Ikki
Hall of Fame Member
Please. You've made snide remarks and tried to jump on their bandwagon enough times for me to know where and how you stand. I have no problem in our differing opinions; I have a problem with inane generalisations.Despite all the discussions I locked horns with you in, I thought you will have some respect for difference of opinion.
I have no problem with you devising a high-school math level (your words) analysis. I have a problem when you try to settle scores as a rule, relying on that analyis. I have no problem that you think minnows should count; but if they counted for Sobers the comparable teams should count for Kallis. I have no problem with regards to sample sizes; but you pretending as if the sample size of WC finals should hold to the same standard as everything else is ridiculous (no one is going to play 60 finals) - It'd be like arguing that a player who hasn't had 60 matches against one team doesn't have enough of a sample to gauge accurately.
I have no problem when you make sense; it's when you don't that I do.
I guess this is "another LOL post".
Nah, no double-standards; that's why it's so easy to argue against the likes of Avada who don't know what to argue and re-argue refuted points of contention. You can disagree with my views on minnows; WCs; or many other things...but there are no double-standards.I have to agree with Ankit and vcs. Ikki's English is very good but he doesn't seem to understand statistics, he has shown levels of double standards and statistic picking. For example, Murali despite playing only 5 tests in Australia in an 18 year career is judged and has a huge significance on such a small sample. but it's not a big deal for Ponting to have a poor record over 14 tests in India according to Ikki.
As for the "how valuable is a wicket analysis" no one has ever claimed is perfect model, but combining that with the bowling average, is certainly a better way of assessing players than just looking at plain average. But of course, Ikki won't accept any analysis which has Warne below Murali. You may accuse me of bias, but I would be happy to inspect the theory that another Australian Mcgrath is more effective than Murali.
As for the 1996 final, it's Warne's fault for not being able to bowl well dew or no dew, just as it's Tendulkar's fault for scoring 4. If anything Tendulkar's challenge was harder in chasing 360 fo victory.
The first bolded part: see; this is where it gets worrisome; where people make up examples. Who said I didn't think Ponting failing in India isn't a big deal? What I said is that it is so bad that it makes his overall average look much worse than it is because he's played many tests there. The guy averages sub-50 because of it - despite averaging above 50 everywhere bar Eng (40s) and Ind (20s). That is completely different to saying "Murali bowled poorly in Aus; look at his stats". Come on...
The second bolded part; you're wrong. I just won't accept any analysis purporting Murali is "objectively" or "without any doubt" or an analysis which purports (like ankit's did) to settle the matter once and for all. I call BS; I am a Warne fan but there is no analysis which will make either that much better than the other to make it a forgone conclusion.
The exact same here, for this thread. There is no argument that makes Tendulkar a "league" or a "class" or any such description better than Ponting. I have absolutely no problem with people holding Tendulkar better, however.
They're not; those players you refer to are simply better than those who came back after failing and still haven't succeeded. The contention in comparisons is not a question of one being perfect and the other not; it's one having supremacy - and they can be flawed and still be better.Anyway, it is important to remember that even Australians, for all their perfection in World Cups, have not individually turned in 10/10 performances on their first introduction to the big stage. Many have failed, got second opportunities, and made good. It is to their credit but don't make them out to be some paragons of perfection.
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