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Haha, so true.Short answer yes with an if, long answer no with a but.
Haha, so true.Short answer yes with an if, long answer no with a but.
This(they were unlucky, let's keep it at that!),
Fair enough. Pollock is a more debatable option I reckon.Interestingly, the same logic applies to Mike Procter among fast bowlers.
Procter was superlative in the little tests he played, he was superlative in WSC and simply awesome in FC. If Barry can be considered for an opening slot, then I see no reason why Procter can't be considered for a fast bowler's slot, even without considering Procter's decent batting prowess.
That's the main reason I personally think all of Barry Richards, Graeme Pollock and Mike Procter should be kept out of discussion for an all-time world XI (they were unlucky, let's keep it at that!), but they should definitely be automatic choices when it comes to a South African All-Time XI.
except what mattered most.......international test statusThat South African team could have been awesome, I reckon. They had everything.
Makes it to my all time XI most of the time. Impressive thing about him was his big strokeply with a simple, minimalist technique. And a genuinely nice guy too. Played a few great, great knocks in the limited opportunity he got, one of which made it to Wisden 100 best knocks of all time.With all due respect to the OP I think the more interesting question is whether Graeme Pollock did enough
It really depends what do you want to call him, he is not a great test cricketer, but purely as a cricketer he has to be one of the greats based on what one saw of him, what his peers and historians thought of him and what he achieved in first class cricket. If you watch him play, he is to someone who batted like Greg Chappell and had an aggression of someone like Viv Richards. It is a shame that world couldn't get to see more of him.
Barry Richards - ESPN Legends Of Cricket No. 24 (Part 1) - YouTube
First of all, reading the cricket archives is not speculation, it is part of history. Reading the opinion of his peers from all over the world isn't speculation either, it is also called expert opinion and if all experts agree on one thing, it is almost certain that their opnion is right.Nope.
Would have to then consider the likes of Vijay Merchant and Madhavan Sathashivam too for sure. Richards was more recent and played in Australia and England so is a bit more hyped up.
But ultimately it is all down to speculation for the most part and can't pick for a all time team based on that.
I agree with you re: Hutton, but this strikes me as illogical to say the least. You could just as easily say the same thing about Tendulkar.After him it gets hazy Hobbs played in a weak era where LBW rules were charitable at best and the fact that he scored 100 hundreds after 40 spoke volumes about his oposition.
Yeah, circular logic at its best.I agree with you re: Hutton, but this strikes me as illogical to say the least. You could just as easily say the same thing about Tendulkar.
Richards batting was wonderful to watch - he had so much time in which to play the ball - I'd been watching him for a few years before I realised he'd had any sort of Test career so it certainly wouldn't have changed my view if he'd averaged 30 in those four TestsOne hypothetical question - Would Barry Richards be rated as highly as he is if he finished with an average of ~30 from 4 tests rather than 70+, assuming all of his other achievements remained same? Everyone knows 4 tests is absolutely nothing to go by, but somehow does it play a role in everyone's sub-conscious in rating him?
no they practised apartheid, let's keep it that...they were unlucky, let's keep it at that
That link that you post shows some great bowlers and batsmen there?With regard to Richards himself, the comparison with Pollock is two fold. Pollock played in more test matches, but all were still againts Australia and after isolation he prefered to stay in S.A. while Richrds enhanced his reputation by plying his wares the World over and exposing him self to the best attacks first class cricket had to offer. WSC also offered him a chance to prove what he was truly capable of, and his stats showed : World Series Cricket Player Records - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia .
The main difference between Pollock and Headley was that Headley's 20 test was spread over 10 years which was much harder that 2 series againts the same team in your prime. This is why Headley is rated higher.
Ps. The WSC stats also show why Greg Chappel is the best Australian bat since Bradman and among the top 8 middle order batsmen of all time.