Nope, I've stated it many times. Go and find it if you really want to, but you don't, and you know you don't.
I geniunely do. I am interested in what kind of logic you are going to bring forth. Maybe, per usual, some insane standard where it stop-starts at the rate of a test but I am willing to be surprised. Thus far, you have provided F-All.
You really are losing control of yourself, and I've seen it happen before too. Vettori and Kumble have both caused England plenty of problems on plenty of occasions, even if there have been other occasions when they've done less well. English batsmen have played spin poorly on any number of occasions and to suggest they've routinely conquered both Kumble and Vettori is absolutely nothing short of ridiculous.
You denied they've clobbered them, which is just stupid. Vettori has almost always had trouble with England and Kumble has almost always had trouble with England in England. That's the point I made. That's
irrefutable. Whether they did well in 1 test or 1 inning is not the point here.
South Africa also had bowlers and batsmen to reply, hence they weren't constantly outclassed every game the way Zimbabwe have been since 2003. It is not even remotely close to being the case that every bowler did well against South Africa. A few people took 4 or 5 wickets for nothing much against them, which means precisely nothing, as bowlers have done that throughout Test history. But very few did anomalaically outstandingly against them - again, bowlers have done anomalaically well against certain teams throughout Test history. Bill O'Reilly is not even remotely close to being the only one. This is my last word on the matter, I'm utterly sick of this.
Ah, but who said I was talking about Zimbabwe post 2003? Do you just make it up as you go? S.Africa were poor during O'Reilly's time. Not on the same level as an England or a Pakistan as you implied earlier.
BTW? What the hell is "anomalaically"? If you are saying that Tigre's performance Vs. S.Africa is an anomaly, then you've lost the plot. That's the whole argument I am bringing forth. It was not just Tiger, but almost
everybody who did well against them. Not just well, much better than their own career figures. This shows an inflationary trend.
No, I didn't. You have tried claiming that South Africa were not of Test standard in the 1910s, 1920s and 1900s. And also the 1930s. I haven't even looked at the figures for the 1930s alone, I couldn't care less about them. I am not changing my mind, I know more than enough about it, and anything you say on the matter is not relevant to me. South Africa were a Test-standard team as of 1906, and never ceased again to be one.
Have I talked about S.Africa in the 1910s, 1920s and 1900s here? I haven't. I'm constantly trying to get you to stop stat-picking regarding eras/decades that have nothing to do with 1930s.
"I haven't even looked at the figures for the 1930s alone, I couldn't care less about them. I am not changing my mind"
What are you? Some petulant little kid? Maybe if you did read about it and looked at the figures you would stop blabbering about something that is making you look foolish.
We can't gauge how good he was at Test level, no. He had just a single good series, and that was the Bodyline one. Of course, Test cricket is not the only level, and domestic cricket does matter, hence people rating players who haven't played at that level.
Most bowlers of the time had careers not much longer than Voce or Larwood. To suggest we do not know enough about them is lunacy. Voce, for example, has 27 tests:
the same amount of tests as Tiger O'Reilly.
I'm arguing that batsmen don't lose-out by being in the field longer.
Not always, but they can. Not just tiredness-wise, but not having much time left to bat. It's one of the bowler's duties to get the batsmen of the opposition out as soon as possible to give their own side as much chance possible to bat out a win. Just because sometimes it isn't necessary doesn't mean that when you have two players you are going to pick the one that takes longer because of it. If you have a choice, you pick the faster one. And to suggest that they'd pick the slower ones because some 'batsmen' conserve energy is ludicrous.