Jono
Virat Kohli (c)
So you're saying that Player A for South Africa is going to score 30 (constant). And you're arguing that 30 off 100 balls will be better than 30 off 34 balls, because it would have taken up more deliveries/time and hence helped the greater possibility of a draw.You're not taking runs scored as a constant. If you don't do that your argument just amounts to "scoring more runs>scoring less runs". Sehwag faces significantly less balls than Dravid does, giving his opponent more time to win the game. Keeping total runs scored as a constant, a low strike rate would have been preferable for all of South Africa's batsmen in the match just past.
Fair enough then. That is true. It doesn't hold much relevance though, because in reality the runs aren't constant.
When you are looking at a player to draw a match for you, you look at the average deliveries they face. Not their strike rate.
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