It should depend on the pitches and quality of opposition in the era as well should it not??? A lot of factors would go into it IMO. Not a specific cut off point I suppose.How much a batsman should average to be regarded better than Tendulkar or Lara?
Imagine that the batsman has 12000 runs, with average over 35 against every opposition in every condition.
SRT Averages close to 57. Lara close to 53.
That means you cannot compare an average of 40 in 1970 to that of 60 in 2010?It should depend on the pitches and quality of opposition in the era as well should it not??? A lot of factors would go into it IMO. Not a specific cut off point I suppose.
I guess maybe with a lot of qualifiers like average scores in that era, the pitches, the bowling, etc. Context should have some part to play in the decision I believe otherwise MoYo has a better batting average than Inzy and Miandad. However most people in Pakistan, including myself, will rank Miandad and Inzy much above MoYoThat means you cannot compare an average of 40 in 1970 to that of 60 in 2010?
I stated there should be qualifiers, like 12,000 runs adn 35+ average in every condition. That will even out lot of differences.I guess maybe with a lot of qualifiers like average scores in that era, the pitches, the bowling, etc. Context should have some part to play in the decision I believe otherwise MoYo has a better batting average than Inzy and Miandad. However most people in Pakistan, including myself, will rank Miandad and Inzy much above MoYo
Often, the line between winning and losing a series for your team lies near the 45-50 mark. That's why it's a meh whether you average 11 or 26, in either case you are likely to end up on the losing side. Also the difference between averaging 70 or 100 in a winning team can be a matter of remaining not out in one innings, which doesn't really matter in the larger picture. And then there's the question of which batsman scored the more important runs that swung the pendulum. Examples that come to mind are Sehwag's 86 in Chennai and Dravid's 140 in Headingley 2002. Sachin scored more runs in both matches, but Sehwag and Dravid played the pivotal knocks. Laxman's 96 in Durban was priceless, more so than many hundreds. You cannot reduce everything to plain numbers.While this question's answer depends on the era, performance against stronger opposition et al., One thing that irks me is that people have this rigid mental block regarding the number 50. It's as if it's a qualifier beyond which averages should not be looked at at all. The difference between a bat who averages 57 and a bat who averages 50 is as much as the gap between the latter and a bloke who averages 43 in value terms even if this concept doesn't fit people's snobbish 'class' definitions. I'm not saying the person who averages 7 should directly be considered the better batsman, but the difference between him and the guy who averages 50 is only as explainable as the difference between him and the 43 dude.*
*-This explanation is based on all three hypothetical batsman averaging those amounts in the same time period.
To extend this to series' performances, People usually have no problem judging batsman who average between 20 and 60 in a series, Poor to average to above average to very good to exceptional. However, It is in separating the freakin' awesome performances from the merely exceptional ones and the disastrous ones from the poor ones do people make judgement errors. Blokes who average 26 in a series and who average 11 are usually treated the same way as having had a 'poor' series, in one generalizing swipe even though in value terms, It is as big a difference as between 29 and 44. Again repeat the same thing to the difference between 10 and 70 and 70 and 130. Both the dude who averages 70-80 and the dude who averages 90-100 are treated as having ATG series' and not separated even though the difference when put on a smaller level of 30 and 50 is exactly the same and the run difference makes the exact impact of runs added to the board regardless of both scenarios.
The difference between 36 and 43 and 50 and 57 should not be viewed as same. Why? Because incremental changes in averages get more and more difficult the higher the values of averages that you compareWhile this question's answer depends on the era, performance against stronger opposition et al., One thing that irks me is that people have this rigid mental block regarding the number 50. It's as if it's a qualifier beyond which averages should not be looked at at all. The difference between a bat who averages 57 and a bat who averages 50 is as much as the gap between the latter and a bloke who averages 43 in value terms even if this concept doesn't fit people's snobbish 'class' definitions. I'm not saying the person who averages 7 should directly be considered the better batsman, but the difference between him and the guy who averages 50 is only as explainable as the difference between him and the 43 dude.*
*-This explanation is based on all three hypothetical batsman averaging those amounts in the same time period.
To extend this to series' performances, People usually have no problem judging batsman who average between 20 and 60 in a series, Poor to average to above average to very good to exceptional. However, It is in separating the freakin' awesome performances from the merely exceptional ones and the disastrous ones from the poor ones do people make judgement errors. Blokes who average 26 in a series and who average 11 are usually treated the same way as having had a 'poor' series, in one generalizing swipe even though in value terms, It is as big a difference as between 29 and 44. Again repeat the same thing to the difference between 10 and 70 and 70 and 130. Both the dude who averages 70-80 and the dude who averages 90-100 are treated as having ATG series' and not separated even though the difference when put on a smaller level of 30 and 50 is exactly the same and the run difference makes the exact impact of runs added to the board regardless of both scenarios.
A point well made.Often, the line between winning and losing a series for your team lies near the 45-50 mark. That's why it's a meh whether you average 11 or 26, in either case you are likely to end up on the losing side. Also the difference between averaging 70 or 100 in a winning team can be a matter of remaining not out in one innings, which doesn't really matter in the larger picture. And then there's the question of which batsman scored the more important runs that swung the pendulum. Examples that come to mind are Sehwag's 86 in Chennai and Dravid's 140 in Headingley 2002. Sachin scored more runs in both matches, but Sehwag and Dravid played the pivotal knocks. Laxman's 96 in Durban was priceless, more so than many hundreds. You cannot reduce everything to plain numbers.
Another example of this is when you compare Ponting and Gilchrist's averages in India. Both are < 30, i.e. poor on paper. When you delve into it, you find that Gilchrist has scored two hundreds and swung both matches decisively in Australia's favour. That's why it shouldn't be held as a big negative for him, whereas Ponting certainly has unfinished business in India.
Even if someone did that today, they would be called a minnow basher.shud average 99.94 tbh
^ Agree 100%This is such a flawed thread on so many fronts that I'm going to stay away from it. Not worth loosing the cool over.
http://stats.espncricinfo.com/ci/en...=start;size=200;template=results;type=battingHow does one calculate "global average" during an era?
Yes, but that further strengthens my point though, If it is even harder to average 57 relative to 50 than 43 relative to 37 why is it that people act like there is no difference between 57 and 50 at all and yet have an entire 'class' difference between 50 and 43.The difference between 36 and 43 and 50 and 57 should not be viewed as same. Why? Because incremental changes in averages get more and more difficult the higher the values of averages that you compare
Nah, I'm not saying the averages are the be-all and end-all. Circumstances matter a lot. I should have made it clear that my argument was a hypothetical perfect world one where all runs are the same worth and all the players played against the same opposition the same number of times from the same position on similar pitches.Often, the line between winning and losing a series for your team lies near the 45-50 mark. That's why it's a meh whether you average 11 or 26, in either case you are likely to end up on the losing side. Also the difference between averaging 70 or 100 in a winning team can be a matter of remaining not out in one innings, which doesn't really matter in the larger picture. And then there's the question of which batsman scored the more important runs that swung the pendulum. Examples that come to mind are Sehwag's 86 in Chennai and Dravid's 140 in Headingley 2002. Sachin scored more runs in both matches, but Sehwag and Dravid played the pivotal knocks. Laxman's 96 in Durban was priceless, more so than many hundreds. You cannot reduce everything to plain numbers.
Another example of this is when you compare Ponting and Gilchrist's averages in India. Both are < 30, i.e. poor on paper. When you delve into it, you find that Gilchrist has scored two hundreds and swung both matches decisively in Australia's favour. That's why it shouldn't be held as a big negative for him, whereas Ponting certainly has unfinished business in India.