Not as big of a difference as you are making it out to be and not as big of a difference where Laxman's poor stats should be overlooked. If a batsman bats at number 4 and walks in when the team is 2-0 then isn't he playing virtually as an opener? I mean, there is no real difference and if anything his under more pressure then what a normal opener would be. Making the transition from batting 4 to Opening isn't like being a professional Tennis player and then having to play in the EPL without any prior Soccer experience like you are making out.
There is a big difference in playing as the opener and playing in the middle order. That's why you have specialists for it. #5 to open is umpteen times difficult than #4 to play at #5.
You prove nothing by highlighting one off examples. Coming at 2-0 is such one where it happens less than 5% of times, Too many ifs and buts show our argument is frail.
Pfft, in the match that Sangakkara scored runs in Australia there was 1,000 runs scored in the first 2 innings' of the match and a combination of 6 bowlers from each side had 100+ runs conceeded against their names. Book in for bed and breakfast, tbh.
*facepalm*
Who talked about that match? What I talked was about SL vs PAK at Lahore few years back when Sanga scored 230 on a green pitch. Either you have a reading disability or a learning one.
MCG pitch in the 06/07 wasn't a road either. England were cleaned up for 170 odd on the first day and Pietersen ended up throwing his wicket away because he was losing partners. England had Australia 5/70 odd at one point aswell before Hayden guided Australia to safety. The Brisbane pitch was cracked by the 3rd day, hence Pietersen's first-innings dismissal. Australia dominated in their second innings batting because England was completely demoralized, hence the match seemed like a runfest. Although the Adelaide and Perth pitches were definately flat.
Once again one off examples.
Here are the stats to put a end to you rant of MCG is not flat blah blah.
MCG, batting average 23.9, Dawin 12.2. nearly half of that.
Cairns 26, but SCG and Adelaide are better batting pitches.
When the cut off is
brought to 2000, it shows Aussie pitches have been even flatter.
Here also SCG, Adelaide and WACA have better batting conditions than Cairns. The pitches which Sanga played (Brisbane, Cairns, Darwin and Hobart) are stacked at the bottom while the ones that KP played are stacked at the top. Self explanatory.
Yeah, Sri Lankan pitches are harder to bat on then English pitches for the touring opposition not the home team, because they have to deal with Murali. Apart from Warne, no Sri Lanka batsman had to deal with anyone of the class of Murali.
Average in SL for non-SC batsmen who are test standard -
26.4
Average of SL batsmen at home against test class opposition -
34.6
Average in ENG for test standard SC batsmen -
32.76
Average for ENG batsmen at home -
32.0
Yes it's particularly difficult for touring batsmen in SL. But SL batsmen at home do not have that greater advantage compared to English batsmen at home.
You also overlook the fact that English conditions mean that the bowlers get to use a duke ball which tends to swing around a bit more. Just because England's bowlers have been a bunch of bottlers for the best part of this decade does not mean that it is the easiest place on earth to bat.
I just want to remind you that Kookaburra reverse swings more.