smash84
The Tiger King
Imran was right when he said Inzy was more talented than Tendulkar
Also how new and innovative it was at the time. Also that Bradman found himself sacrificing his individual innings totals in that series to focus on faster scoring, to aid his team-mates.Migara conveniently ignores the WI pace battery not having the benefit of a Bodyline field.
I'm not a statistician, and it's really TC you want to be having this conversation with. I would guess, using my very limited knowledge, that some form of survival analysis could have some merit.OK, stats time, what distribution would you use to model batsmen's innings?
What tests would you consider as appropriate to make a call on the significance level of their average after 80 Tests?
Burgey ignores that WI pace battery was much more mean, quick and relentless than Bodyline.Migara conveniently ignores the WI pace battery not having the benefit of a Bodyline field.Standard.
Who were the bowlers BTW?DRJ averaged 127 against Bodyline therefore Jardine>Bradman with Tendulkar not qualified to join the comparison
6 matches if I am not mistaken. GR Wishwanath, Steve Waugh and Gavaskar have played more than that (Latter of course with some controversy)The bowling line up that he supposedly averages 55ish against.
GF suddenly turns in to a statsmonger.I've said it before and I'll say it again.
Viv Richard's batting average places him closer to Chris Martin than Don Bradman.
Learie Constantine and Manny MartindaleWho were the bowlers BTW?
ganeshran is a member there too it seems. A post in that thread by him:Thread on ICF on same topic - Sachin Tendulkar better than Sir Don Bradman - Indian Cricket Fans
I don't know why, but I have started posting there.
Another post by me in the same threadganeshran is a member there too it seems. A post in that thread by him:
"Now Bradman fanatics will have to come up with arguments to discredit the study."
To be fair, anyone capable of basic mathematics can rip that study, and its conclusions, to pieces.No, I am treating responses by their fans as equals. I never compared the players in the first place.
Any study that normalizes averages needs to have some sort of arbitrary adjustment to the data to adjust for different conditions. Numerous such studies have been done and holes can be picked in all of them.To be fair, anyone capable of basic mathematics can rip that study, and its conclusions, to pieces.
Fine.Learie Constantine and Manny Martindale
But you're being disingenuous by doing so. Just because they are both arbitrary doesn't mean they'll be equal - equally ridiculous or legitimate. You have to get pretty creative to deduce Sachin > Bradman and the 'arbitrary adjustment' would be laughed at.No, I am treating responses by their fans as equals. I never compared the players in the first place.
Depends on the adjustment itself and the weightages it seeks to apply.But you're being disingenuous by doing so. Just because they are both arbitrary doesn't mean they'll be equal - equally ridiculous or legitimate. You have to get pretty creative to deduce Sachin > Bradman and the 'arbitrary adjustment' would be laughed at.
CLT has no such requirements, and CLT says or assumes nothing about actual underlying distributions.This thread wasn't actually as bad as a lot of people were making it out to be, even though it was never really going to go anywhere particularly good.
One thing people were discussing that I felt I had to comment on was use of the CLT and normal distribution. I'm afraid that doesn't hold at all, the set of all of a batsman's innings can't be modelled as a normal distribution, because a normal distribution assumes that the population mean and mode are equal, and the distribution is symmetric about the mean.