honestbharani
Whatever it takes!!!
well, when explaining facts, there is..We? Is there a team element to all this? Silly me, I thought I was debating with Jono about this
well, when explaining facts, there is..We? Is there a team element to all this? Silly me, I thought I was debating with Jono about this
You are comparing goals in a game to wins in a series though. Bad analogy. You should rather compare a 1-0 victory to Chelsea with a tight victory of India over NZ in one test match. In which case the points should probably be the same as any other win.Disagree. Chelsea don't lose points when they win 1-0 in the last minute of stoppage time against some ****ty random EPL team (Ipswich or Portsmouth or whatever), even if they were predicted by the bookies to win 4-0.
You play to win a series at the end of the day.
I don't know, that's for the experts to figure out. Bookies somehow come up with specific numbers for starting odds - I don't how they work it out, but they must have some consistent method. Generally I find the starting odds for cricket matches are pretty good representations of what result is expected. Why should Australia have lost points since 2007? New team which is much worse than before=expected result is lower than before.who decides these expectations? And shouldn't Australia have lost something like a 1500 points since 2007 then???????
Jono's always put less importance on the result on each match than most, IMO. He's definitely a series result kind of guy.You are comparing goals in a game to wins in a series though. Bad analogy. You should rather compare a 1-0 victory to Chelsea with a tight victory of India over NZ in one test match. In which case the points should probably be the same as any other win.
You're not talking about the 'in-play' odds are you? I'm just talking about the odds before the match has begun. E.g. take the Betfair odds for the Ashes series:Because since 2007 the odds for Australia by the bookies have been horrific and almost unbackable at times. Any reasonable punter would have seen great value against Australia at various stages.
Australia drawing vs. WI, losing to Pak in Eng and losing to SA at home should have resulted in huge point losses.
I think all of those odds are perfectly reasonable. And because e.g. the Aus/Pak scoreline was 1-1, Aus should have been deducted points (because it is a negative deviation away from 2-0).No, pre-match/pre-series.
Aust vs. WI in Aus 3-0 was favourite, Aus vs. Pak in Eng 2-0 was favourite. Aus vs. SA 2-0 in Aus was favourite I believe.
Why?Yeah fair enough. I disagree but I see your argument.
WI of the 80s wouldn't have scored that high tbh.
All of that stuff is why there should be (and is even in the current system, I believe) bonus points for series wins. Even in dead rubber matches, most teams will take it as an independant challenge and still put in due effort. If they don't, and give away the test, it's their loss, because even this primitive ranking system awards points on individual test results.There are times they didn't win matches, but won overall series.
I just think you're failing to realise the realistic nature of test cricket.
Take away this series, which had a decider test. Let's look at Ind in NZ in 2009 and India in Eng 2007.
India were 1-0 up after 2 tests in both series. In the 3rd test there was deliberate choices by Dravid and Dhoni to ensure that India received, what was for India, a rare away test series win, even if it was only 1-0, instead of going for the 2-0 win. I'm talking deliberate attempts to slow the game and shut out the opposition.
India could definitely have declared 2 hours earlier vs. Eng at The Oval (Sachin wouldn't have bowled 19 overs vs. Eng at the Oval if they were playing to win)., and in the end the rain cost India the match against NZ at Wellington, but they too could have declared early and won.
At the end of the day, if England win the first test of this series, and then bat 1st every test afterwards, score 700 at a slow pace to ensure they can't lose any tests and give up their lead, they win The Ashes. I dare say that's what everyone cares about.
And this isn't even taking into account dead rubber syndrome, which clearly exists in cricket.
Small point, but technically India didn't lose points on this series - they gained points, but because they didn't perform as well as expected, they gained less points than their average so their ranking.Disagree. Chelsea don't lose points when they win 1-0 in the last minute of stoppage time against some ****ty random EPL team (Ipswich or Portsmouth or whatever), even if they were predicted by the bookies to win 4-0.
This I agree with but it sucks if you take away points for winning series 1-0.. You should be rewarded a LOT more for 2-0 or 3-0 though and be encouraged that way.Yeah, agree with DeusEx that the ranking system should encourage teams to go for wins (and curators to prepare wickets accordingly).