But the comparison is not with Bevan or Hussey, it is with Gilchrist.
What you are doing is splitting his stats into two parts comparing his 1-4 stats with Gilly and saying sample is not enough and then comparing his lower order record with Hussey/Bevan's and again saying it is not good enough.
As usual selective manipulation of Statistics.
PS :- Now go ahead and accuse me of being intellectually Dishonest, that's the missing piece of your argument so far .
But that's the point: you cannot compare an opener with a mid-to-lower positioned bat. It's like night and day. So either you look at when Dhoni batted further so we can compare him to Gilchrist; or you judge him with those who bat in similar positions, like Bevan and Hussey; or you try to even it out someway so you can compare them directly.
On one hand he didn't bat near enough up the top to compare properly with Gilchrist, and at the bottom he doesn't fare very well against the likes of Hussey and Bevan. It doesn't mean he isn't a great bat, and truthfully I think he'd do better if they just gave him a solid go at one position (which they seem to be doing) and once he has done that we can them compare him fairly.
Putting up laughter smilies in an argument is akin to mocking people. You seem to have a habit of it when you run out of valid arguments. I take it you have lost the argument.
I am sorry, but I can't seriously discuss this with you if you cannot grasp the difference, at
least for statistical analysis, between the two different roles they play. This is just another matter where you show you do not grasp the basics. IIRC in another thread you were putting a qualifier on Bradman (was it?) where you limited him to a certain amount of runs per inning - making sure he'd fail - and compared that to what I was doing.
That's almost the case here where you again accuse me of "statistical manipulation". You either don't grasp the difference between an opener and a finisher or you're purposely ignoring it.
IMO, my way was fairer - you may argue it was not the fairest, I wouldn't know what that would be, but at least it made the comparison somewhat equitable: I simply removed all not-outs for both batsmen to see how much they score per innings. It showed their records were both fairly good but Dhoni has more to do to equal Gilchrist's legacy. It's too early for him to compare truly.
If you're just fishing for a way to say Dhoni is greater, well good luck to you.