G.I.Joe
International Coach
You're harping on the same point. You try and create an impression that a poor 3rd/4th innings is of greater concern than a poor record in an entire country, which I disagree with. Runs scored in the 3rd and 4th innings do not count double that of runs scored in the 1st or 2nd. As long as you're giving me 100 runs per test, why should it matter how you distribute them among the 4 innings'? The team still ends up with the same number of runs!I don't consider either an aberration. They're both poor records that need closer looking at.
However, the scope of the problem is much more limited in one than the other. It's not an aberration for Sehwag in any sense. Whether Overall, against non-subcontinental teams away or at home, against sub-continental teams away or home...he still has a poor 3rd/4th innings average. Unlike Ponting where it's a singular problem in one country...for Sehwag it spans every team in every country for their 3rd and 4th innings.
What's intellectually dishonest is saying that Ponting has played 18 innings in Australia and the innings in that analysis for Sehwag is also 18 innings...not mentioning Ponting has played twice as much cricket as Sehwag.
However I would definitely be concerned if I had a bastman fail consistently in a country over multiple tours to the extent Ponting has, since that actually costs my team valuable runs. And its not simply a matter of Ponting playing spinners well in Pakistan and SL but not in India, but as you put it later in your post, its a question of negotiating a package of problems in a country. And if he fails to do that to a respectable degree against arguably the toughest opposition he's had to face, in their own backyard, it assumes a significance much much more than merely labelling it an aberration in a random country. Heck, if Tendulkar had averaged 20 in Australia over his career, you'd have trumpeted that as a very significant failure like there was no tomorrow.
And you know thats true, don't even bother denying it.
He hasn't based on the criteria you yourself suggested. Check posts 141, 144 and 148. If you narrow the criterea, you're obviously going to end up with a smaller sample size.Sehwag has played more than 18 or 24 innings. It's much more than that. Check his records.
I do accept your point regarding Sehwag being troubled by much more than just the spinners in the 3rd and 4th innings, but I do not buy the different standards you apply to different players, and your reasons for categorising sample sizes. Its plainly obvious you're fixed in your reasoning for that, but I do not see merit in them, you do not see merit in my reasoning, and I think we'll have to agree to disagree.Whether at home or away; whether against spinners or not; whether it includes subcontinental pitches or not...he has a poor 3rd/4th innings record. You're just creating a qualification which will naturally have a much smaller number - only non-subcontinental teams (there are only 5) and only away. Well, in half those innings he played 1st/2nd innings and in the other half 3rd/4th innings, and he did very badly.
Your original point was that because they face spinners during the latter stages they're bound to have weaker 3rd/4th innings records. That point is moot because against the sides that I linked you to (those 40 innings) no notable spinner troubled India in any sense. It was more India's own home spinners troubling others - which Sehwag does not face.
It's not like I buy your argument that 18-24 isn't enough to gauge anything on either. That many is enough. It's just that the scope of this argument brings much more than that. And you know it.
Of course you can't separate the strength of an attack from the ease of the pitch. That is exactly what makes your list a futile exercise when it comes to comparing which batsmen have it easy batting at home, proving which, if I remember was the original purpose when it was compiled.What doesn't compensate? You can't separate the strength of an attack and the ease of the pitch. In many ways you wouldn't want to. It's a package of problems playing in different countries. But every country plays in each of those pitches so it's more or less evened out. Does India have worse bowlers than NZ? No, but look at their records. Did Pakistan? No, yet they're as bad as the WIndies.
It doesn't skew the data for visiting teams comparative to each other, but it definitely does when comparing the ease of run scoring for home batsmen against any set of visiting batsmen. The home bowlers could do well to bring down that per wickets average against visiting teams, but the home batsmen are free to score much more than that against the inferior visiting bowlers. This holds particularly true for Australia, by virtue of their excellent bowling attacks. Which is why it would be a fallacy in assuming that Australian batsmen bat in tougher conditions than Indian batsmen based solely on that data. I do not claim it as fact that Australian batsmen have it easier than Indian batsmen, but rather that it makes little sense reaching either conclusion based on that particular set of numbers.
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