Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
The thing is, as I've pointed-out, Richards didn't score with an average of 50 - there were two brief periods when he scored with an average in the late-90s and early-80s. In these two short times he lived-up to "best since Bradman" tag, and lived-up to it how.it doesn't always convert to runs for any batsman, expect maybe the don...that's not a good enough reason to rate him down, he was a match winner for most of his career, the most feared presence at the crease for any bowler during that time...that basically says right there that his approach converted into runs when it counted...the windies had some exceptional batsmen in their lineups during his time and he didn't always need to make tons of runs...but with his approach, to score at an average of 50 overall during that time with his kind of strike rate and importantly batting in the top order is as exceptional as it comes...
For most of the rest of his career, though, he was indeed constrained by the approach he'd chosen, and averaged just 41. Because of the fact he still played many match-winning knocks and the fact that a, for instance, 42 from him was probably worth a bit more due to the intimidation than a 42 from a, for instance, Dilip Vengsarkar, he was still a cut above most batsmen with a similar average, and indeed a cut above some with a slightly higher one.
And yes, I'm well aware that I didn't watch as-it-unfolded a single one of these knocks, inside a phenomenal period or a less-phenomenal one. I don't care, frankly. I've watched similar things and I've read about the Richards legend much, and I fully understand what it was that went-on when Richards batted. I just don't draw the same conclusions from it that most people - those who did and those who did not watch him - do.
Runs always count meanwhile - there's almost no such thing as "making runs when it counted". The more often you make them, the more often they count.