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Dire cricketers who had a successful test career

Ikki

Hall of Fame Member
Depends what you think has happened to the standard of batting. After all, the standard of bowling has certainly decreased.
If it has, to what extent? The 90s stand out for it's bowling in comparison to the 2000s but the 80s, 70s do not. Yet you don't hear someone saying Gavaskar or Chappell would average 9-10 runs less, would you?

2-3 runs on average, sure. 9-10? Ridiculous.
 

zaremba

Cricketer Of The Year
The 90s stand out for it's bowling in comparison to the 2000s but the 80s, 70s do not.
Lillee
Hadlee
Marshall
Garner
Holding
Roberts
Imran Khan
Abdul Qadir
Sarfraz Nawaz
Kapil Dev
Chandrasekhar
Prasanna
Bedi
Underwood
Botham
Willis
Snow
Alderman
Thomson


Apart from that lot, not many outstanding bowlers in the 70s and 80s
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
If it has, to what extent? The 90s stand out for it's bowling in comparison to the 2000s but the 80s, 70s do not. Yet you don't hear someone saying Gavaskar or Chappell would average 9-10 runs less, would you?

2-3 runs on average, sure. 9-10? Ridiculous.
2-3 runs being the average difference does not mean all batsmen will have their averages affected to the same degree by the same thing.

Not all players are the same.
 

Langeveldt

Soutie
Atherton didn't do well for a short period of time. Between 1990 and 2000 (calendar years in full) he averaged 41 when fit. Considering the bowlers he faced this is a superb achievement. There are 90 Tests in this period. Not short at all.
:band: here come the staaaaats dunnunuh nununuh nununuh nunununuh uh uh
 

Precambrian

Banned
1989 is irrelevant, he shouldn't have been called-up yet. 1998/99 is completely and totally irrelevant, he was unfit and no-one in that state of fitness would ever have performed. 2001 isn't irrelevant, but he wasn't Test-class any more and that was shown by his performance against other teams.
If he was not test class, why he played? Denotes that he played mostly because others around him were crap. So he was test player by elimination than being first and only choice. There is no way 2001 can be irrelevant, because we are talking test matches and you just can't discount terrible performances by saying he's past his peak. Everyone has a peak, however the judgement of a player should never be made just on the basis of that.

In 1990/91, 1993, 1994/95 and 1997 combined his record is more than acceptable. The only time he had a genuinely poor series was 1997.Atherton was far from superlative against Australia, but he was nowhere near as bad as some think. Players don't stay the same all career and Atherton was no exception.
When since averages of 35 became "more than acceptable"? He was crap always against Australia and was owned by McG so many times that it ceased to be funny. The only series he had something to tell about him was in 1993 and probably 94-95. The other 5 series, he was very very mediocre.

Atherton was never "exceptional" at any point in his career. Yet for some reason, he was always a fixture.

As I say - just one bad series, in 1998. He had a shocker in 1991, but he wasn't fully fit then either. He doesn't seek to use this as an excuse, however, but I do.
If he was not fully fit, he shouldnt have played. That is bloody criminal. And no way to be discounted.

No-one refuses a call-up. Atherton played in 1989 only because England's cricket that year was an utter shambles. However, more players than not who turn-out Test-class struggle early in their careers. I always ignore such a time, particularly when it comprises of 2 Tests. Look back through my posts, you'll find hundreds of examples concerning many different players.
Exactly my point. Atherton played because so poor was English cricket as regards to batting at that point in time. That is why I say he was English cricket personified.

They weren't - Ambrose and Walsh were both as good that tour as ever. Atherton's batting in that Oval Test (he scored 80 and 100 - almost carrying his bat in the second-innings) was quite brilliant.

As I say - plenty of good knocks, those were just the very best of the best.
Plenty?? :laugh: And I did say his knocks at Oval was masterly. But 2 masterly knocks doesnt make a career.
 

Precambrian

Banned
It was pretty damn good for the bowlers he faced. Had he faced the bowling of 2001/02 onwards, it wouldn't be that great an achievement. But had he done that his average would be considerably higher - more like 50. If Herschelle Gibbs can do as well as he did, Atherton certainly can. And yeah, I won't even mention a thing about Matthew Hayden.
Not at all. There is absolutely nothing in his batsmanship that suggest he'd have averaged more than 50 had he played in the 90s. And Gibbs was an attacking player whereas Athers was purely a defensive player who always lacked the 3rd and 4th gear. Rather in these days when aggressive openers set the tone for the innings, he'd been a colossal misfit and against stronger teams, his defensive play would be almost suicidal.
 

Precambrian

Banned
I never mentioned Atherton. Atherton, I thought, was a good player who had a successful Test career. He was one of the batsmen that I immediately liked when first getting into Test cricket.

There was another one, which went something like, 'You know its Christmas when England are collapsing and Atherton is battling to save a Test in some far off land'.

Describes him perfectly. Doesn't matter he averaged 41, his value to his team was immense. I think he was a very underrated cricketer myself, and a very good one. Not great, but very good.
Yeah he was as I said important to England because he was consistent in his glueing approach which made him look like the solid batsman which he was but never the value-adding one. If he had another attacking batsman at the other end, like Sehwag, then it would have been a different story. But Athers alone was mediocre. A truer comparison would be with Akash Chopra of India, who had a impeccable defenseive technique but seldom went above 2nd gear.
 

Precambrian

Banned
Nah, hooper would is more suited to the category of "extremely talented player who didn't make the most of his ability until very late". By no means mediocre, could match Lara stroke for stroke or better him at times..
Not at all, he's played so many tests and yet failed to give us anything but a glimpse of what he could have been. He's mediocre like Atherton, although he added value to the Windies team in ODIs.
 

Precambrian

Banned
I disagree wholeheatedly. He was an absolutely superb player whose Test average does not reflect his quality. He would walk into England's team now, at a time when the top 6 all average over 40.

Without him, England's cricket in the 1990s would simply have disappeared down the plughole.
I hate to repeat myself, but Athers was in mainly for lack of another good opener, and rather stood out because the others around him were crap. Athers was like the proverb, "In the land of the blind, the one-eyed is the king". In these days of aggressive cricket, he'd struggle to get into any International quality team.
 

Precambrian

Banned
2-3 runs being the average difference does not mean all batsmen will have their averages affected to the same degree by the same thing.

Not all players are the same.
Summed up really. I think Athers' average would have gone up by say 1 or 2 points at the maximum had he played in the 2000s.
 

Ikki

Hall of Fame Member
Lillee
Hadlee
Marshall
Garner
Holding
Roberts
Imran Khan
Abdul Qadir
Sarfraz Nawaz
Kapil Dev
Chandrasekhar
Prasanna
Bedi
Underwood
Botham
Willis
Snow
Alderman
Thomson


Apart from that lot, not many outstanding bowlers in the 70s and 80s
I can list a whole lot of tripe from that era too. Point being, as attacks, the bowling was as bad, or probably even worse than what it is in the 2000s when you look at country by country. One bowler surrounded by mediocrity is not really an attack to trouble all-time batsmen..
 

Ikki

Hall of Fame Member
2-3 runs being the average difference does not mean all batsmen will have their averages affected to the same degree by the same thing.

Not all players are the same.
Yes, I think the best batsmen would fluctuate even less. In fact, the averages of all specialist batsmen is just that, 2-3 runs difference when you compare eras. To say someone like Atherton would be averaging in the 50s had he been batting now is rubbish.

Then you sound surprised how you've racked up 70k posts arguing.
 

zaremba

Cricketer Of The Year
I hate to repeat myself, but Athers was in mainly for lack of another good opener, and rather stood out because the others around him were crap. Athers was like the proverb, "In the land of the blind, the one-eyed is the king". In these days of aggressive cricket, he'd struggle to get into any International quality team.
Athers was in the team because he was England's best batsman for long periods, and certainly England's best opener (at least after the end of Gooch's glory years).

Yes his colleagues were very often mediocre. Your point is that this made him look better than in reality he was, by comparison with them. I see where you're coming from, but my view is rather the opposite: I think that his play suffered for the very reason that he so often received inadequate support from those around him, so that he was forced to play the role of the boy standing on the burning deck rather than being able to play in a more attacking vein.

Would he get in the current England team? Too right he would - he'd be the first opener selected.
 

zaremba

Cricketer Of The Year
I can list a whole lot of tripe from that era too. Point being, as attacks, the bowling was as bad, or probably even worse than what it is in the 2000s when you look at country by country. One bowler surrounded by mediocrity is not really an attack to trouble all-time batsmen..
There was tripe on offer in the 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s, 2000s. There is tripe on offer today. In general my view is that the standard of all disciplines in cricket tends to increase as time goes by. However I believe that the 70s and 80s saw better quality bowling attacks than both the 90s and 2000s. And to try to write off the list of greats from the 70s and 80s in the way that you have is, with respect, wishful thinking.
 

Ikki

Hall of Fame Member
There was tripe on offer in the 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s, 2000s. There is tripe on offer today. In general my view is that the standard of all disciplines in cricket tends to increase as time goes by. However I believe that the 70s and 80s saw better quality bowling attacks than both the 90s and 2000s. And to try to write off the list of greats from the 70s and 80s in the way that you have is, with respect, wishful thinking.
Better than the 90s? With all due respect, now you're wishfully thinking. If you wish to make an exercise of it, list the attacks of both eras. Even statistically your argument is flawed.

Whether players get generally better as their skill-sets improve and the sport evolves is not my contention. My contention is that comparatively, the bowlers, haven't changed that much. Certainly not to the extent where batting averages can change between 9-10 points :laugh:.
 

Precambrian

Banned
Athers was in the team because he was England's best batsman for long periods, and certainly England's best opener (at least after the end of Gooch's glory years).

Yes his colleagues were very often mediocre. Your point is that this made him look better than in reality he was, by comparison with them. I see where you're coming from, but my view is rather the opposite: I think that his play suffered for the very reason that he so often received inadequate support from those around him, so that he was forced to play the role of the boy standing on the burning deck rather than being able to play in a more attacking vein.

Would he get in the current England team? Too right he would - he'd be the first opener selected.
He would be, considering Tresco's loss and Strauss's loss of form. His defensive play would not be exactly the best option for England these days, and since Cook is reasonably solid at the other end, England could do with an opener who plays his shots.
 

Uppercut

Request Your Custom Title Now!
There was tripe on offer in the 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s, 2000s. There is tripe on offer today. In general my view is that the standard of all disciplines in cricket tends to increase as time goes by. However I believe that the 70s and 80s saw better quality bowling attacks than both the 90s and 2000s. And to try to write off the list of greats from the 70s and 80s in the way that you have is, with respect, wishful thinking.
Uhh, fast bowling certainly, i don't think there was an equivalent of Warne or Murali though. Also the standard of fast bowling is a lot worse today than it was even five years ago, and i blame flat pitches to an extent. While bowlers like Marshall and co. could've clearly coped anyway, it's pretty soul-crushing for international quicks to run in full-blooded all day and see every ball bobble gently through to the wicket keeper.

We're seeing swing bowling becoming very prominent lately too, with bowlers trying to take the pitch out of the equation.
 

Goughy

Hall of Fame Member
Uhh, fast bowling certainly, i don't think there was an equivalent of Warne or Murali though. Also the standard of fast bowling is a lot worse today than it was even five years ago, and i blame flat pitches to an extent. While bowlers like Marshall and co. could've clearly coped anyway, it's pretty soul-crushing for international quicks to run in full-blooded all day and see every ball bobble gently through to the wicket keeper.
Harmison was the World number 1 ranked bowler 4 1/2 years ago.

Therefore, Harmison >>>> than anything currently in the World :)

I dont buy that the standard of fast bowling have particularly declined. Though the pitches have certainly got more difficult to bowl on in general and there have been other factors that have helped the batsman in the very recent past.
 

zaremba

Cricketer Of The Year
Better than the 90s?
Yes, better than the 90s in my opinion.

Now, I freely admit that there were some great bowling attacks in the 90s:
  • Pakistan was one. But in the 80s Pakistan had Qadir, Imran and Wasim.
  • Australia also had a fine attack in the 90s, with both Warne and McGrath playing in that decade. But in the 70s, for instance, they had Lillee and Thomson and a host of other fine fast bowlers.
So I'd say the attacks of those 2 countries was comparable in the 70s/80s and the 90s.

South Africa and Zimbabwe didn't play in the 80s.

Sri Lanka were the only team to have a distinctly better attack in the 90s than in the 80s.

Looking at the other teams, however, the standard was higher. New Zealand's attack was far better in the 80s than the 90s, because they had one of the best bowlers ever to play the game. England's attack too was better.

And that leaves the finest bowling attack the world has ever seen which was, of course, the West Indian attack from the late 70s and 80s. Walsh and Ambrose were great bowlers in the 90s, but they were great bowlers in the 80s too. Added to them were Marshall, Garner, Holding, Roberts, Croft, Gibbs, and a troupe of other world class bowlers who couldn't even get into the team.

If you wish to make an exercise of it, list the attacks of both eras.
I don't have the time or the inclination - if you can be arsed to do it, please be my guest.

My contention is that comparatively, the bowlers, haven't changed that much. Certainly not to the extent where batting averages can change between 9-10 points :laugh:
I'm not getting involved in trying to guess how much batting averages might hypothetically have been affected. That seems a pretty sterile debate to me, which I'll leave to you and Richard / Manee (or whoever you're having it with - I haven't read the whole thread I'm afraid).

All I've sought to do in my last few posts has been to challenge your assumption that bowling attacks have been better in the last 18 years than in the preceding 20 years, because I happen to think that you're wrong.
 
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