dude... i am a tamil speaking south indian. many of us dont even have last names. i don't have one, for the record. we all go by our given names and use our father's name as the surname. srikkanth uses his dad krishnamachari's name before his given name. anand (chess player) uses his father viswanathan's name before his, too. I write my dad's name after mine. my wife uses my name as her surname. it works like this because we are expected to have first and last names all around the globe on our passports and we do it according to our convenience. also, most of the last names in india are supposed to signify the cast the person belongs to - iyer, nadar, pillai, yadav, reddy, rao etc. the modern society, in our state, kind of looks down upon this habit and that is also a reason we have only our first names to hold on to.I know I'm in a minority (probably of one ) but I actually find the fact that he's always referred to by his first name as if people know him personally to be far more annoying than any praise of his ridiculously awesome batting. It doesn't bother me when people are celebrating in a tour thread (eg. YES!! SACHIN!! What an innings!") because that's supposed to be fan-ish, but when people are trying to make a serious point about him or compare him to someone else and they just call him Sachin, it puts me off a bit.
As I said, I doubt anyone else has this problem; just thought I'd put it out there.
I don't agree with this at all. Tendulkar's longevity is very much part of what makes him a great cricketer. Put it this way - if you're the captain of a side and you get offered two choices: an all-time great batsman who plays for 15 years, or an all-time great batsman of roughly the same quality who plays for 20 years - who are you going to pick?The other thing about these comparisons that bugs me is that we always compare careers. But SRT has played for more than 20 years, where the average career would be lucky to be 10. It's not so annoying in the Tendulkar v Ponting comparison, but with every run Tendulkar scores it makes Lara, Steve Waugh etc. look worse because they only played for 10-15 years. I don't think that's fair.
I dunno about that one mate, but I was doing some crunching of my own yesterday. It's been annoying me of late how many Tendulkar v Ponting comparisons are coming up. Even the Cricinfo stats article about Tendulkar the other day slipped one in at the end. It's especially annoying since these last 3 years have been possibly the worst of Ponting's career, with Sachin has enjoyed a resurgence. I can't remember too many comparsions in the mid 2000s when Sachin was tanking and Ricky was peerless. But anyway...
The other thing about these comparisons that bugs me is that we always compare careers. But SRT has played for more than 20 years, where the average career would be lucky to be 10. It's not so annoying in the Tendulkar v Ponting comparison, but with every run Tendulkar scores it makes Lara, Steve Waugh etc. look worse because they only played for 10-15 years. I don't think that's fair.
So what I did was find out who had the best 10 year period - an average man's career. I also took out the matches v Bangladesh and Zimbabwe, which penalises Tendulkar a little more than Ponting.
Tendulkar's best 10 year period? Either:
1992-2001: 68 Tests, 6071 runs @ 61.32, 24 100s, 89.28 runs/M, 100 every 2.83 Tests
or 1993-2002: 76 Tests, 6790 runs @ 60.63, 24 100s, 89.34 runs/M, 100 every 3.17 Tests
The second period SRT scores more runs, but his rate stats are slightly worse. Depends what you value really as to what you think is best.
Ponting's best 10 year period?
1999-2008: 98 Tests, 8938 runs @ 60.80, 33 100s, 91.20 runs/M, 100 every 2.97 Tests
Virtually equal to my eyes. Ponting scored more runs in his best 10 years, but he played more Tests. That's about the only major difference. Given that, overall I'd have to favour Tendulkar ever so slightly given the gun to the head choice, given that his career outside those 10 years has been more impressive than Ponting's. But the whole point of this is that Ponting at his best versus Tendulkar at his best are pretty much the same. The dodgy 'Tendulkar v Ponting since 2007' comparisons going around do not do justice to their equality because in my eyes they are virtually equal.
ODI cricket though would give Tendulkar a little more of an advantage.
Tendulkar's best 10 ODI years, either:
1994-2003: 238 ODIs, 9893 runs @ 46.45, S/R: 88.06, 31 100s
or 2001-2010: 165 ODIs, 7024 runs @ 48.44, S/R: 86.39, 17 100s
Ponting's best years, either:
1998-2007: 215 ODIs, 8556 runs @ 45.75, S/R: 82.50, 20 100s
2001-2010: 215 ODIs, 8516 runs @ 44.82, S/R: 84.98, 21 100s
Hope you enjoyed it...
I get your point and agree with it slightly, but still reckon basically if Sachin has played almost 2 times longer and got the same amount of runs, he is clearly on top, although definitely not by twice, if that makes sense.I dunno about that one mate, but I was doing some crunching of my own yesterday. It's been annoying me of late how many Tendulkar v Ponting comparisons are coming up. Even the Cricinfo stats article about Tendulkar the other day slipped one in at the end. It's especially annoying since these last 3 years have been possibly the worst of Ponting's career, with Sachin has enjoyed a resurgence. I can't remember too many comparsions in the mid 2000s when Sachin was tanking and Ricky was peerless. But anyway...
The other thing about these comparisons that bugs me is that we always compare careers. But SRT has played for more than 20 years, where the average career would be lucky to be 10. It's not so annoying in the Tendulkar v Ponting comparison, but with every run Tendulkar scores it makes Lara, Steve Waugh etc. look worse because they only played for 10-15 years. I don't think that's fair.
So what I did was find out who had the best 10 year period - an average man's career. I also took out the matches v Bangladesh and Zimbabwe, which penalises Tendulkar a little more than Ponting.
Tendulkar's best 10 year period? Either:
1992-2001: 68 Tests, 6071 runs @ 61.32, 24 100s, 89.28 runs/M, 100 every 2.83 Tests
or 1993-2002: 76 Tests, 6790 runs @ 60.63, 24 100s, 89.34 runs/M, 100 every 3.17 Tests
The second period SRT scores more runs, but his rate stats are slightly worse. Depends what you value really as to what you think is best.
Ponting's best 10 year period?
1999-2008: 98 Tests, 8938 runs @ 60.80, 33 100s, 91.20 runs/M, 100 every 2.97 Tests
Virtually equal to my eyes. Ponting scored more runs in his best 10 years, but he played more Tests. That's about the only major difference. Given that, overall I'd have to favour Tendulkar ever so slightly given the gun to the head choice, given that his career outside those 10 years has been more impressive than Ponting's. But the whole point of this is that Ponting at his best versus Tendulkar at his best are pretty much the same. The dodgy 'Tendulkar v Ponting since 2007' comparisons going around do not do justice to their equality because in my eyes they are virtually equal.
ODI cricket though would give Tendulkar a little more of an advantage.
Tendulkar's best 10 ODI years, either:
1994-2003: 238 ODIs, 9893 runs @ 46.45, S/R: 88.06, 31 100s
or 2001-2010: 165 ODIs, 7024 runs @ 48.44, S/R: 86.39, 17 100s
Ponting's best years, either:
1998-2007: 215 ODIs, 8556 runs @ 45.75, S/R: 82.50, 20 100s
2001-2010: 215 ODIs, 8516 runs @ 44.82, S/R: 84.98, 21 100s
Hope you enjoyed it...
Yep, his half-centuries in a tight match with his team under pressure are worth more than if he had scored a century in a bore draw. Gilchrist also averaged sub-30 in places like India and maybe SL but came up big when his team really needed it. Ponting has also done that. It's not easy to stall the momentum of the Indian spinners in India when they have just struck three quick blows and the crowd is baying for blood.for what it is worth i think ponting has inched closer to sachin overall with his two fantastic knocks in the ongoing test. except his indian record there is absolutely no gap in his resume. he has tried his best to rectify that and even though he has not comepleted the task, one cant ask for more.
Yeah it's certainly the most assured I've seen him look in tests in India.for what it is worth i think ponting has inched closer to sachin overall with his two fantastic knocks in the ongoing test. except his indian record there is absolutely no gap in his resume. he has tried his best to rectify that and even though he has not comepleted the task, one cant ask for more.
Just like the WI quick's short barrage on a variable bouncing pitch, ..oh waitthe crowd is baying for blood.
What does that have to do with anything?Just like the WI quick's short barrage on a variable bouncing pitch, ..oh wait
I dont think an hypotetical all-time series would last 15 years though.I don't agree with this at all. Tendulkar's longevity is very much part of what makes him a great cricketer. Put it this way - if you're the captain of a side and you get offered two choices: an all-time great batsman who plays for 15 years, or an all-time great batsman of roughly the same quality who plays for 20 years - who are you going to pick?
Being able to do it for longer has made him more valuable.
I would say he look just as assured on the 2008 tour.Yeah it's certainly the most assured I've seen him look in tests in India.
Haha well personally I don't base my entire opinion on a player's greatness on how they'd perform in one hypothetical series.I dont think an hypotetical all-time series would last 15 years though.
By a hypotetical all-time series i dont mean just one series. More like a test match championship, where all the top 8 all-time XIs would play each other home & away. Which could probably be completed within a year or so.Haha well personally I don't base my entire opinion on a player's greatness on how they'd perform in one hypothetical series.
Yeah, same point really. Don't base my opinions on that either. It's probably the crux of why we disagree on certain things when we do; we approach the way we rate players entirely differently.By a hypotetical all-time series i dont mean just one series. More like a test match championship, where all the top 8 all-time XIs would play each other home & away. Which could probably be completed within a year or so.
Bar one knock he basically failed in 2008.I would say he look just as assured on the 2008 tour.
Not sure what about the other knocks outside of the Bangalore 1st innings hundred, constitutes failure.Bar one knock he basically failed in 2008.
Looked much better this series.