Sanz
Hall of Fame Member
How is he sweeping them under the carpet ?I generally think it is a better philosophy though to embrace your mistakes/flaws, rather than sweep them under the carpet.
How is he sweeping them under the carpet ?I generally think it is a better philosophy though to embrace your mistakes/flaws, rather than sweep them under the carpet.
By not talking about them...How is he sweeping them under the carpet ?
Very interesting. Not too dis-similar to what I'm doing, although it looks more at individual bowlers in attacks than teams. Deserves its own thread.
Lolworthy "analysis". Does he post on CW?
If I'm understanding the process correctly, it's flawed imo because the match average isn't a good indicator of the difficulty of batting in that match, and because it disproportionately rewards a good batsman in a poor team. I haven't looked at it in much detail though.
That's not really identifying a flaw though; that's just suspecting a flaw from the conclusion, which is poor IMO. Find out why that happened and we're talking.I don't understand his methodology properly but saw this comment posted by Arnab Gupta -
"Interesting to consider that Sachin Tendulkar, Virender Sehwag and Rahul Dravid have played identical opposition in the 2000s, but where Tendulkar's and Sehwag's averages drop by about 10 points each, Dravid's average barely drops at all.
Would you consider that a flaw in your method of analysis, or in the way you assign "strength" to bowling attacks?"
Let me put it this way - playing against the same attacks for similar returns doesn't mean you performed equally when you weight the quality of the attacks.I don't understand his methodology properly but saw this comment posted by Arnab Gupta -
"Interesting to consider that Sachin Tendulkar, Virender Sehwag and Rahul Dravid have played identical opposition in the 2000s, but where Tendulkar's and Sehwag's averages drop by about 10 points each, Dravid's average barely drops at all.
Would you consider that a flaw in your method of analysis, or in the way you assign "strength" to bowling attacks?"
I haven't examined the formula closely, but it seems to take into account:Well, the article doesn't make the methodology very clear at all, and resorts to usual cliches "played in a top-class team", "weaker attacks in easy conditions", "run-glut against minnows", "boosting their averages". That makes it really hard for me to take it particularly seriously. Still, I'd appreciate it if anyone could clarify exactly how he comes up with that quality measure matrix and how he translates it into effective runs.