There are a number of players who's average flatters them.Hmm, why do you think he does average 50? Interestingly, his stats take nowhere near the damage of his contemporaries when you remove the minnows.
The suibtle difference is I'm willing to accept there could be someone better than Bradman, or at least as good as whereas those who haven't seen the bad of Don willing to accept he's the best regardless of doing any comparisons of their own.Including you. And yet you seem able to compare him to Tendulkar.
Awesome!
No-one got on top of Shane Warne like Tendulkar. Ask Shane.But Tendulkar hasnt even scored 250 in test cricket against ne one, how on earth is he goin to score 500?? And Tendulkar was hardly successful against the best attacks of his time.
I'm in the unbiased camp, what camp are you in?It looks like it's pako007 and rivera213 in one camp here, everyone else in the other.
Going to go ahead and say all of them, considering the whole 'I average 99.94' thing. Also can't believe you managed to contradict yourself completely within three lines.No-one got on top of Shane Warne like Tendulkar. Ask Shane.
And what great attacks did Bradman get on top off?
I mean attacks, not just a single bowler.
LOL - If someone averaged 120 today and no one else averaged above say 70-75 over an extended period I would say that they are better than Donald Bradman.If someone averaged 120 on todays wickets, someone would say "the Don would've averaged 170 on these wickets" so no matter how good a batsman's record, the romance of Bradman and all which comes with it (like that of Babe Ruth and Pele) is too big for the majority to compare with an unbiased mind.
Great article, Nasser was very good under the pump. Never going to win any style awards, but could grind with the best of them. His average was rather spoilt by a dire trot he had whilst captain from the home Windies series in 2000 to the 2001 Ashes when, the Kandy ton aside (and from memory he was "out" about 4 times in that innings) he couldn't buy a run. Because we were winning tho no-one seemed to mind tho. Link.
Great call. Bevan was an amazing player. You only need to look at his performances in Shield and County cricket as well as his ODI feats to see that. If he had played for a country with less competition for batting places, he would have played 100 Tests and had a very healthy average.Re: OP
I said earlier in the thread that players get what they deserve. I still believe that but I think when careers are cut short or there are limited opportunities then records can be deceptive.
Take Bevan and his failures and supposed weakness against the short ball. Basically he was up and down the order and the 'weakness' used as an excuse to drop him in favour of one of the legion of talented batsmen lining up.
I think it was a fair decision (given the depth of quality) but, IMO, there is no way Bevan averages under 25 if he plays 50 Tests.
A couple of bad series, messed around in the order, get roughed up by Darren Gough and get dropped. Harsh but fair but not a true reflection on how good Bevan was.
So do you think Ponting is far better than Tendulkar on batsman-friendly pitches? Because if he's not scoring any on the tough ones and averages a decent bit more than him he must be pretty considerably more consistent on the "flat" tracks.There are a number of players who's average flatters them.
With Ponting, it helped for a long time being under limited pressure because you have openers by the names of Hayden and Langer before you.
It's also not a coincedence Ponting has only got 1,000 run test seasons since batsmen friendly wickets were brought to the fore.
His average of 42.63 in England and 20.85 in India is more telling. That 42 is more like 37 since all of the tests over here were played post-2002.
You didn't answer my question because you can't. No other batsman in the history has come even remotely close to averaging 100. Tendulkar wouldn't of averaged anywhere near 100 in any era he played in. No other batsman has even come close to Bradman's first-class average of 95.I didn't say there were batsmen as good as Bradman in his own era, just in eras after his.
He's by far the best in his era but the lack of any other 99.94 average batsmen doesn't mean the bowling was good.
You obviously have no clue about what you are talking about. Do you not understand the impacts of the War or the Great Depression? Far worse then being hounded by bucket loads of media. I'd rather be in Tendulkar's life situation then Bradman's. Tendulkar lived in a more peaceful era. His not half as good as Bradman. Open your eyes, son.rivera213 said:Don't give me that BS. You seriously need to do some research on the Indian media. People in INdia, especially Bombay, pay especially to see Tendulkar to but there is a million times the media coverage 1990's onwards than in the 30's and 40's.
There's no comparison with what Bradman was under to Tendulkar. Get real.
Ponting plays every shot in the cricketing manuel and plays his shots as eligantly as what Tendulkar does. Many think (not me) that Ponting is better then Tendulkar, because he relied less on playing weak opposition.rivera213 said:Ponting isn't a 50 average player. He has nowhere near the range of shots, timing ability or adaptability Tendulkar (or even Lara) has/had.
That's because no one else has come close to their acchievements (Well atleast Bradman's anyways), so obviously, no one is even close to Bradman. Tendulkar only averaged 39 in the most bowling friendly conditions in world cricket during his career - South Africa, whilst Ponting averaged mid 50's.rivera213 said:People are always going to take the view that there is no better batsman than Bradman, no better footballer than Pele, no better baseball hitter than Ruth, no better pitcher than CY, no better hockey player than Gretzsky and no better basketball player than Jordan simply because of the romance.
That article would have to be a load of rubbish. Subcontient wickets are clearly the easiest to bat on in the entire world, so much so that it's like subcontient players have an extended home ground advantage, which doesn't give a clearcut view of how good a batsman is. Ponting has made difficult batting conditions look incredibly flat. His 101 & 99 @ MCG last year, 50 odd @ Sydney this year and 80 odd @ South Africa have all been under very difficult conditions and circumstances. To say Ponting benefitted from flat pitches is merely laughable.Proof? There was an article in cricinfo some time back which proved contrary to notions, Australian grounds are far more conducive for batting.
Matthew Hayden averaged 250 against Zimbabwe. Hayden > Bradman > Tendulkar.Tendulkar averages 137 against bangladesh... and about 80 against Zimbabwe and believe me the teams of bangladesh and zimbabwe are much better then the south africa england etc. of that time. it is like tendulkar playing against my team, he will score 500 evry match. but it is near to impossible to flawlessly deal with a swinging ball at 140-150 kmph i dont think Bradman had ever to face that challenge that tendulkar had to face quite regularly. i think he got lucky to be playing in that era, in this era he might be some1 like michael clarke or ian bell.
He opened the bowling for Barcelona, as I recall.every shot in the cricketing manuel
May not have been totally fair to drop Bevvo the first time 'round against England but after getting back, he was given full series' against WI in 1996, the following series against SA and 3 Tests in England in 1997. Not one ton in that time. Got two unbeaten 80's against the WI but the Adelaide knock was a shocking one (was dropped at least once and bowled off a no-ball), still dicked around and didn't get a hundred on a road against a thoroughly demoralised opponent. Was then found out against reasonable bowling line-ups in SA and England and absolutely deserved to be dropped for Ponting.Great call. Bevan was an amazing player. You only need to look at his performances in Shield and County cricket as well as his ODI feats to see that. If he had played for a country with less competition for batting places, he would have played 100 Tests and had a very healthy average.
Not sure he was the easiest character in the world though, having read about his time at Sussex in Tony Cottey's book. Perhaps this counted against him?
It's possible, even probable but I don't think we can say with certainty. There's been quite a few examples of blokes who make hay in the FC arena and don't translate this into tests. Hick, for example, averaged 47 and a half for QLD, but famously never quite made it in tests and, whilst not in Bevan's league, was always a very useful ODI batsman.Great call. Bevan was an amazing player. You only need to look at his performances in Shield and County cricket as well as his ODI feats to see that. If he had played for a country with less competition for batting places, he would have played 100 Tests and had a very healthy average.
Not sure he was the easiest character in the world though, having read about his time at Sussex in Tony Cottey's book. Perhaps this counted against him?
Yeah for sure and around the time he got that short ball from Gough, several players expressed surprise at the assertion of a weakness against the short ones because he was routinely belting the same stuff from bowlers a yard quicker at state level.Interesting, TC, thanks for that. Can't say I was a big student of his technique but I always thought the short ball weakness which was commented on a lot in 1997 was a bit of a myth. I remember some Aussies commenting that the same lifters that he was now spooning to gully he would have smacked for 6 in Shield cricket.
Goes the other way too; see Botham and QLD. Class player (obv) who didn't do so well there.It's possible, even probable but I don't think we can say with certainty. There's been quite a few examples of blokes who make hay in the FC arena and don't translate this into tests. Hick, for example, averaged 47 and a half for QLD, but famously never quite made it in tests and, whilst not in Bevan's league, was always a very useful ODI batsman.
It's interesting and I dunno if it stops at the Test side. MacGill was known as 'difficult' before he even played for WA. Personally, it's not so much the arrogance but the emotional outbursts. In a team culture that seems to prefer stoicism, people who outwardly express are in trouble. There's heaps of examples, really; the selection leniency shown towards Boon vs Dean Jones, Martyn being dropped after (really) one bad shot, Scott Muller, Zoehrer vs Healy, etc. Don't whine, keep your trap shut and you'll do well in Aussie.Interesting point about Bev's personality tho, sometimes I think the Australian team isn't perhaps the most accomodating to those players without the (stereo)typical Ocker identikit dispositions. MacGill always seemed an outsider as does/did Symonds now. 20 years ago Symonds would've fitted right in perhaps, but now he's unwilling or unable to adjust.
"Genius writes its own rules" to pilfer a rather good line.It's interesting and I dunno if it stops at the Test side. MacGill was known as 'difficult' before he even played for WA. Personally, it's not so much the arrogance but the emotional outbursts. In a team culture that seems to prefer stoicism, people who outwardly express are in trouble. There's heaps of examples, really; the selection leniency shown towards Boon vs Dean Jones, Martyn being dropped after (really) one bad shot, Scott Muller, Zoehrer vs Healy, etc. Don't whine, keep your trap shut and you'll do well in Aussie.
Except Warne.