Contradiction. I win.Batsmen cannot bully bowlers, and it is not and never, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever will be the case that a batsman is too good for a bowler - in the case of Sami, he simply is mostly not good enough to get out Tendulkar (though he could be and at any given point the possibility remains that a bowler as hopeless as Sami could produce a delivery that Tendulkar cannot combat).
You were doing well until the end. Both skills equally impact on each other. Prove otherwise.Batting average is a consequence of batting skill and bowling skill, with bowling skill making a bigger impact; bowling averages are also a consequence of batting skill and bowling skill, with bowling skill making a bigger impact.
Agree with all bar this. What is wrong with McGrath, Murali, Warne, Pollock, Kumble, Bond, Akthar, Asif, Caddick, Gough, Wasim, Waqar, Gillespie, Steyn, Johnson, Vaas, Srinath, Harbijan, Donald? Plus there are those on the "good" rung like Lee, Flintoff and Zaheer mk II. All played last decade, some moreso than others and some were better than others but that is quite a list. I haven't included the best ODI specialists either. In the 80s apart from the WI quartet each side had one spearhead most of the time. It is the same today albeit Australia had the biggest baddest bowling of McGrath, Gillespie, Warne and Lee, which is comparable with the WI quartets. Last decade was also probably the best spin bowling era in history. not only was there Murali and Warne, we had the Indian duo, McGill, Saqlain, NZs best in Vettori (who is world class in ODIs). Fingerspin is making a comeback with the likes of Swann.Decks can make it more and more difficult for a bowler to produce; every now and then the combination of poor-quality (ie, too flat) deck and poor-quality ball will make it near impossible for a bowler to produce. Such circumstances have become more common since 2001/02, as have things from the next rung down (ie, conditions which only the best bowlers can exploit) and with the near-absence of truly top-notch bowlers since 2001/02 this has resulted in batting being very easy.
Completely disagree with this entire paragraph. Why would Hayden and Sehwag not succeed? Bradman himself was not orthodox. Andrew Jones should never have had success either with his technique right? Yet he played in 87-95, right smack bang in the middle of your fave era and did very well. Vettori is currently averaging something ridiculous as well.I have never once said that the likes of Kallis and Ponting are not good batsmen; I have simply said that there is ample evidence to my mind that they would not have been the supermen they've been since 2001/02 had batting not gotten easier. Of course they would probably at some point have gotten better than they had been up to 2001, because they always had the talent to do so. But I do not believe they would have scored to anywhere near the extent they have done - and yes, I do believe that one or two who have had phenomenal success would have had precious little of it had things continued as they had been up to 2001. Namely Hayden and, if he was forced to open the batting, Sehwag.
*yawn*Of course bowlers disappeared - those of the calibre of Ambrose, Walsh, Donald, Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis and others retired within a couple of years of each other (some had a few terrible games just before retirement, as more players than not have done throughout history). Players are always disappearing, but sometimes the replacements will not be of comparable calibre. I don't see any way that anyone can possibly dispute that the replacements for those bowlers have been lesser; the combination of the flattening-out of pitches and the replacement of top-notch bowlers with a mixture of moderate ones and outright poor ones has made batting notably easier.
You disagreed with it in my previous post. If you agree with that paragraph then why the hell are you arguing with me? Because that was essentially the point.I don't know why anyone keeps saying all of this as if I've disputed it, because I've never argued against it. I just don't often have reason to mention it the way I constantly have to about batsmen having it easy.
Thats not them being prejudiced, thats a disagreement.The prejudice only exists in the minds of those who don't accept what I'm saying. I have used no prejudice to come to the conclusions I've come to - I've used simple logic.
So you have no tangible evidence to back up your claim? Don't become a lawyer.Some people have used different logic and come to different conclusions (some through bias and prejudice, some not) but there is no sense in the suggestion that my conclusions have been reached through pre-judged notions - I have watched cricket for a lengthy time and it was very obvious to me without even consulting figures that batting became easier starting in 2001/02 and has still not become as difficult as it was up to 2001, thought the balance begun to be shunted back in the year of 2006.
Not really - it's something that can be manufactured into a contradiction if you try to be clever with words, but in reality in terms of what I mean it isn't.Contradiction. I win.
Yes, I do. The idea of "bullying bowlers" just isn't acceptable to me. Bowlers can always, if they're good enough, produce something which a batsman is powerless to resist. Batsmen merely respond to what is bowled at them; Hayden and Sehwag are very good at looking dismissive when they smash a crap delivery for four, and this creates the illusion of them "bullying" bowlers. But their games both retain flaws that a top-class bowler can exploit.Mathew Hayden and Sehwag don't bully bowlers? Sure, you believe that.
It's unbelievably easy to prove otherwise. The bowler bowls the ball. All the batsman can do is react to what the bowler bowls at him. The bowler thus has control of the exchange, and only when the bowler errs can the batsman make some sort of gain.You were doing well until the end. Both skills equally impact on each other. Prove otherwise.
Murali and Warne were outstanding bowlers and played for most of 2001/02-2006/07. Lee was crap for all bar a handful of Tests in 2007/08; Saqlain and Harbhajan, Swann and Vettori are all fingerspinners who can only bowl well when presented with a turner which as I mentioned has not happened often of late, and the same mostly applied to Kumble. Donald, Srinath, Wasim Akram, Gough and Caddick all played a mere handful of Tests after 2001/02 and all were by then crap, as (as I mention) a great many players are at the end of their careers. Gillespie, Bond, Akhtar and Asif barely played for a variety of reasons and were certainly not 100% reliable when they did; Steyn has only been around for the last 3 years; Flintoff was only good for a relatively short time; Vaas could either be brilliant or terrible with no indication of what was coming next; Pollock was clearly not the bowler post-2001/02 that he was up to 2001; Johnson has barely been around 5 minutes and has not made that much of an impact yet. So essentially you're left with Murali, Warne and McGrath - they are the only really, really good bowlers who have played consistently after 2001/02. And those from the next rung down (eg Harbhajan and Hoggard) are mostly not capable of performing when they do not have helpful conditions.Agree with all bar this. What is wrong with McGrath, Murali, Warne, Pollock, Kumble, Bond, Akthar, Asif, Caddick, Gough, Wasim, Waqar, Gillespie, Steyn, Johnson, Vaas, Srinath, Harbijan, Donald? Plus there are those on the "good" rung like Lee, Flintoff and Zaheer mk II. All played last decade, some moreso than others and some were better than others but that is quite a list. I haven't included the best ODI specialists either. In the 80s apart from the WI quartet each side had one spearhead most of the time. It is the same today albeit Australia had the biggest baddest bowling of McGrath, Gillespie, Warne and Lee, which is comparable with the WI quartets. Last decade was also probably the best spin bowling era in history. not only was there Murali and Warne, we had the Indian duo, McGill, Saqlain, NZs best in Vettori (who is world class in ODIs). Fingerspin is making a comeback with the likes of Swann.
It's not about orthodoxy (Gary Kirsten is a far better example than Andrew Jones as he was far more consistently successful, and he was wholly unorthodox), it's about having obvious flaws in the game which top-class bowlers can exploit. In my view there's enough evidence in the relatively few occasions Hayden and opener-Sehwag actually faced said bowling post-2001/02 to show that they had said obvious flaws and that with more consistently good bowling they'd have been exposed. Of course there can be no certainty and I've never, ever said there can be; I simply say that to me it's logical deduction.Completely disagree with this entire paragraph. Why would Hayden and Sehwag not succeed? Bradman himself was not orthodox. Andrew Jones should never have had success either with his technique right? Yet he played in 87-95, right smack bang in the middle of your fave era and did very well. Vettori is currently averaging something ridiculous as well.
In my view the evidence suggests otherwise. Ponting and Kallis have always shown some amount of vulnerability to top-class bowling. Of course, any batsman can do this, it's no shame, but to my mind there is enough evidence to suggest both are notably lesser than the likes of Tendulkar, Lara and Stephen Waugh.Ponting and Kallis would be supermen in any era. They are simply greats.
I found compelling StatsGuru evidence that there are very few bowlers with good averages over lengthy careers since 2001/02. Of course some will prefer to believe this is because the calibre of batsmanship has improved; with the way I see that the game works, I believe this to be illogical.*yawn*
Didn't someone find some statsguru evidence that collective bowling average has only gone up like half a run or something? think it was some bloke that hardly ever posts.
I did? Where?You disagreed with it in my previous post. If you agree with that paragraph then why the hell are you arguing with me? Because that was essentially the point.
They disagree, so they try to look for reasons I am wrong, and prejudice is a favourite. I, however, know myself better than them and am quite capable of identifying my own biases; others are not, as no-one on here knows me anywhere near so well as I know myself.Thats not them being prejudiced, thats a disagreement.
I have plenty, of both a numerical and non-numerical nature, but I am merely saying I don't need actual numerical data to know what I know; it might help to demonstrate it to others, however, if they're willing to open their minds.So you have no tangible evidence to back up your claim? Don't become a lawyer.
What?Hmm, interesting description of random numbers plucked out of the air to try and back up your point there.
I am not too proud to say that I have been bullied in the past by batsman.Yes, I do. The idea of "bullying bowlers" just isn't acceptable to me.
I'm with Richard on this one.I am not too proud to say that I have been bullied in the past by batsman.
You make it sound like batsmen were lucky to score a run back then, which is bull**** frankly.What?
The averages for Hoggard & Arnold are not random. Those are their respective career averages. Go check cricinfo.
On the 30 innings theory. Where i suggested... i'd say for ever FTB in the 2000s era, if he batted in 30 innings, he would have faced a quality pace attack in bowler friendly (or just a quality pace attack on a flat deck) conditions about 5 times. Which compared to 70s, 80s & 90s it (another educated guess) would be around 15+ times out of 30 innings
I certainly believe if one compares for example the hundreds Greg Chappell scored in the 70s & 80s to hundreds Ricky Ponting scored in the 2000s era (specifically after Headingley 2001). We would see Chappell scored more hundreds againts quality pace attacks in testing (or just quality pace attacks on flat decks) conditions than Ponting did.
You make it sound like batsmen were lucky to score a run back then, which is bull**** frankly.
You reckon batsmen in the 70s and 80s faced quality pace attacks, in helpful conditions or otherwise 50 per cent plus back then? Bollocks. Firstly, how many of the sides had quality pace attacks then for any meaningful length of time, let alone got to use them in pace-friendly conditions? WI did, Aus barely did in the 80s, NZ had Hadlee and some triers, India had Kapil and SFA and played a lot at home, Pakistan had Imran and Sarfraz, but everyone says their pitches were roads, England had an aging Willis in the 80s, Botham and Dilley.
Honestly, if you think decks then were seamers' paradises a lot if the time you're kidding mate. It just wasn't so.
And Chappell's hundreds were great knocks, don't get me wrong - I saw most of them. But they were great knocks because he was a great player, just as a Ponting ton will often be a great knock because he's a great player. This uber-revisionist **** has to stop. It's crap.
/rant.
gordon greenidge?As long as I've watched cricket I've never heard of anyone who averaged 45 being considered as a "great". Very good maybe, but never "great".
I've seen you say this a few times Richard, on a few topics and I thought I should comment. Did it ever occur to you that if people are interpreting your posts differently to how you intend them, it is not some sort of vendetta? Because after all you've used this line against many people that I know you have no problem with (including myself). It's a cheesy phrase but my boss is always telling me 'perception is reality'. If it's coming across that you are saying one thing when you mean another, I would suggest that you need to think about how your posts are coming across, rather than attacking the way people are reading them.Equally people need to stop grossly exaggerating what people say about changes over time. I know it's easier to respond to what you'd like people to have written than what they have, but it's a nonsensical approach.
Personally I think he says it as a diversion tactic when he's being beaten tbh. Nice guy but he can't admit some of his theories might be wrong.I've seen you say this a few times Richard, on a few topics and I thought I should comment. Did it ever occur to you that if people are interpreting your posts differently to how you intend them, it is not some sort of vendetta? Because after all you've used this line against many people that I know you have no problem with (including myself). It's a cheesy phrase but my boss is always telling me 'perception is reality'. If it's coming across that you are saying one thing when you mean another, I would suggest that you need to think about how your posts are coming across, rather than attacking the way people are reading them.
I'm certainly not too proud to say that I've been not remotely good enough to remotely trouble batsmen, but that's what it is to my mind - I'm not good enough to trouble them, not they're too good for me. I still bowl the ball and if I didn't bowl it they'd not even have a thing to do.I am not too proud to say that I have been bullied in the past by batsman.
Hmm, I don't think it's always a result of personal vendetta (sometimes is, of course) but more a vendetta against several points I make regularly - one of the most notable being batting-has-gotten-quite-a-bit-easier-since-2001/02. There's lots of people who don't like that idea, and the easiest way to argue against it is to reply with what's commonly termed irrelevant logic - by saying something related to what's easy to argue against rather than what has actually been said.I've seen you say this a few times Richard, on a few topics and I thought I should comment. Did it ever occur to you that if people are interpreting your posts differently to how you intend them, it is not some sort of vendetta? Because after all you've used this line against many people that I know you have no problem with (including myself). It's a cheesy phrase but my boss is always telling me 'perception is reality'. If it's coming across that you are saying one thing when you mean another, I would suggest that you need to think about how your posts are coming across, rather than attacking the way people are reading them.
If I thought theories were wrong I wouldn't have attached myself to the belief of them.Personally I think he says it as a diversion tactic when he's being beaten tbh. Nice guy but he can't admit some of his theories might be wrong.
But if you're not good enough to trouble them, then they must be too good for you. Be it on the day or in general.I'm certainly not too proud to say that I've been not remotely good enough to remotely trouble batsmen, but that's what it is to my mind - I'm not good enough to trouble them, not they're too good for me. I still bowl the ball and if I didn't bowl it they'd not even have a thing to do.
Again, you're making assumptions about what other people are thinking...surely it's logical that actually, they just summise from what you write that your opinion is whatever they state that they believe it is. if that makes any sense. It certainly does in my head.If I thought theories were wrong I wouldn't have attached myself to the belief of them.
If I say people are replying to what they'd like to have been written rather than what has been it's because that's what's happened.
You're absolutely right but I suspect it's not going to be any easier to change his mind about this than it is to change it regarding the actual theories.Again, you're making assumptions about what other people are thinking...surely it's logical that actually, they just summise from what you write that your opinion is whatever they state that they believe it is. if that makes any sense. It certainly does in my head.
I certainly don't 'want' you to have written anything or nothing - I just reply to what I think you've said/are suggesting