flibbertyjibber
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To justify Sobers over Imran.In reply to the thread question, why would you want to do that?
To justify Sobers over Imran.In reply to the thread question, why would you want to do that?
Yeah, I'm quite interested in how one would analyse players' performances in matches one did not see, or failing that, watch every match ever.
To assume one's cricketing knowledge is of such grandeur as to outweigh human fallibility of analysis, performance variance and natural bias.. and all while only watching a tiny portion of the cricket played at that.. is the height of arrogance. To profess to know better than the game itself because statistics don't always tell the full story reminds me a lot of the argument that it's better to use the human eye than HawkEye even if the latter is more accurate because it's not 100% accurate. Blind faith in our own flawed instincts whenever a measure, however much better, isn't perfect is a widespread ideal throughout humanity that I will never really grasp.
Anyone who reads match threads here will know that I watch as much current cricket as anyone and love nothing more than to discuss a batsman's technique, a bowler's contribution to the attack as a whole, the weight of pressure a good field-set can mount on a team and all those other "beyond averages" aspects of cricket. This is the part of cricket I find most interesting and while I like to use these judgments to form opinions on the potential of players still playing, once someone retires their potential means nothing and all we're left with is what they actually did. And as much as I'd love for my opinion on Matthew Hayden's head position post 2004 to have any relevance to how good he was at scoring runs throughout his career, it doesn't. Determining how good someone could be, might be or probably will be is an exciting and interesting cricketing topic for me because you can use what you see and form judgments from that, but comparing two players who have since retired though (or even a here-and-now comparison) should really come down to what they've put on the board more than anything else. I have a lot of respect for robelinda's position on the matter that it's just fundamentally boring because the more I delve into it, the more it is. Its boring nature doesn't change what it is, though, and no attempt to make it more interesting and achievable will produce more accurate results.
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Oh, and ignoring all that and addressing the OP for a second, I'm faaaaar from convinced that ICC rankings are the best statistical measure around, let alone a uniform one that can be applied to each player and all his career intricacies. Good post anyway though.
To justify Sobers over Imran.
Says the guy who picked Moin Khan in his all time World XI.Still the process has to be explained, and bias is obvious when used in statistics. In subjective assesment, it's not apparent, and worshippers of it, says that they are not biased at all as well.
Wow.....this is awesomeOn a recent BBC series Prof. De Sauto used a good demonstration of the 'law of the crowd' and it's ability to predict the numerical quantity of an object with very good accuracy.
The example was a jar of jellybeans and he asked roughly 30 (iirc) people in an office to guess how beans in the jar. There was a few reasonable guesses 5000, 3000 etc. but then one person who you would think was blind said 500. Not to be outdone one lady answered 50,000! What would seem such a ridiculous answer and sure to stuff up the estimate.
In the end the averages of the guesses was roughly (no I cant remember exact numbers) 4652.18, and the correct answer was 4626 jellybeans in the jar. Fricken amazing! It would suggest that the outrageous estimates of some people are compensated for by others who will be more cautious in guessing and that this principles infact allows for greater accuracy that possible by one expert alone.
This has certainly made me more in favour of using polls of many people to determine ATG lists in the hope that the overlap of each 'guess' leads to a cancelling out and a pretty decent list at the end of it.
Ha ha, did he?Says the guy who picked Moin Khan in his all time World XI.
Completely AWTA.I know my opinion holds no weight
I doubt anyone could be that stupidHa ha, did he?
the success of this on polls rely heavily on the variety of samples gathered, age is one such factors among many...On a recent BBC series Prof. De Sauto used a good demonstration of the 'law of the crowd' and it's ability to predict the numerical quantity of an object with very good accuracy.
The example was a jar of jellybeans and he asked roughly 30 (iirc) people in an office to guess how beans in the jar. There was a few reasonable guesses 5000, 3000 etc. but then one person who you would think was blind said 500. Not to be outdone one lady answered 50,000! What would seem such a ridiculous answer and sure to stuff up the estimate.
In the end the averages of the guesses was roughly (no I cant remember exact numbers) 4652.18, and the correct answer was 4626 jellybeans in the jar. Fricken amazing! It would suggest that the outrageous estimates of some people are compensated for by others who will be more cautious in guessing and that this principles infact allows for greater accuracy that possible by one expert alone.
This has certainly made me more in favour of using polls of many people to determine ATG lists in the hope that the overlap of each 'guess' leads to a cancelling out and a pretty decent list at the end of it.
Also onthe success of this on polls rely heavily on the variety of samples gathered, age is one such factors among many...
awtaalso on
1. Whether one voter can influence decisions of some of the others.
Example: Tommorrow if an 'imran vs wasim as bowlers' poll comes up in cw, and sjs is absent the result will be different than if he's present and writes one elaborate post describing the qualities as a bowler that imran possessed and wasim lacked.
2. Whether people are particularly knowledgeable about the poll contestants in question.
Example: Tommorrow if a trumper vs hayden comes up in cw, there'll be plenty who'll vote for hayden without knowing/caring who trumper is/was.
The CW50 avoided the first problem as the vote was done via e-mail and both of your comparisons fell in the direction you advocate. Imran was ranked higher than Wasim and Trumper made the list whilst Hayden didn't feature. In the case of a cricket poll, people will need a good knowledge of the game and its history to provide a reasonable answer. CW did just that I think.Also on
1. Whether one voter can influence decisions of some of the others.
Example: Tommorrow if an 'Imran vs Wasim as bowlers' poll comes up in CW, and SJS is absent the result will be different than if he's present and writes one elaborate post describing the qualities as a bowler that Imran possessed and Wasim lacked.
2. Whether people are particularly knowledgeable about the poll contestants in question.
Example: Tommorrow if a Trumper vs Hayden comes up in CW, there'll be plenty who'll vote for Hayden without knowing/caring who Trumper is/was.