Black_Warrior
Cricketer Of The Year
^ I reckon Dinesh Kartik is a better keeper
This.Never have much agreed with this TBH. Unless it refers to what sort of pitches you play on and thus whether your attack is spin-dominated rather than seam-dominated, I consider that a good-batsman-decent-wicketkeeper adds more to any side than a moderate-to-poor-batsman-outstanding-wicketkeeper. I don't care in the slightest how strong the specialist batting is - you can never have enough batting and as long as your wicketkeeper is decent and your attack is seam-dominated, you should still pick the best batsman of them.
I used to but TBH from all I've heard he's been shocking of late. Ditto his batting, which in the longer game initially looked better than Dhoni's.^ I reckon Dinesh Kartik is a better keeper
Not as perfect as Brad Haddin tbh.I don't actually think Dhoni's good enough with the gloves. Not when keeping for India, anyway, because he struggles keeping to spin. For Australia or South Africa, he'd be perfect..
Well Dhoni's the better batsman, and I can't remember him ever dropping anything standing back. If he only had to keep to Nathan Hauritz... it's a tough call. Haddin's a lot better than Dhoni at the stumps, but he's still not the greatest.Not as perfect as Brad Haddin tbh.
Not convinced about that - not in Tests. In ODIs Dhoni's clearly light-years ahead of anyone right now and will far more likely than not end-up the best ODI batsman-'keeper in history, but his Test batting still has a little to prove and I don't think he's likely to end-up better than Haddin, and probably not as good either.Well Dhoni's the better batsman
In ODIs you can not argue the point. (that Dhoni is better, obv)Well Dhoni's the better batsman, and I can't remember him ever dropping anything standing back. If he only had to keep to Nathan Hauritz... it's a tough call. Haddin's a lot better than Dhoni at the stumps, but he's still not the greatest.
It's a compulsion which won't last long - and one which sensible people don't seriously comply to anyway - for this precise reason:gone are the days when a team would be happy to have a tallon or a wasim bari; excellent keepers but hopeless bats. the right mix of batting and keeping ability in an ideal keeper would be someone like knott or healy who were excellent with the gloves and also more than handy at no.7. but ever since the arrival of gilchrist (and andy flower to a lesser degree) it is a compulsion the world over to look for a match turning, top notch bat who could also keep well.
Unrealistic expectations soon get dispelled.since this is as much a fantasy as expecting a left hand batsman who is the best in the world to also bowl pace and all varieties of spin and field anywhere like a hawk, to turn up for every team other than the west indies of the 60s
I often wonder why this question is so frequently framed in terms of how strong the rest of the batting is -- to me it's really a question of the strength of the bowling.Never have much agreed with this TBH. Unless it refers to what sort of pitches you play on and thus whether your attack is spin-dominated rather than seam-dominated, I consider that a good-batsman-decent-wicketkeeper adds more to any side than a moderate-to-poor-batsman-outstanding-wicketkeeper. I don't care in the slightest how strong the specialist batting is - you can never have enough batting and as long as your wicketkeeper is decent and your attack is seam-dominated, you should still pick the best batsman of them.