African Monkey
U19 Vice-Captain
Jacques Rudolph's knock against Australia in 2005 at Perth was a good match-saving innings.
That's entirely wrong - for three consecutive Ashes series' Atherton performed more than acceptably against Australia - 1990/91, 1993 and 1994/95. Yes, Atherton was something of a disappointment in 1997, played when he should not have in 1998/99 and thus failed dismally and was past it in 2001 (as he was against other teams besides Australia) but gross exaggeration does no-one any credit. Taylor too was past it in 1998/99 and also only escaped his wretched form midway through the 1997 series.placing taylor and atherton in the same plane of test openers is a crime. taylor was a huge success in ashes. atherton was not just a disaster in tests vs australia. he was an embarassment.
Not really - of course Taylor's best innings' were better than Atherton's but Atherton's consistency was much better and he did not endure 18 months of utter dismality like Taylor did in 1996 and the first half of 1997. Overall career averages as I've stated hundreds of times are pretty irrelevant, and Atherton's and Taylor's no less than most. There are indeed plenty of stats you can use to make a case for Taylor being a better player than Atherton and as I said I don't have a problem with such a profession but equally it's possible to argue there wasn't a lot between them.if one were to pick and choose taylor's stats defining his peak years to one's convenience his stats would be miles ahead of atherton's. actually, hold on. they are miles ahead of atherton's as they are right now. the difference in their averages - taylor's at 43 + and athers' at 38 -, should make it obvious where they both belong. also, besides scoring more centuries in less tests at a far superior average taylor also managed a double hundred and a triple hundred whereas athers had to be satisfied with a 185 n.o. another reason why they should never be compared.
As a Test batsman in the grand scheme of things, indeed he was. As an opener of his time, he was pretty good.Me too. Atherton merely decent and nothing more.
Nah, mediocre/decent in both respects. A very ordinary player with his own set of career highlights. Nothing out of the norm.As a Test batsman in the grand scheme of things, indeed he was. As an opener of his time, he was pretty good.
the manufactured opener was good enough to score a double hundred against australia in australia; the natural talent was not.That might not be as ridiculous as saying Atherton was no better than Sadagoppan Ramesh, but it comes close. Shastri was a manufactured opener who made a decent fist of the role for a couple of years. Atherton was a fine, natural opener for a decade.
true he did not. but we endured his mediocre career for 15 years.Atherton's consistency was much better and he did not endure 18 months of utter dismality like Taylor did in 1996 and the first half of 1997.
Haha, pwnage.true he did not. but we endured his mediocre career for 15 years.
For the record, my belief is that VVS Laxman's innings first "saved" India, but ultimately put them in a position to win. He gave Harbhajan something to bowl at. It was a match-winning innings, which is a much greater and more fitting achievement than merely calling it match-saving.Hmmm, Laxman took the win out of the equation for Australia. How could Australia have won?
It was either a draw or a win to India, with the draw being much more likely. Australia imploded and Harbhajan bowled brilliantly.
All semantics I guess anyway.
Lost me with that one, think there is a very obvious different there."Decent middle-of-the-road Test batsman"? Can use that term if you prefer. For me very good and decent-middle-of-the-road is largely the same thing, just one is more complimentary than the other. A couple I'd describe as likewise would be Damien Martyn and Hansie Cronje.
One century in 33 tests mateThat's entirely wrong - for three consecutive Ashes series' Atherton performed more than acceptably against Australia - 1990/91, 1993 and 1994/95. Yes, Atherton was something of a disappointment in 1997, played when he should not have in 1998/99 and thus failed dismally and was past it in 2001 (as he was against other teams besides Australia) but gross exaggeration does no-one any credit. Taylor too was past it in 1998/99 and also only escaped his wretched form midway through the 1997 series.
Newsflash: there's more to batting than scoring a single double-century in Australia. Give me 10 years of fine production over a single double-century and a couple of years of decent performance anyday.the manufactured opener was good enough to score a double hundred against australia in australia; the natural talent was not.
Whose mediocre career did we endure for 15 years?true he did not. but we endured his mediocre career for 15 years.
Far more to batting than centuries; one of those non-centuries was a 99 so effectively that's two centuries (no-one would claim a single run makes any significant difference); at least 6 of those 33 Tests he shouldn't have played (granted 2 centuries in 27 is still hardly outstanding).One century in 33 tests mate
Really? Can't see him having been more than someone who'd average 39-42 sort of thing against consistently good bowling; granted he cashed-in on the largely rubbish fare of 2001/02-onwards well enough.Would actually say Damien Martyn is an excellent example of a 'very good' test bastman.
Slater had 9 or 10 90s tbf... (to hark back to yesterday's comparison)Far more to batting than centuries; one of those non-centuries was a 99 so effectively that's two centuries (no-one would claim a single run makes any significant difference); at least 6 of those 33 Tests he shouldn't have played (granted 2 centuries in 27 is still hardly outstanding).
None of this, however, changes the fact that Atherton was good in three consecutive Ashes 1990/91-1994/95. Yes he was indeed poor in 1997 and the fact that he was past it in 2001 meant he was also poor then, but it is nonetheless still completely wrong to say that Atherton was not invariably poor against Australia, nor that Australia entirely had the wood on him. Because such things simply did not happen.