oh lord! i may abandon atheism and turn to some kind of faith to deal with whatever you are heaping on me now. my karma is catching up with me.I suggested, in the India in South Africa tour thread, that cricket be renamed 'kallisball'. What are your thoughts on this?
Personally I think it's fair to say that Kallis is one of the greatest kallisballers of all time.
both have played for 15 years debris. form is temporary. their respective places in history are already fixed.Really the wrong time for this thread. Can't really get a fair result unless both are in form.
I don't really agree. Kallis's strength in the debate lies in the fact that he's in form more often. When both are at the top of their games I'd definitely take Ponting but that's not quite the point.Really the wrong time for this thread. Can't really get a fair result unless both are in form.
I would strongly dispute that.both have played for 15 years debris. form is temporary. their respective places in history are already fixed.
I am very much in agreement with you on this.I would strongly dispute that.
For me, nobody's place in history is fixed until the end of their career.
Like most of your posts in this thread, that's complete crap.both have played for 15 years debris. form is temporary. their respective places in history are already fixed.
Not a chance.both have played for 15 years debris. form is temporary. their respective places in history are already fixed.
DWTA. Not by me anyway.What if Ponting retired when his average hit 60? He would probably be considered far greater than he is now simply because one couldn't assume that a lengthy decline in form would follow soon afterwards.
You value (like me pretty much) only the player's contribution to their teams success across their career, yes?DWTA. Not by me anyway.
Indeed.You value (like me pretty much) only the player's contribution to their teams success across their career, yes?
Indeed.
Unless someone dips to a point where they clearly aren't Test standard, I'll never rate their career less for playing on and seeing their average fall, unless I'm comparing him to a player who didn't have that happen. Longevity is a really tricky thing to compare between eras but when you have players in the same era it can get reasonably straight-forward.
For example, if Player A and Player B both debut in the same year, and after ten years they both average 60, but then player B retires while Player A plays for another ten years and his averages drops to 52, I'd still rate Player A higher. He's done what Player B has, and then contributed to his team for another ten years averaging 44 or so in that period. That second ten years, while not as good as his first ten years, contributed a lot more to his team than if he'd retired. That's still 'taking his whole career into account' - you're allowed to do more than look at one's overall average and still do that.
Agree with both.I don't think many would disagree with you there Prince.
The Ponting and Kallis isn't yet in a place where Kallis' longevity is a factor. We shall wait a few years for that.
Yeah, I know. I was just speaking in general. Players A and B certainly aren't Ponting and Kallis in that example.I don't think many would disagree with you there Prince.
The Ponting and Kallis isn't yet in a place where Kallis' longevity is a factor. We shall wait a few years for that.
awtaFor example, if Player A and Player B both debut in the same year, and after ten years they both average 60, but then player B retires while Player A plays for another ten years and his averages drops to 52, I'd still rate Player A higher. He's done what Player B has, and then contributed to his team for another ten years averaging 44 or so in that period. That second ten years, while not as good as his first ten years, contributed a lot more to his team than if he'd retired. That's still 'taking his whole career into account' - you're allowed to do more than look at one's overall average and still do that.