this is where patel could come in.Vettori would probably average better with some good support at the other end, so often the opposition is allowed to see him off and score their runs against the other end. Wonder what his average is with the likes of Bond in the team? I reckon it'd be better.
**** all is an overstatement considering the amount of overs he bowls. He takes a reasonable amount of wickets relatively expensively.Maybe he would have. It's all speculation though. Whether he'd have taken any wickets in a decent side is something we don't know, but that he takes FA wickets in a poor side is a fact.
Haha oh DingDong you are a card. You do have a bit of a point though, when they bowl in tandem runs tend to have dried up in their limited matches together. Will give that one a looksies.this is where patel could come in.
Same as Benaud.And very, very slowly. Less than one wicket every 14 overs.
This is getting sad.Apart from those already mentioned,
TBF Illingworth may have scored his centuries from 7 or so but so what?
- Mushtaq Mohammad
- Shahid Afridi
- John Bracewell
- Greg Matthews
- Ray Illingworth
Then there's the former spinners who now mainly bat:
And then there are the batsmen who can bowl:
- Samaraweera
- Shoaib Malik
There are probably loads of others
- Warwick Armstrong
- Gayle
- Hooper
- Jayasuriya
- Polly Umrigar
This is getting sad.
Just to jog your memories, Vettori has taken 300 wickets and scored 4 centuries
[*]Mushtaq Mohammad - [batsman who only bowled very occasionally
[*]Shahid Afridi - underrated but without the longevity of Vettori and wont match his record because he's "retired" as tests are too hard
[*]John Bracewell - worse bowler and got lucky with the bat ONCE (ave 20)
[*]Greg Matthews - better bat but got dropped because his bowling was not up to scratch (bowling ave of 48 ffs!)
[*]Ray Illingworth - slightly better version of Bracewell but his s/r of 2 wickets per test must really have had the opposition ****ting themselves
Then there's the former spinners who now mainly bat:
And then there are the batsmen who can bowl:
- Samaraweera - 14 wickets in 55 matches (on course to catch Dan if he plays 1100 tests)
- Shoaib Malik - a batsman who throws badly (17 wickets @ 68)
- Warwick Armstrong
- Gayle
- Hooper
- Jayasuriya
- Polly Umrigar
Your point? Let's include Clarke and about 1000 others if the criteria is test 100 and bowls slow junk
Once more, this is about a world-class all-rounder that bowls spin
At that point you weren't talking about quality, you weren't talking about numbers of wickets, you weren't talking about longevity, you weren't talking about whether the bowler was a chucker, you weren't talking about strike rates. What you were doing was shooting your mouth off, and you've been picked up on it by about a number of us, and now you're just forlornly trying to move the goalposts.How many spin bowlers were capable of scoring test centuries at 6?
Oh, that's right NONE
How many were good enough to be picked at 6?Sorry sunshine but all I was doing was to expose the complete ridiculousness of the following assertion made by, er, you:
At that point you weren't talking about quality, you weren't talking about numbers of wickets, you weren't talking about longevity, you weren't talking about whether the bowler was a chucker, you weren't talking about strike rates. What you were doing was shooting your mouth off, and you've been picked up on it by about a number of us, and now you're just forlornly trying to move the goalposts.
As for Mushtaq Mohammad only bowling "very occasionally", that will explain how he took almost 1,000 first class wickets... Better bowler than Vettori, better batsman, end of story.
Moving the goalposts againHow many were good enough to be picked at 6?
Moving the goalposts again.2 guys that played a relative handful of matches (Afridi and Matthews) and have spent more times out of the team than in it
He "remotly compares" in that he has a better Test average (even if you include minnows in Vettori's otherwise ugly statistics), a better Test strike rate, an identical Test economy rate, a better FC average, a better FC strike rate, more FC 5 wicket hauls and twice the number of FC wickets.As for Mushtaq Mohammed, he took 79 test wickets in 50 odd tests. How the **** does that remotly compare to a guy with 300 test wickets
Why dont we just agree to disagree because when it comes to arguing that player A is better than player B because he's taken wickets relatively cheaply at a much lower standard whilst doing comparatively sweet ****-all at the highest level, then there is no point continuingMoving the goalposts again
Moving the goalposts again.
(And unless you have 26 or 33 fingers on your hand I don't think your description of either Afridi or Matthews is all that accurate)
He "remotly compares" in that he has a better Test average (even if you include minnows in Vettori's otherwise ugly statistics), a better Test strike rate, an identical Test economy rate, a better FC average, a better FC strike rate, more FC 5 wicket hauls and twice the number of FC wickets.
Useful in small doses sums it up - he was a part-timer that couldnt be trusted with the primary role because he simply wasnt that good despite limited competitionMushtaq was a decent bowler and his record clearly demonstrates that - he'd doubtless have bowled more overs if Pakistan hadn't had two other leggies during his time, Intikhab Alam and Wasim Raja, both of whom, and for that matter Abdul Qadir who immediately followed him, have an inferior test average to his
The point is, the comparison between them is not ridiculous. Even if you want to disregard all other FC cricket, as you seem to want to do, MM's Test batting average is 10 points higher than his bowling average. Vettori's (average-flattering minnows included) is 4 points lower than his bowling average. Yes, Vettori has bowled a lot more, and consequently picked up more wickets and leaked vastly more runs in the process.Why dont we just agree to disagree because when it comes to arguing that player A is better than player B because he's taken wickets relatively cheaply at a much lower standard whilst doing comparatively sweet ****-all at the highest level, then there is no point continuing
This is precisely the reason why I turned to FC statistics - to suggest that someone who took over 900 FC wickets in that era is a "part timer" is frankly absurdUseful in small doses sums it up - he was a part-timer that couldnt be trusted with the primary role because he simply wasnt that good despite limited competition