Below are the exact links for the stats I posted. Anybody can go and see for himself if any of the stats provided in my first post were wrong. For the convenience of the 'doubters' like Sanz I have the stats I had posted below the link that will lead you to the same stats on CI. NNNNNNNNNjoy.The Amount of BS you have been spouting is just too much. I do not know if you lied or posted incorrect stats but onus is on you to post the links if you want people to buy the Bull**** you are selling. If you can't or don't then obviously people are going to believe whatever they want to.
I am not accusing you of telling lies or posting incorrect stats. What you have done is actually worse which is cherry picking the stats in order to spew your own hatred in this thread.
It is not hard to do that to any batsman, even if it is someone as Good/Great as IVAR. Here is a sample, with links (unlike you) .
Sachin (in matches Imran Played) :- 43.75 (SR 104.16)
IVAR (in matches Imran Played) :- 33.03 (SR 94.37)
Sachin (in Matches Wasim Played in Aus) :- 54.50 (SR 86.85)
IVAR (in Matches Wasim Played in Aus) :- 8.00 (SR 46.510
Sachin (In Matches Hadlee Played in NZ) :- 36.00 (SR 92.30)
IVAR (In Matches Hadleed Played in NZ) :- 19.25 (SR 89.53)
Yes Hadlee/Imran were Old, But Sachin was not at his prime either. He was a 16 year old when he faced Imran/Wasim/Waqar/Qadir, Yes Richards faced those guys at their peak, but so was he.And YOU? YOU have posted the stats for SRT against a 37+ yo Imran Khan (b.1952) and a Richard Hadlee that was 39+ yo (b.1951) when he faced them. So the King has to face these guys at their strongest, fastest and best match after match, year upon year; and SRT catches them years past their best. And the two are same?
I've got no problem with his use of stats, I've seen worse on CC. What I didnt like was the deliberately inflammatory tone of his first post. If he had bothered to present his thoughts in better form, the chances of a decent discussion would have been higher (am saying this not having read the rest of the subsequent thread).How is that any worse than some of the stats we have posted here? As is being remarked in another thread, people need to take a chill pill when dealing with new posters.. If you got a point against what he posted, try to put it there.. Such remarks are basically stupid because he posted stats, which is what you and I and so many others have been doing here as well.... He posted some stats and he drew his conclusions from it... What is so bad about it?
This. He was provocative throughout the post and is also continuing to be so.I've got no problem with his use of stats, I've seen worse on CC. What I didnt like was the deliberately inflammatory tone of his first post. If he had bothered to present his thoughts in better form, the chances of a decent discussion would have been higher (am saying this not having read the rest of the subsequent thread).
I think that applies to NYLove as well.. Look, the McGrath stats and Donald stats kinda show that Tendulkar was not as dominating as we all think he was against the best.. But then again, the sample sizes are too small to make a real decision... Fact is, both of them are so good that cherry picking with stats is never going to be conclusive... The reasons I felt Sachin was better are listed earlier... Some of them are inherently biased towards Sachin. LIke the fact that he played for a weaker side than the King. I mean, it is obviously not Viv's fault that he played in a stronger team... It is just a reason I "think" Sachin is slightly better.OK, NYLove78. We don't require the confrontational nature of that posting. People will take a lot more notice of you if the tone of your posts tries to present why Richards is better, and not denigrate who is being compared to.
The point that Sanz was trying to make is not necessarily that Richards<Sachin based on those facts. More the point that the manipulation of facts into such small samples means that they can be misleading.
Sanz, your point of view often gets lost in the emotion of your posting style. With both moderator, and fellow poster, hats on, I ask that you try and separate the belligerent from the detail, because a lot of what you have to say is worthwhile, when you are more dispassionate within your posts. I'm not saying that you shouldn't be dispassionate about an issue, but that doesn't mean that you have to have such emotion flowing through your posts all the time. It can too often escalate an issue.
I think that applies to NYLove as well.. Look, the McGrath stats and Donald stats kinda show that Tendulkar was not as dominating as we all think he was against the best.. But then again, the sample sizes are too small to make a real decision... Fact is, both of them are so good that cherry picking with stats is never going to be conclusive... The reasons I felt Sachin was better are listed earlier... Some of them are inherently biased towards Sachin. LIke the fact that he played for a weaker side than the King. I mean, it is obviously not Viv's fault that he played in a stronger team... It is just a reason I "think" Sachin is slightly better.
But, having read through the thread and the sort of respect he seems to command on the people who have watched him and how high they rate him ahead of his contemporaries, I am coming around to believing Viv is better, again though, by a pretty small margin, as is often the case between greats..
Fair enough, HB. Although I think you give too much credence to commentary regarding Viv, in this instance, and not enough to your own valuation of Tendulkar. Secondly, I think there is a little danger of a Tendulkar "not good against the best" meme building up over time through repetition. Great attacks in ODI games are not quantified in terms of just those bowlers who we traditionally think of when describing great attacks (i.e McGrath, Ambrose, Donald). In doing so we also forget the other great/very good ODI bowlers like Bracken and Lee and Gough etc or those ODI attacks which were more than the sum of their parts for 50 overs.I think that applies to NYLove as well.. Look, the McGrath stats and Donald stats kinda show that Tendulkar was not as dominating as we all think he was against the best.. But then again, the sample sizes are too small to make a real decision... Fact is, both of them are so good that cherry picking with stats is never going to be conclusive... The reasons I felt Sachin was better are listed earlier... Some of them are inherently biased towards Sachin. LIke the fact that he played for a weaker side than the King. I mean, it is obviously not Viv's fault that he played in a stronger team... It is just a reason I "think" Sachin is slightly better.
But, having read through the thread and the sort of respect he seems to command on the people who have watched him and how high they rate him ahead of his contemporaries, I am coming around to believing Viv is better, again though, by a pretty small margin, as is often the case between greats..
I feel that is the case, JBH.. I don't think Sachin is any less of a player than what he actually is or at least, what I have thought of him to be so far... He is EASILY the best ODI top order player I have seen.. But Richards just seems so far ahead of his contemporaries then... And so highly regarded by such great players.. That is what has made me rethink my position on this.Fair enough, HB. Although I think you give too much credence to commentary regarding Viv, in this instance, and not enough to your own valuation of Tendulkar. Secondly, I think there is a little danger of a Tendulkar "not good against the best" meme building up over time through repetition. Great attacks in ODI games are not quantified in terms of just those bowlers who we traditionally think of when describing great attacks (i.e McGrath, Ambrose, Donald). In doing so we also forget the other great/very good ODI bowlers like Bracken and Lee and Gough etc or those ODI attacks which were more than the sum of their parts for 50 overs.
Even taking the traditionally great names into account, SRT only falls short against SA. And even this if including those games where he does not open. For example, his average as opener against SA attacks containing either of Pollock or Donald is 33 with a SR of 73 (while his average in all main batting positions is 26 with a SR of 68). Incidentally he played in 5 ODI games as an opener facing both Donald and Pollock and averaged 28 with a SR of 90.
Also, his average against attacks containing McGrath and/or Warne is 45 with a SR of 95. His average against attacks containing the both of them is 50 with a SR of 102, and his average against McGrath alone is 37 with a SR of 91. These statistics are as an opener, by the way.
Make of that what you will, but dont fall for the "fail against the best" nonsense that seems to be rearing its ugly head (although you do seem to be talking about not as dominating against the best as we think - which is subjective). If that were the case, HE would not be rated so highly by his contemporaries and expert observers.
Edit/ If, however, the argument is that Richards was better against the best of his time, that is another argument entirely, and one that holds more water, IMO.
Thanks mate... It is amazing how much we argue with each other most of the time and yet we get along just fine..Agree with him or not...HB is all class.
Vic, my motive was not to denigrate SRT, but to indeed highlight what I believe is imo Richards' vast superiority. I did not intend to put down SRT than rather I admit taunt some of the very biased SRT fans here. Over the last couple of years when I was a passive onlooker many and I say MANY here propagated worse stats against Lara, Ponting, Gilchrist etc to advocate SRT's supposed superiority.OK, NYLove78. We don't require the confrontational nature of that posting. People will take a lot more notice of you if the tone of your posts tries to present why Richards is better, and not denigrate who is being compared to.
Your argument makes Kapil >> Botham as an all rounder because Kapil did very well against Windies.I still maintain I did no cherry-picking. I picked out the stronger teams of both eras, and included the statistics for the respective performances for both against those teams on the opposition turf, and THAT when the best bowlers were playing.
There simply is no such thing when you are comparing cricketers of that quality, unless you are arguing Bradman's case. That's just my opinion, though.Vic, my motive was not to denigrate SRT, but to indeed highlight what I believe is imo Richards' vast superiority.
I am no moderator but 'taunting' a fan-base does not seem to be an acceptable way to put forward your argument.I did not intend to put down SRT than rather I admit taunt some of the very biased SRT fans here.
I looked over some of your posts - and I have said it about many of the stat wars that go on here - but sample sizes of 3 or 4 matches tell us close to nothing in comparison to the body of work a player has achieved over his entire career. For me, filtering out records to look at such small samples is intellectually dishonest, without considering overall records.I still maintain I did no cherry-picking. I picked out the stronger teams of both eras, and included the statistics for the respective performances for both against those teams on the opposition turf, and THAT when the best bowlers were playing.
The rest of your post is interesting - there is no doubt batsmen had it tougher physically in previous generations with uncovered wickets, lack of protection and so on - but it's not as if Sachin had any control over the conditions he batted in. All we can say is his era was 'different' (perhaps better spinners and more spin-friendly wickets, more depth in Test-playing nations, variability in conditions?) and there is no doubt he is up there with the best of his era.This is without going into obvious but definitely debatable (at least to some here) issues like the absence of protective gear, as also of the numerous restrictions on the bowlers, more difficult pitches which were more like the test pitches then where even 200 in 50 overs was a good total, and superior fast bowling etc which makes Richards' average and strike-rate imo at least 20 to 30 p.c higher if juxtaposed in the background of the 90s/00s.
Also I noticed nobody in over 30 pages of debating bothered about these stats (or the difference in conditions across the two eras wrt ODIs) here wherein some of these same posters were quick to bring forth in the Lara vs SRT debates the stats for the two of them in Aus and SA in tests in the 90s where SRT averaged a little better (iirc) on the opposition turf. That was on the premise that the tracks got super-flat at the exact dawn of the new year/decade/century/millennium. In reality I believe that was a culmination of a decade-long metamorphosis that started around '90. In terms of difficulty of conditions an adequate summary would be 70s&80s > 90s > 00s.
As I mentioned before, 'cricketastically', that Richards had those performances against the fastest and greatest ever like Lillee, Thomson, Imran, Hadlee etc clinches it for him, AND that fact being so in those conditions mentioned place him beyond the reach of any other ODI bat past, present, and future. His 153* vs Aus '79 and 189* vs Eng '84 are probably ten times better than the third greatest knock ever cricketastically (taking conditions, attacks etc into consideration) and will imo stay the two greatest ODI innings ever as long as cricket is played. Add to this the fact that statistically too he is ahead more so in terms of statistics that matter more. In fact in the 20 years of cricket-watching "live' (started watching live from around '90 from when on I have vivid memories) I rate Steve Waugh's 120* vs SA in the WC '99, De Silva's centuries vs Pak (Akram, Younis, Saqlain) in Sharjah '97, Lara's 153* vs Pak in Sharjah '93 and again Lara in the C&U against Aus and Pak in '97 above any ODI innings I have seen from SRT. I cannot rate his centuries on a flat deck against Aus (no McGrath, Gillespie, Lee, only Warne recovering from shoulder operation and sub-standard benchers like Fleming and Kasperowicz) in Sharjah '98 just as I cannot rate Ponting's century in the WC'03 final also on a equally flat track vs India consisting of rank medium-pacers.
Not to mention Simon Cowell.I did some more stats-filtering meanwhile. Again one can always find manipulation and distortion Perhaps its the fact that I have been a student of Mathematics till I was in the Phd program at Stony Brook in neighboring Long Island that I tend to look at everything in a rather theoretical/analytical manner. I am pretty sure that some of the posters here 'cricketastically' might be far better than me as judges.
1) The e.g you give is far from an exact analogy as I have taken multiple cases and you are taking one single case into consideration.Your argument makes Kapil >> Botham as an all rounder because Kapil did very well against Windies.