And happen John Traicos might have become the great spinner and that would be that - great shame we will never know - Denis Compton had a point - not a good one but a point nonethelessThere's no reason to presume any of those performers would not have had good Test careers over the following year or 3 as far as I'm concerned.
There is no reason to assume that all or even most of them would have had successful test careers either. For one thing the vast majority of their cricket would have been in England and South Africa. How do we know they would have succeeded in the sub-continent or even the West Indies? The bottom line is that first-class cricket is a lower, less challenging form of cricket and success at this level doesn't guarantee test success.I've gone through this before but when you've got a collection of players some of whom have Test performances on their side and some of whom have superlative First-Class careers, before and after, on their side, then it's pretty obvious it's a superlative team.
There's no reason to presume any of those performers would not have had good Test careers over the following year or 3 as far as I'm concerned.
Except Barry Richards played County Cricket when each county had four or five Test players on show where as Ramprakash has made hay against journeyman allrounders from Denmark and the Australian 4th XI.I just compared Barry Richards to Ramprakash, Hicks and Manjrekar and they have pretty similar first-class records. So how do we know that he wouldn't have fizzled out at the top level like the others? The answer is we don't. No matter how good he looked at county cricket there is no guarantee he would have been able to handle the greater challenges of test cricket.
No, the bottom line is that things aren't black-and-white. There have been times in cricket's history when some domestic cricket has been stronger than some international cricket. In general, the gap was considerably smaller in the early-1970s than it is currently.There is no reason to assume that all or even most of them would have had successful test careers either. For one thing the vast majority of their cricket would have been in England and South Africa. How do we know they would have succeeded in the sub-continent or even the West Indies? The bottom line is that first-class cricket is a lower, less challenging form of cricket and success at this level doesn't guarantee test success.
Never quite been able to fathom why it is that Traicos is talked about and Grahame Chevalier, whose Currie record was far better, if shorter-term, is completely ignored. Perhaps because the SA selectors made the same odd choice in that series.And happen John Traicos might have become the great spinner and that would be that - great shame we will never know - Denis Compton had a point - not a good one but a point nonetheless
I think it’s a pretty difficult question to answer for coloured cricketers not only played on mat stripes but also were void of the cricketing ‘start’ their white counterparts enjoyed.Very probably true by 1970 when they had just become No. 1, and also very likely around the time of their very good side in the late 1950's. Less certain imo around the side's transitional period in the early 1960's unless BD really was a complete one-off. And who knows who else missed out in the decade or so after WW2? Actually, TTBoy may have some idea - I think he's read far more into this than the rest of us.
Fair enough. I wouldn't agree fully with the first part but it's a reasonable enough argument. I would note that though South Africa won in England in 1965, England had won in South Africa earlier in the year. So the two teams were evenly matched at that point. And though SA had improved by 1970, so probably had England with the likes of Snow and Underwood. As I mentioned earlier, the SA stars as a whole, didn't really shine in England in 1970 as part of the ROW.
No. Don Wilson was a fingerspinner, and most of his career came in the era of uncovered wickets. There is no way he was the remotest of patches of Peter Pollock, Michael Procter, Pat Trimborn or anyone else as far as likely performance on covered pitches is concerned.To give a concrete example, let's look at the England team playing against the ROW in 1970. They had a bunch of different bowlers but almost all of them averaged below 25 in first-class cricket.
For example there was a Yorkshire bowler called Wilson who averaged 21, better than Peter Pollock, in first class cricket.
http://content-www.cricinfo.com/england/content/player/22469.html
Are we supposed to believe that Wilson was some kind of all-time great bowler because of his first-class record?
I can't. You seriously overrate that side. It was one of England's better teams of recent years, but lost (admittedly with hindrance from rain) to India at home a year later. Now, until recently that was the strongest Indian team away from the subcontinent, by miles, in history, but losing at home to India always means a team can't be taken too seriously.Incidentally that 1970 series saw some fairly average performances from some of the South African players including Pollock and Richards. England came quite close to drawing the series 2-2 in the fourth test and I could easily see them beating SA if they had turned up that summer.
This is such a weird argument. If we can't take England seriously because they lost to India then we can't take Pollock and Richards seriously because they couldn't score heavily against England just the previous year. We can't take the 99 Australian team seriously because they lost to Sri Lanka for the first time. We can't take the 1981 Australia team seriously because they lost a test match at home to India. Any time a player performs under par against a weak team we can't take him seriously. Ridiculous argument really.Now, until recently that was the strongest Indian team away from the subcontinent, by miles, in history, but losing at home to India always means a team can't be taken too seriously.
Do you have an opinion on the best Test team of all time?This is such a weird argument. If we can't take England seriously because they lost to India then we can't take Pollock and Richards seriously because they couldn't score heavily against England just the previous year. We can't take the 99 Australian team seriously because they lost to Sri Lanka for the first time. We can't take the 1981 Australia team seriously because they lost a test match at home to India. Any time a player performs under par against a weak team we can't take him seriously. Ridiculous argument really.