HeathDavisSpeed
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
I understand that McGrath owns the complete works of Philip Glass on vinyl; therefore he has the most complete record collection.
If it was compensating with another team, I'd agree. Compensating against the same team, albeit either home or away, makes much more sense. To me, if you average less than 40, overall, against a team it is much worse and averaging above 35 both home and away but less than 40 - i.e. Tendulkar v S.Africa - doesn't change that. That means you were done both home and away. Whereas in Ponting's case failure is split in this regard. He averages 79 (!) against India at home in as many matches he averages 20 away - 47 overall. That is much more of a success IMO than Tendulkar's S.Africa. Tendulkar in neither case has been helpful whereas Ponting was at least in one.ikki... but this thread is about the most "complete" cricketer. if a batsman/bowler has been a total failure in a certain setup then he is ruled out. calling ponting the most complete batsman is like calling murali the most complete bowler. they both have failed miserably in a test playing nation apiece. they cannot be in the race.
and yes i mean "in" a certain country. being a complete cricketer must have some connection to succeeding in all conditions. right? compensating for a massive failure in one place with a massive success in another place makes you a successful cricketer; not a complete cricketer. look at sehwag for example. unless he does well in south africa his claim to greatness will always have a question mark above his head despite his triple against them in india. ponting's doubles against india cannot make up for his pathetic show on indian soil. leave him out ikki. he is a great cricketer. but his career is not going to look complete unless he fixes this in his resume.
If a batsman averages 36 away and at home, that is by your reckoning keeping him in "complete" terms. Yet, actually, that is indeed a failure both home and away. IMO, at least Ponting was imperious at least at home.my point is... ponting is not the complete batsman we are looking for. if there is a batter who averaged above 35 both home and away, or make it 40 if you think i am tweaking it for tendy, against all the major test playing nations of his time then he is our man. may be border would come close to the requirement. or gavaskar. or one of the 3Ws. no one with the first name of "ricky" would fit the bill though. if we keep the limit at 40 then no one called "sachi" would make it either. but it is important for a batsman to never fail in any condition to be "complete". no point in scoring well at home and failing abroad against a nation - like sehwag against SA or ponting against India.
\So if a batsman averages less than 40 against a team then he does not have a complete record, so only batsmen that have an average of over 40 against every team have a complete record. How many batsmen have an average of over 40 against every non minnow team.If a batsman averages 36 away and at home, that is by your reckoning keeping him in "complete" terms. Yet, actually, that is indeed a failure both home and away. IMO, at least Ponting was imperious at least at home.
Tendulkar averages 38 overall against S.Africa; Ponting averages 47 against India. Ponting's lowest average against a country is 47, his second lowest England is 48. Tendulkar averages 38 against S.Africa and 42 against Pakistan.
Neither could Tendulkar against S.Africa till last series (remember, he averaged 27 then).yeah. yeah. I know. but he cannot bat in india to save his life.
That's the problem, Ponting has had one very bad low; but many more highs than others can't match. Think of this: Ponting can very realistically end his career averaging 50+ against every test nation in the world. That's as complete as you get without being called "The Don".but mcgrath cannot be taken that lightly in any country. that is why he is more respected and called the most complete bowler. let ricky not evoke laughter on indian grounds then he will be called a complete batsman. no one laughs at glenn mcgrath anywhere.
but, unfortunately, not any more!!! he was a flop against SA at home. he has fixed it.Neither could Tendulkar against S.Africa till last series (remember, he averaged 27 then).
yes. sobers was a flop show in new zealand. no doubt about that.Anyway, your statement is like saying Sobers is considered a laughing stock because he couldn't average above 15 in NZ (much worse than Ricky) and 24 overall (again, much much worse than Ricky).
You keep trying to take cheap shots against Tendulkar and keep implying that he made runs only against weak attacks.If it was compensating with another team, I'd agree. Compensating against the same team, albeit either home or away, makes much more sense. To me, if you average less than 40, overall, against a team it is much worse and averaging above 35 both home and away but less than 40 - i.e. Tendulkar v S.Africa - doesn't change that. That means you were done both home and away. Whereas in Ponting's case failure is split in this regard. He averages 79 (!) against India at home in as many matches he averages 20 away - 47 overall. That is much more of a success IMO than Tendulkar's S.Africa. Tendulkar in neither case has been helpful whereas Ponting was at least in one.
Again, for me, Tendulkar can't be considered as complete as Ponting even as it is. Nevermind that his record against Pakistan was also comparable until 2004 - when Pakistan lost any semblance of a world class attack - to that of S.Africa. We'll never agree in this regard, which I why I suppose we let it be.
Not sure, I haven't looked at every batsman's record close enough. There wouldn't be many. Most fall one short: Tendulkar, Dravid, Kallis, Viv, Gavaskar and many more.\So if a batsman averages less than 40 against a team then he does not have a complete record, so only batsmen that have an average of over 40 against every team have a complete record. How many batsmen have an average of over 40 against every non minnow team.
Yes, but against a new and different attack. That's the point. He also "fixed" his Pakistan record - once the bowlers that kept him to a poor record retired. What kind of argument is that to demonstrate a complete record?but, unfortunately, not any more!!! he was a flop against SA at home. he has fixed it.
Maybe you think so, but I'd hazard to bet that most people wouldn't write him off being a complete batsman totally because of it. Theoretically, a batsman can average 36 home and away against all test nations and be more complete than Sobers. It sounds daft when you put it that way.yes. sobers was a flop show in new zealand. no doubt about that.
No, that's not the implication at all. The implication is that only last year Tendulkar had a record arguably as worse as Ponting's (at home v SA) and only improved that once the bowlers that troubled him retired. So it makes his SA record look "complete" when his record against through throughout was anything but. The same goes for his record against Pakistan.You keep trying to take cheap shots against Tendulkar and keep implying that he made runs only against weak attacks.
Yes, but against a new and different attack. That's the point. He also "fixed" his Pakistan record - once the bowlers that kept him to a poor record retired. What kind of argument is that to demonstrate a complete record?
Maybe you think so, but I'd hazard to bet that most people wouldn't write him off being a complete batsman totally because of it. Theoretically, a batsman can average 36 home and away against all test nations and be more complete than Sobers. It sounds daft when you put it that way.
No, that's not the implication at all. The implication is that only last year Tendulkar had a record arguably as worse as Ponting's (at home v SA) and only improved that once the bowlers that troubled him retired. So it makes his SA record look "complete" when his record against through throughout was anything but. The same goes for his record against Pakistan.
He has scored against quality bowlers, that is not the argument. The argument is did he score across them all consistently - in a way that pertains to the thread. To me he didn't.
Yep, Hobbs also scored 40+ against every opponent. Tendulkar and Border didn't though.how about jack hobbs? didnt he do well in test cricket for over 20 years playing in completely different circumstances with rule changes etc. and eras separated by a world war? and don bradman? and sir len hutton?
these batsmen overcame every challenge thrown at them during their long careers and came out on top.
i wonder who among postwar batsmen other than sachin tendulkar and allan border would have had either successful or satisfactory records against everyone everywhere.
But complete in what terms? Not going below a certain level? There is also the other side of the coin: doing well against many more.A complete record doesn't mean a better or more complete batsman.Who said it? I thought this was merely a statistical exercise.
not as daft as calling someone complete when he averages 20 in a country. look elsewhere dude. you cant sell ponting in this thread.It sounds daft when you put it that way.
well.. there is someone who averages above 35 even if you include minnows.. guess who?Or Damien Martyn is more complete than him . The only instances he has less than 35 is 1 inning against Bang and 2 innings in UAE.