marc71178
Eyes not spreadsheets
Not at the same time, no.He didn't ?
Not at the same time, no.He didn't ?
2-1 in the pole, closer then it should be for mine. Not that IK was not a great player just clearly behind GSAWTA
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interesting........does captaincy play a role in deciding?sobers' strength was his batting and for imran it was his bowling. they both achieved equally great feats in their strong departments.
while gary wasnt a great bowler, his bowling - in my opinion - was better than imran's batting. i was never a fan of imran the batter; and please dont tell me he averaged over 50 for close to a decade because i saw most of it. his batting was pretty insipid throughout his career including his peak years. forget botham, i rate even kapil above him as a batsman. sobers on the other hand had more great moments as a bowler than imran as a batsman.
considering this marginal advantage i am happily handing over to sobers' bowling over imran's batting, and the fact that sir gary was probably the greatest all round fielder ever while imran was less than average in that department, it is quite obvious to me that sobers was the superior cricketer of the two.
in a "being john malkovich" inspired dream match between them, imran bowling to sobers would be an even contest and awesome to watch. but the 10 other imrans in the field would drop catches and chase the hits to the boundary instead of stopping them with dives. sobers bowling to imran would be slightly in favor of the bowler especially when the 10 sobers' in the field catch blinders anywhere in their vicinity.
Very rarely have I watched a cricketer who received universal acclaim throughout his career and come away with the impression - "Nah, he was overrated.". So why should it be any different with Sobers?Sobers may be complete - in terms of being capable in multiple facets of the game - but overall he is overrated IMO. Not that he isn't great, but the widespread esteem he is held in doesn't make much sense to me. Imran is the better all-rounder, was a wonderful leader and that settles it for me. Better looking too.
No one that I can remember at the time. It was felt he was one of the great four ARs of his era and there was a lot of argument which one was the best, but clearly all of them were rated behind SobersVery rarely have I watched a cricketer who received universal acclaim throughout his career and come away with the impression - "Nah, he was overrated.". So why should it be any different with Sobers?
I'd be interested to know from people who were avid cricket followers at the time - when Imran retired (and presumably the accolades and tributes were flowing), how many renowned cricket experts were willing to declare him the best allrounder ever?
That depends on the trust you have on cricket experts though. 99% of these blokes honestly believe that Ricky Ponting and Tendulkar are better cricketers than Jaques Kallis and Shane Warne and Wasim Akram are better cricketers than Richard Hadlee. They hold an extremely subjective POV towards cricket which does not rate the cold value that a cricketer but rather bring in stuff like persona and influence, which I don't rate close to as much as what he actually did.Very rarely have I watched a cricketer who received universal acclaim throughout his career and come away with the impression - "Nah, he was overrated.". So why should it be any different with Sobers?
I'd be interested to know from people who were avid cricket followers at the time - when Imran retired (and presumably the accolades and tributes were flowing), how many renowned cricket experts were willing to declare him the best allrounder ever?
Cricket played by humans and therefore, the aura or any other feeling a person generated in an opponent (a fellow human, in most cases.. ) MATTERS..That depends on the trust you have on cricket experts though. 99% of these blokes honestly believe that Ricky Ponting and Tendulkar are better cricketers than Jaques Kallis and Shane Warne and Wasim Akram are better cricketers than Richard Hadlee. They hold an extremely subjective POV towards cricket which does not rate the cold value that a cricketer but rather bring in stuff like persona and influence, which I don't rate close to as much as what he actually did.
The Cricinfo XI was supposed to be selected by some of the supposedly most knowledgeable cricket experts in the world. They picked Wasim Akram for the spot of all-rounder(no less) over Imran Khan, Kieth Miller and Richard Hadlee. I consider it a downright moronic decision. Idc if they've watched more cricket than me, You just don't do that. When picking a XI, You pick the XI most likely to win you a game, not one where all the players have great memories and skill sets which will never be forgotten(yada yada yada)
How much weightage you give to the judgement of guys who hold opinions such as Akram>Imran/Miller/Hadlee depends from person to person. Personally, not very much.
/General rant not directly related to the poll in question
Wasn't my point tbh. Viv Richards generating unquantifiable fear in opponents matters but him having great spirit, being a great bloke, playing shots for the gods at will and influencing the future generations of batsman doesn't matter at all to me when comparing him to a batsman of similar quality like say, Border. The only real quality I look for is the ability to make runs, hence, Both are equals for me even if every cricket historian of the time considers Viv to be a better batsman by a good deal.(Before anyone goes on a strawman 'You only look at the career averages lulz" rant on me, that isn't my point)Cricket played by humans and therefore, the aura or any other feeling a person generated in an opponent (a fellow human, in most cases.. ) MATTERS..
True it does matter somewhat. Which is why Imran's leadership was so good. It inspired a motley bunch to perform at an unprecedented level and match arguably the greatest side in cricket history blow for blow.Cricket played by humans and therefore, the aura or any other feeling a person generated in an opponent (a fellow human, in most cases.. ) MATTERS..
I'm not concerned about one bad choice in an All-Time XI. I agree there were better candidates than Wasim for a Test bowling allrounder spot. Maybe they wanted the variety of a left-hander and the versatility that he brings.That depends on the trust you have on cricket experts though. 99% of these blokes honestly believe that Ricky Ponting and Tendulkar are better cricketers than Jaques Kallis and Shane Warne and Wasim Akram are better cricketers than Richard Hadlee. They hold an extremely subjective POV towards cricket which does not rate the cold value that a cricketer but rather bring in stuff like persona and influence, which I don't rate close to as much as what he actually did.
The Cricinfo XI was supposed to be selected by some of the supposedly most knowledgeable cricket experts in the world. They picked Wasim Akram for the spot of all-rounder(no less) over Imran Khan, Kieth Miller and Richard Hadlee. I consider it a downright moronic decision. Idc if they've watched more cricket than me, You just don't do that. When picking a XI, You pick the XI most likely to win you a game, not one where all the players have great memories and skill sets which will never be forgotten(yada yada yada)
How much weightage you give to the judgement of guys who hold opinions such as Akram>Imran/Miller/Hadlee depends from person to person. Personally, not very much.
/General rant not directly related to the poll in question
You are missing the point. A number of times when trying to decide who is the better batsman between A and B (this is an example), people don't look at what runs he scored alone.. The number of unquantifiables in cricket far outweigh the quantifiables and it is perfectly possible that the better batsman among the 2 could well be the one with the lesser average, even wtih all sorts of standardizations done... Standardizing averages (a la PEWS) helps to give a better picture but that doesn't necessarily make it a true picture.. Given the variations that exist in conditions match to match at the same grounds, it is not really a silly thing.. And people, mostly tend to vote for whom they think was the "most skilled" when you say best than the ones who produced the "best returns" as long as the returns are reasonably close to each other...Wasn't my point tbh. Viv Richards generating unquantifiable fear in opponents matters but him having great spirit, being a great bloke, playing shots for the gods at will and influencing the future generations of batsman doesn't matter at all to me when comparing him to a batsman of similar quality like say, Border. The only real quality I look for is the ability to make runs, hence, Both are equals for me even if every cricket historian of the time considers Viv to be a better batsman by a good deal.(Before anyone goes on a strawman 'You only look at the career averages lulz" rant on me, that isn't my point)
I'm not concerned about one bad choice in an All-Time XI. I agree there were better candidates than Wasim for a Test bowling allrounder spot. Maybe they wanted the variety of a left-hander and the versatility that he brings.
I don't think there's a lot of difference between Tendulkar/Ponting and Kallis as "cricketers" (extremely nebulous concept that I'm not particularly fond of), especially when ODI prowess is taken into account. And then there are subtle things like game-changing impact, playing the game in a way it wasn't done before or pioneering a new facet (Sehwag/Jayasuriya for attacking opening, Gilchrist for keepers being expected to be competent batsmen) which aren't reflected in your stats. You can only pick up those things and weigh them against each other if you've followed a player's career in its entirety.
As it stands, I'd be more willing to believe Richie Benaud or Ian Chappell's opinion than someone who's formed an opinion on Imran/Sobers based on Statsguru filters.
as I had explained in posts about Shane Warne's list, it is perfectly feasible that the same expert has a buffoon opinion on one player but a perfectly valid and judgemental one on another...at a slight tangent, while we are on the value of topic of experts's opinions of cricketers, i was wondering which experts are considered knowledgeable, and which complete buffoons....and no, smarty pants answers like 'those whose opinions match mine' are not what i am looking for!
for example, i would imagine a benaud's opinion would have more weight than those of a thomson, or even a hussain.
Er, Why did you generalize that all my judgements are based on career average and/or standardized average?You are missing the point. A number of times when trying to decide who is the better batsman between A and B (this is an example), people don't look at what runs he scored alone.. The number of unquantifiables in cricket far outweigh the quantifiables and it is perfectly possible that the better batsman among the 2 could well be the one with the lesser average, even wtih all sorts of standardizations done... Standardizing averages (a la PEWS) helps to give a better picture but that doesn't necessarily make it a true picture.. Given the variations that exist in conditions match to match at the same grounds, it is not really a silly thing.. And people, mostly tend to vote for whom they think was the "most skilled" when you say best than the ones who produced the "best returns" as long as the returns are reasonably close to each other...
Meh, I don't belong to the "opinions > stats always" camp either. As always, something in between is usually the best.
Now you have officially crossed the line and will be stalked for ever by the spreadsheeters anonymous..
Mushtaq Mohammed disagrees. He had an awesome peak of one match where he hammered a century and took five wickets in an innings against WI, which Botham never came close to doing.Botham's peak > Anyone else's.
Anyone.