, than all-time greats (both Gavaskar and Viv in Benaud's all-time XI) would do quite well.
What the hell is your definition of doing well anyway?
In this post below...
... you suggested that the answer as to whether they would do well in the 2000s is a 'no' for Sunil Gavaskar.
Averaging over 50 in this era is doing well.
Bingo. Frankly, I find it ridiculous that Gavaskar, who opened against some of the best fast bowlers ever and had a tighter technique than Dravid, would be 'found out' by the mediocre bowling of the last few years. Given that batsmen like Graeme Smith and Jaywardene can average 50 in this age of buffet bowling, Gavaskar could pretty easily manage 60+.Richards would destroy the bowling of today while Gavaskar would easily be the best opener in the world.