It's enough, and no they aren't generalizations, they're opinions.
Simply watching highlights is enough? I think you'll find few will agree with you there. And that's probably why your opinion will rarely garner support.
And yes, they are generalisations. You've given little proof and only sweeping statements.
The sport.
Number of people playing it at the lowest level, level of competitiveness, media coverage. Loads of things.
Just because rules don't change, it doesn't mean the game itself hasn't.
Good, the sport. Now in what ways has the sport change and could you please, in some way, quantify how much it has changed, thanks. With your thesis of change, please give supporting data.
Na, it's that clear cut statistically, but not in reality.
Stats
are reality. They are
what happened, not what we
think happened.
And if that's not reality, please define reality and show how in your reality you're right. With evidence, of course. Not just another sweeping statement like "to me, X batsman is worth Y amount of runs".
Missed the point completely.
I'll take that as a retraction of your stance with regards to Lohmann.
The 30's in terms of overall quality is nowhere near that of the 50's-90's.
See, that's one of the sweeping statements I was talking about. You make that claim, now back it up. With examples, proof, and data.
I agree it was about the same as today (ca 2007 onwards) being the wickets are similar, but you still seem to underestimate how a growth in playing a sport naturally produces a better overall standard.
You overestimate it, because you know little about the statistics pertaining to Cricket's past.
There is proof in every sport, though it's true some eras dip.
Where the standard has improved is not a talking point. The talking point is how much.
As I showed you, and will continue to exemplify, the difference between batting averages in the 90s and now is only a few points (3-4). Yet the difference between the two eras is very noticeable. Now, you're saying the difference between Tendulkar and Bradman is none, if not in deficit for The Don, which means you are saying the difference is worth something -40-50. That is a stark change in the game, and would be noticed by all...easily. Yet it isn't and Cricket is largely regarded as the same.
Ok, but it's still 99% irrelevant.
Another sweeping statement. Please prove or show how it is irrelevant. Thanks.
You'd think what all batsmen were achieving in certain eras is relevant...but apparently not
But it isn't proof when the players change.
Stastics are proof of success only, and success is dependant on an era. I've no doubt Bradman would be among the best batsmen of any and every era, but to say he would be head and shoulders above everyone is frankly a joke.
Sorry, it is proof. Because it discerns how much has changed.
Your statement would be true of Hammond, for example, in that in any and probably every era, he would be the best or thereabouts. But for Bradman it is even above that. He would be more than likely the greatest by a mile in every era.
I don't think anything in sport, not just cricket, which can't be completely determined by stats is "fact", that's my point.
In sport, there's no one quite like Bradman. If someone like Gretzky, who you continually cite, is far and away the best player of his sport, then Bradman is moreso.
The reason it can't be fact is because no one can possibly fly a young Bradman over time to the 90s, for example, and have him bat. What we do is use the FACTS and the STATISTICS to discern whether that would bet he case. Not whether we see a few clips and are impressed or not.
Generalisations?
I've already said on this board that if we're basing who is the best batsman of all time based on how much better they were over their contemporaries then it's Bradman.
But what you can't do is automatically think because Bradman was streets ahead in HIS era, he would without question be streets ahead in any and every era against better individual bowlers, better attacks, different type of attacks across the wor
ld etc.
No one is "automatically" assuming anything. That's why no one "automatically" assumes Lohmann as the greatest bowler of all-time.
The reality is, that people look at his era, compare it with other eras and even if it was inferior, the difference would be small. Usually, in the single digits. Since the 30s, the sport has been largely the same and the evolutions made have not been that stark.
Now Bradman, in his own era, which is easily comparable to the ones after, was so far ahead, that it is more than a probability thta he would have still been awesomely ahead.
For even if he didn't average 100, but say 70 (
a 30 point drop!) he would still be far and away the greatest batsman of all time.
I don't think a 50 in the 50's is worth as much in gold as a 50 in the 70's or the 90's.
It's largely dependant on player quality and not something you can prove statistically.
I agree, it's probably worth a little less than ones in the 90s, for example. And you cannot totally commit to statistics because they may not speak about the quality of play. But what/who does? Those that were around, including the players, the fans, the commentators and, later, the historians.
That's why I give you the generatiton to generation comparison between players. When a player is established and rated highly, for example Headley, then the next great batsman that comes on is compared to Headley, until a point where Headley will retire and that new player, say Weekes, continues to play and then he is compared to the next hot-shot who is Sobers, for example, and on and on it can go.
So when we compare the best, everyone around is there to notice any slight change in the batting, the bowling and how well the best fared in those times. As I said, and will continue to say, when the difference between eras (90s vs 00s) is a few points, for example, in the average batsman's average, and it is noticed by the great majority, then it would be unthinkable to assume that at some stage this huge jump, that you're saying occurred, in the sport that would nullify Bradman's talent of averaging 40-50 better than all the others,
was not noticed by anyone. It's frankly untenable.
One can see an argument for those like Hammond who only averaged a few more than those like Lara and make that case...but not for Bradman.
The thing is Bradman was so revolutionary in HIS time that a 40+ difference was possible against lesser bowlers.
As a sport evolves, there is less room to be revolutionary.
HIS time was not a vacuum. It is comparable to OTHER times
.
I think the average player's ability has changed drastically era by era up to the 90's.
Whether you think so is not what people care about. It is whether you can prove so. Arbitrary whims are for ****s-and-giggles; not serious debate.
There's no contradictions, and based on talent level I don't think the 30's can be put up anywhere near the 70's onwards, and I wouldn't put the bowlers (espeically England's up there with the 50's and 60's).
Well, you see, you have to prove why you wouldn't. Someone like Lindwall, for example, who bowled in the 50s based his action and his bowling ON Larwood.
And I must chuckle at this "Talent level". Now you are measuring Talent. Objectively, of course?
So you would say someone who can play every shot in the book as good as his contemporaries and the majority of them BETTER than his contemporaries, in 1 of the top 2 eras for batting (not naming any names, just for argument sake) who averages only 45 is less a batsman than someone who can play, say 5 strokes (again, not naming names just for argument sake) and averaged 60+?
I'd phrase it more like- "although batsman A was a far more talented batsman than batsman B, he was not as successful for whatever reason".
That is EXACTLY what I would say. A Batsman could have only 1 stroke and average 60 and the other can have all the strokes in the world but only have 42 (Waugh M, for example) and I couldn't care less. The aim for batsmen: make runs. That's how you know who the better batsman is: the one that makes most runs, in hopefully most occasions, with hopefully a well-rounded record. You do not help your side by being flash yet scoring less runs.
And you seem to miss the reason why someone like Tendulkar would try to evolve his game to have "all the shots". It's to help him score runs. Obviously, the more shots you have in your war-chest, the better chance you will have. But that's not all there is to batting. It's making runs. Steve Waugh was somewhat flamboyant in his youth but scored less runs. He cut out shots that were causing him trouble, made more runs and the perception is now that he is more of a battler. There are not many people who would seriously say his brother Mark was a better batsman than him because Junior played more shots.
What if there were a 2-tier test system and the 2nd tier included Bangladesh, Pakistan, West Indies and New Zealand and a batsman averaged 100. People would say that isn't as credible as an average of 50 against the top tier sides because we've seen how good/poor those teams are.
Yes, that's my point. If such a system existed where a batsman bled minnows dry, then I wouldn't consider him as good as Bradman.
Even if someone was twice the batsman Bradman was, it wont happen nowadays (an average of 100). It's impossible for anyone to average much more than 60 over a 10-year career unless they have loads of NO.
That's why Bradman is far and away the greatest batsman and a freak. Because it is not going to happen. No one has come even near suggesting they are that good. Mike Hussey had an awesome start to his career and he was struggling to hold 70.
Where does the 40-50 points come in to it?
That's the difference between Bradman and the rest.
I'm talking about the credability of a batsman coming in @ 6 compared to that of a batsman coming in @ 3/4. And yest batting at 6 in terms of role is completely different to someone @ 4.
It's still credible, just a different role. You say a #6 will have some benefits compared to a #3, and yet they will also have different troubles. Maybe I am sympathetic and agree if a #3 averaged 52 and a #6 averaged 56 I'd see them in a similar plane, but nothing much different than that.
But you did the daft thing and say a #6 is practically a #7 and that's...well, daft.
Someone coming in @ 5/6 will see the 2nd new ball after they've gotten in in all likelyhood.
Exactly, so it hardly makes that much of a difference. Likewise a #3 could come in after the openers have dealt with the new ball, which does happen often enough, and could miss the new ball and then the batsmen below will have to face the new, new ball.
It happens often enough that it is almost negligible and not something to actually demean. "Oh, X batsman averaged 50, but it was at #6, so nevermind!".
I've made the argument that some later middle-order batsman could('ve) be made into openers based on their ability against the new ball (Katich, Border, Thorpe), but it is harder to get in against the new ball, simple as that.
This whole side-argument pertains to Ponting, to which was finalised at the mention of the fact that Ponting's failures were primarily against the weaker sides of the 90s with his inconsistency. So holding his average of 45 against him (when his average against good opposition is healthily above that) means your arbitrary estimations of him are moot.
Na, that is a cop-out.
I'd take an individual opinion (even if I disagreed with it) over 1 attained by mixing and matching potentially biased articles and stastistcs of an era there is very little coverage of. It at least shows free-thinking ability.
It's not a cop-out, that's just my position. I would rather have second-hand intelligence than free-thinking ignorance.
I'd say Waugh was more talented (from what I've seen of Ken which admittedly isn't alot) but Ken was more successful and harder to dislodge.
If you asked me who would I rather have in my team if I were captain, then I'd take Barrington. But in pure talent, I go with Junior.
No one picks a player on pure talent for the sake of pure talent. Pure talent, when picked, is at the hope that the player in question will translate said talent into runs in the future.
That's why it's not much of a debate. Barrington > M Waugh. Bradman >>> Tendulkar.
Bradman would bat where he wanted, the same with Ponting because he is captain.
Graeme Pollock was the best batsman in the Saffie team and neither batted @ 3.
Tendulkar the best Indian batsman ever batted @ 4 with Dravid, more of a stonewaller than free-flowing Tendulkar, battign @ 3.
Lara was @ 4 for the majority of his career.
Viv came in anywhere between 3 and 5. Since he played naturally wherever he came in, it didn't matter too much. I'd have him @ 5 personally.
Greg Chappell, probably Australia's greatest batsman post-WWII batted @ 4 for the majority of his career.
Miandad had over 100 tests @ 4 and he's the best Pakistan batsman ever.
Inzamam for the majority, though he came in @ 5 sometimes.
Pietersen, easily our best (and would be allowed to bat anywhere) comes in @ 4.
I would certainly have my best batsman come in at 4 when the new ball has (hopefully) been softened up a bit but not too soft.
All those batsmen changed from time to time from 3-4, or even lower. It simply depended on the team. The best batsmen are usually either #3 or #4. Let's give this one a break.
"I saw some videos" at least shows you have a mind of your own. Stats and analysis of those stats is only a comparison of success per era, it says nothing about talent level. Sorry but it doesn't.
But you think you are the only one who has seen videos. I have seen videos too, but that's no way to judge a player's complete career. What if those videos are only highlights of him performing well? What if they are just random and sparse? What if they are his bloopers? They tell you little. Unless these batsmen played in your lifetime and you could watch them properly, it's a heavily flawed way to judge players. Especially, if you wish to compare batsmen and their entire careers.
To me, Gilchrist looked like he'd average 70 the way he smashed everything from ball 1. But what I know is, he averaged a little bit below 50 and the likes of Kallis, for example, are superior to him.
No one really is pre-occupied with talent-level. People care about success level. If you want to compare who had more talent, you could open up a thread and talk about that. You can be as subjective or arbitrary as you like.
Any opinion is as worthy or unworthy as anyone else's.
Your closed mind is a bit pathetic.
That is
highly ironic coming from you, who thinks your
own opinion is better than the opinion of others. You have a go at me for taking into account the opinions of
others and have the gall to say this.
You're amazing.
Na, Australia's domestic scene without international players is crap. If you include international players in every domestic competition then all are pretty much equal.
Er, no, they're not. You're assuming only the 1st XI of every country is different and all levels below them are the same. Hilarious.
And how about knowledge of what the wickets were like in an era? Doesn't that prove anything?
It clearly does. To mention the difference between pitches, for example, is very important. If it affects the stats drastically, even more important. The best way is to get a sample and show how different in quantity it is.
X pitch yields 30 runs per batsmen and Y pitch yields 50 runs per batsmen, hence those who batter on Y pitch were benefited more.
Apart from that, the climate of our country is a lot harder to bat in. You can literally in an hour go from overcast and muggy where the ball swings to bright sunshine where it becomes a joy to bat. You don't get that in Australia and never have.
Why do you think the toss in England is so important?
In Australia, I would say in the 50's to 70's it was equal to England, but again, stats and records is dependant on the quality of players playing.
They're simply different conditions. Perth is sunny, not overcast or anything, but does that mean it is less difficult to bat on than The Oval, for example? For most of Australia's cricket history - I'd say until the late 90s - it has been hard and fast and a nightmare to bat on. Sydney has been a spinner's pitch, but does that mean it is easier to bat on than a swinger's pitch?
Nowadays I would agree since we have so few quality swing bowlers and less batsmen adapted to it. Still, your generalisation was pathetic to say the least.
Better than which test teams?
Bangladesh yes, but the others- nope (not unless you include the international players which is unfair since you can't be in 2 places at once).
I'd say up there with the best Test teams, frankly. Better than only Bangladesh? Can you even name the WA squad from the 90s, for example? Seriously, why am I arguing with someone who knows so little?
Hayden was great in Australia but so what?
The tracks in Australia are much flatter than over here and our climate allows more sideways and eratic vertical ball movement.
He was show to be mediocre on all but our most batting-friendly wicket.... The Oval.
I'm sure if Australia had a GENUINE competitor for an opening spot, who wasn't shown up to be completely crap in conditions which weren't ideal, he'd have been in.
Just because Hayden failed in England doesn't mean you can wash away his career. Hayden faced great bowling conditions, and a better attack, in S.Africa for example and did very well there.
It is, but 145 tests is still more than 27.
The less you see someone, the more of a mystery they are and the more success against you they will have.
For Warne to continue being effective with all the scouting, footage, analysis and sheer amount of cricket played is testament to his quality.
It'd be doubtful that O'Reilly would equal Warne and Murali's wicket totals, though I don't think he is far off in terms of talent.
It goes both ways. Time between tests mean less chance to carry on good form, for example. It means less time for YOU to figure out the mystery of the other sides.
Footage goes both ways, for the bowler there is footage and also for the batsmen. It counts out itself. In O'Reilly's time there was no such advantage for either bowler or batsman so it means little.
So, have you seen Chandrasekhar or not?
Admittedly, little, but what is your point? Unless you're trying to build an argument on "talent level" again. Chandra was a fine spinner, one of India's best. But not in the same class as Tiger or Clairrie.
My opinion is original in that I haven't let anyone else's opinions affect mine.
Your opinion isn't actually an opinion.
My opinion is an opinion and your opinion is an opinion. It's just that your opinion is laughable and mine isn't. Way to go.
If you have an idea of the social climate, understanding of test cricket in general then yes you can.
Right...the social climate is going to tell you how tense a wicket taken in an important period of a match is.
And reading about WWII is just like living it, I guess.
I said before I've seen 10 times what's on You Tube and I don't know how you can take the piss when you don't have a clue about my Grandad, that's frankly insulting especially since he saw the players you talk about in the flesh as well as being privvy to footage you WISH you could watch.
Visuals of matches back then were sparse to say the least, so even if it were 10 times as much, it'd still be sparse. Your confidence that you've seen enough to judge Hammond on, and say it's crazy to talk to compare him to Tendulkar, is really
the insult here.
Wow, Bedi mediocre.
In terms of bowlers, yes. In terms of spinners he was good. But there have been much better spinners.
The fact that you tout Bedi and demean Verity should be noted here.
What does that prove exactly?
It proves that you know nothing but generalisations. When it comes to the 30s, to Bradman, to Hayden, to the 50s till 70s, you clearly don't know much in terms of detailed facts.
The clips on TV and the internet isn't all what's available. Some footage (in cans) is too delicate to open now though, which is partly why there isn't much dvd's released of "Hammond's greatest shots" etc.
The fact is it does. well did, exist. The amount which has been destroyed (not intentionally) obviously outweighs what is still available.
I don't have any secret stash, otherwise I'd put it on the internet.
You don't seem to understand; there still isn't enough to judge him on. Even if it were more than that. Games weren't taped like that. You could watch a batsman today bat for hours and you won't have seen enough to properly judge him. When you're going by what you see, you should watch a batsmen over several tests, several hours of batting, and even then, against different opposition and in different countries.
Unless all you want to do is gauge their "talent level".
I'm neither naive or ignorant.
I think you, however, are both- not just in regards to cricket.
You will go through your whole life unable to form an opinion which is sad, but not uncommon.
I'm fine with being common, thanks. I don't need to hold a special, and ridiculous, opinion simply to feel unique
.
Nope, because someone who can't bat for **** in 1 era is the same as someone who can't bat for **** in another era, especially against lesser bowlers.
No no no, according to you there are no facts to prove either way. Who knows, maybe Larwood has special talent that just didn't translate into runs and had he batted in this era he would be even better than Tendulkar.
It does, you're taking the easy way out by saying it doesn't.
You have given no proof OR opinions. As I said before, anyone can do analysis of stats. BUt hwen the argument isn't who was the most successful out of 2 batsmen, but actually who was most talented then statistics means jack ****.
No, I really don't care to argue on something as subjective as talent. I am arguing who was the better batsman in terms of making runs.
How many times do you need to be told those 40-50 points are agains different bowlers for it to go in?
Yes, and the other batsmen, in his era or in the 90s or even now...score their runs against different bowlers. When you come to that realisation, you'll have gone up a step.
When you then try to determine the standard of bowling, through objective means, and nothing as whimsical as "talent level", you will have gone onto another level. When you reach that step, I'll help you out some more.
I know as much asyo u abou Larwood, i just happen to think you buff it up as something it wasn't- a tough era, and a good era for overall talent.
What was so ordinary about Larwood? Statistically he is very good and the fact that many future bowlers tried to replicate his style shows he had great "talent".
Er, Warne would admit himself that Tendulkar was the 1 batsman who got the better of him.
Tendulkar is a fine batsman and did very well against Warne. But that wasn't the point, or rather, doesn't defend the accusation against him that he didn't succeed as infamously touted against the best.
And there's nothing saying Bradman would do better.
You mean apart from the fact that Bradman did well against comparable spinners in Tiger and O'Reilly on uncovered tracks?
It is for you, don't try to argue against it.
Nah, I always try to look at everything. Repute as well as stats. What good is a 50+ average if you have nothing to compare it against or an opinion which would illustrate it's value?
Tha's complete BS.
If 1,000 players play a sport, there will be in all likelyhood a larger number of quality players than if only 100 played.
Try to find how many people actually played cricket in the 30's compared to nowadays.
Again, it's easier to be a big fish in a small pond than be a big fish in a big pond.
I didn't "fudge" anything up. Stop trying to act superior.
I'm still here just to annoy you, I've been sent by God.
And where did you get that likelihood? India and China carry a third of the world's population and cannot put a good Football (soccer) team out between them. The standard in their leagues are low.
Simple numbers does not equate quality. What's important is the STANDARD of football, or Cricket in this case, being played in these populations. The higher the standard and number, the more competitive and better it will be. Has the standard of Cricket improved from the 90s simply because we have more teams now, i.e. Bangladesh? No.
Your discounting of the 30s is farcical.
No, your opinion isn't actually an independent opinion.
Zaremba's is (and he disagrees with me, no biggie) and that is also shared by others. Your "opinion" isn't actually an opinion since it wasn't 1 you came to based on independent research disregarding the possibly biased views of writers of his time.
Neither is yours. You didn't learn the sport of Cricket on your own. Someone showed you what is right and what is wrong. What is good technique and what isn't. Hence when you watch a game, you will always refer to what you have been taught.
You are no different to anyone else sunshine. You sound incredibly naive. How old are you, 15?
His hand-eye co-ordination was no better than the greatest batsmen of eras after him actually. If you weren't so up his ass, and judged batsmen with an unbiased mind you'd see that.
"Talent-level", gotcha.
Considering Tendulkar's ability to time drives perfectly against balls delivered in excess of 92mph and Viv's ability to time & control a hook or pull against fiery pacemen (including his own bowlers in domestic cricket) I'd find it very hard to say Bradman's hand-eye co-ordination is what made his average 40+ points better than those 2.
If it was better at all, it wasn't almost twice as good.
And I don't think you should question the dedication of Tendulkar, he too has spent 20 years in test cricket and I doubt anyone without 100% dedication would manage that.
Neither Tendulkar nor Sir Viv are worthy to be compared to Bradman, full-stop.
So, are you know admitting Tendulkar is a more talented batsman who wasn't/isn't as successful as Bradman?
No, if anything I just said no matter how hard Tendulkar tries, he still won't be the gleam on Bradman's shoe. If his entire batting was based on crudely scoring runs, at the cost of everything else, he'd still be a pauper. What Bradman had is unlikely be taught or trained.
Why not?
I'd love to hear original analysis from you.
This whole thread is my whole analysis. You should see an optometrist.
For time's sake: replace every "Tendulkar" with "Richards". The reasons are the same.
This is your 1 chance to prove you aren't dictated to by statistics and have formed an original opinion (whether it is shared by others is irrelevent if you've come to it on your own).
LOL, to prove? To who? You?
I am dictated by statistics, you have to be. Statistics is WHAT HAPPENED. It's not your fantasy. It's not your wet-dreams about Tendulkar's straight-drive. It's what actually happened.
Of course, not every scenario is the same and not all statistics accurately reflect every nuance of the game. So for this, one
must use extrinsic sources, such as testimony.