Had nearly forgotten about that, by far the outstanding innings of the series.Yeah, possibly. But how then do you rate that overall record against his efforts in specific matches like Old Trafford in 2005, or Brisbane in 2006/7?
I think you also need to take his overall record vs England with a grain of salt, or in a bit more detailed view: like all the Aussie batsmen he struggled overall in 2005 by his normal standard, only scoring 350-odd runs at a tick under 40. The two series either side of that he was pretty dominant, averaging 52 and 82.
What particularly drags his overall record against England down is his 1998 series, where he averaged only 11 across three tests and was dropped after the 3rd test. He was only 24 at the time, and came back into the team later in 1999 better for the experience. Having come in so young, he was always likely to have a point where his game came under scrutiny and his form suffered - for him, that process culminated during a series against England.
Haven't done the maths, but I imagine if you take that series out, his average vs. England would be 50+.
Don't want to make excuses for him - part of the point of career averages is that they capture the times you were bad along with the times you were good, but in his case I think he has a more 'legitimate' reason for the times he was bad and to describe it as 'underperforming pretty badly' is a bit unfair. That said, if we're trying to split players like Border, Waugh and Ponting, then maybe this sort of thing is what we need to look at.
I've seen every England game since 1994.Again, his numbers are misleading and I'm gathering by what you're saying you didn't see him bat in either 1998 or 2001. Not talking about his dead rubber Tests but the ones where he got a full series. Not once did his batting contribute to a win but, on many occasions, he did the exact opposite and was a large contributor to letting the Aussies back into the match.
Call it a bias but I'm no fan of a player who seems so unwilling to bat for the team, preferring instead of bat the same way no matter the match situation. It's a huge knock, for mine. The problem with that attitude is that it's essentially saying to the guy at the other end "It's up to you to win the game, I'm just going to bat how I bat." if he was scoring big, that'd be one thing but he faffed about so many times for 100+ balls, essentially doing very little to contribute to a win. When a bloke is just sitting on his bat handle, the obvious tactic is to contain him and lay the pressure on the other guy knowing he'll crack eventually. And that's exactly what the Aussies did. That he managed to keep his numbers above 40 says more about how good a player he wasn't than how good he was, in my view.
Well I'll tell you one thing - Boon never opened against England from 1989 onwards. Scored one hell of a lot of runs at three though, and Ponting obviously loses nothing from going down to six.From 89 onwards - haven't looked at stats, just picked who I seem to remember doing well vs England.
1 David BOON
2 Michael SLATER
3 Ricky PONTING
4 Mark WAUGH
5 Steve WAUGH
6 Allan BORDER
7 Ian HEALY
8 Shane WARNE
9 Merv HUGHES
10 Craig McDERMOTT
11 Glenn McGRATH
12 Matthew ELLIOTT
Best numbers = best chance of winning. Simple as that.Depends on whether you're picking a side with the best numbers or one that'll win.
Healy had more good Ashes performances than Gilchrist (as well as more poor ones). If you look carefully I've never once said Healy was > Gilchrist, just that he had more extensiveI thought i'd check the stats to back my opinion on this and was actually surprised that I was right. Russell>>>>>>>Stewart at keeping. In Ashes Russell=Stewart in batting results. If this wasn't based on Ashes, I'd go Stewart. Not Stupid and far more Sensible than Healy>Gilchrist.
Atherton was a considerably superior Test opener to Broad (he was pretty good, Broad was average), simple as that. Broad was lucky to be in the right place at the right time with regards Ashes success; Atherton was the inverse.Atherton was ordinary, although he did try hard. Broad was a series winner, even if he couldn't back it up.
No it wouldn't. You might as well play ten players if you view it as pointless. Either pick another batsman or just play your best five bowlers. Tufnell, truth is, was very occasionally brilliant and incredibly often utterly useless. Against Australia he had one great game and quite a few dreadful ones.Tuffnell, well that maybe is nonsensical but who else Giles? Embury? Hemmings? none any better and a fifth paceman would be pointless.
Actually the reality is that Atherton was genuinely poor under acceptable circumstances against Australia only once - in 1997. In 1998/99 his dreadfulness is utterly irrelevant as he would have and did do poorly whoever he faced in that condition (he could barely make a run against Zimbabwe in 1996/97). In 1989 and 2001, too, he would have and did fail against all-comers.thought I'd actually check Atherton's stats to see if they agreed with my impresion of Atherton's ordinariness and was quite shocked at just how diabolical they were.
1 century in 33 matches, with an average under 30. Poor
That's an extreme example. For mine, a batsman who averages, say, 35 vs a bloke who scratches around averaging 45 is far more useful. I'd rather see Mark Ealham in an Ashes side than Ramps.Best numbers = best chance of winning. Simple as that.
A batsman who averages 23 and has a positive mindset <<<<< one who averages 49 with a negative mindset.
To be of any use, a specialist batsman must score runs. If he doesn't, he loses-out to one who does.
Yeah but how often did Ramprakash bat at number 7?Well I'll tell you one thing - Boon never opened against England from 1989 onwards. Scored one hell of a lot of runs at three though, and Ponting obviously loses nothing from going down to six.
Nonetheless, if you want those two, both Waughs and Border (not unreasonable) you have to push one to the top and Boon would of course be much the best choice.
I asked before and got no answer - who, between 1989 and 2006/07, apart from Hussain, Pietersen, Stewart and Thorpe, did a better job as a middle-order batsman for England against Australia than Ramprakash? Smith was a sitting-duck against Warne; Crawley was a sitting-duck against any decent seamer; pretty much anyone else tried was just not good enough for Test cricket. I suppose you could possibly make a case for Hick based on 1993 and 1994/95.That's an extreme example. For mine, a batsman who averages, say, 35 vs a bloke who scratches around averaging 45 is far more useful.
As you know, I'm Ealham's biggest fan as a ODI bowler, but in Tests he offered precious little.I'd rather see Mark Ealham in an Ashes side than Ramps.
Again, though, I cannot say anything more than that Ramprakash was at least scoring runs while most others could barely even do that. Look at John Crawley - terrific player in one respect (against spin and against seam directed at his pads) but a sitting-duck against anything outside off-stump moving away. And Crawley was, apart from Hussain\Stewart\Thorpe, the best England had to offer in the time in question.Anyway, it's not that simple. While Ramps was scratching around scoring 50 at a glacial pace, Aus were busy winning the match. As I said, England were competing well and sometimes in the ascendency on the back of knocks by blokes like Butcher/Hussain/Thorpe/Stewart when in walked Ramps and, within a short period of time, out walked the momentum they'd built. In a team environment, that's demoralising.
Without checking, I'm pretty sure the above all had inferior records against Aus. Yet I can promise you the Aussies would rather face Ramps than any of them. It's not just about how many but how and when you score your runs too.
No kidding; it happened on the other side of the country!Thorpe can catch, although I can remember in a Test at the SCG he dropped a catch and kicked the ball away in disgust and it went for a couple of overthrows, does anyone else remember that? My memory of the event is a little hazy.
That was actually The WACA, 1994/95. You'd have been only a little boy of 11 or so.Thorpe can catch, although I can remember in a Test at the SCG he dropped a catch and kicked the ball away in disgust and it went for a couple of overthrows, does anyone else remember that? My memory of the event is a little hazy.
Not supported by the facts, I'm afraid. Especially in 1998, Ramps came in several times on the back of at least decent starts by the openers or was supported by the middle-order. Only in a couple of knocks was he the lone blocker propping up a losing team.You seem to underestimate just how bad most England batsmen were. I'm not for a second claiming Ramprakash's contribution was absolutely ideal, merely that he did better than most had the foggiest chance of doing, because mose were simply not good enough to repel bowling of the calibre of Alderman And Co. \ McDermott And Co. \ McGrath And Co. (delete as appropriate)
At the SCG or the WACA,No kidding; it happened on the other side of the country!
Frankly, the response by Dev Malcolm at having another catch dropped was awesome. Something inside him broke there and then.At the SCG or the WACA,
it doesn't matter
M A R V E L L O U S..
cherry picking the acceptable and ignoring the bad is a wierd way to go about it.Actually the reality is that Atherton was genuinely poor under acceptable circumstances against Australia only once - in 1997. In 1998/99 his dreadfulness is utterly irrelevant as he would have and did do poorly whoever he faced in that condition (he could barely make a run against Zimbabwe in 1996/97). In 1989 and 2001, too, he would have and did fail against all-comers.
In order to assess Atherton against Australia accurately you can look only at four series' - 1990/91-1997. In that time he was far from outstanding but far from dreadful either. And certainly better than some just-about-adaquete opener like Chris Broad.
I've seen you say this about Atherton on many occasions in my year or so on this forum, but I've never quite understood it.Actually the reality is that Atherton was genuinely poor under acceptable circumstances against Australia only once - in 1997. In 1998/99 his dreadfulness is utterly irrelevant as he would have and did do poorly whoever he faced in that condition (he could barely make a run against Zimbabwe in 1996/97). In 1989 and 2001, too, he would have and did fail against all-comers.
In order to assess Atherton against Australia accurately you can look only at four series' - 1990/91-1997. In that time he was far from outstanding but far from dreadful either. And certainly better than some just-about-adaquete opener like Chris Broad.