Sachin's World Cup stats are great. He has the most runs, the most hundreds and the highest average. The things that count against him are these - 1) 3 of his 6 hundreds are against minnows (2 vs Kenya, 1 vs Namibia); and 2) he's never anchored a world cup final win.I doubt Ricky saves 15 runs a game in comparison to the worst of fielders.15 runs per game more than Sachin?Fair dinkum?I find it hard to believe.While I cant honestly claim to of watched all of Sachin's career I'd wager he was above average as a fielder for most of his career.150+ wickets aint a joke; not everyone can give it a burl and take 150 wickets.Also reckon Sachin gets undersold when there is talk of pressure.A quick cricinfo search tells me that he is the most successful batsman in WC's, has performed adequately in 3 WC SF and 2 WC QFs and has 3 MoM awards to his name against Pak in WC's. That is as hard as it gets for the Indians in terms of pressure. Done well in a number of other finals too by the looks of his stats.No contest in ODIs for mine. Sachin has done
more than Ricky and for longer!
Also, Sachin has had 2 world cups at home, Ponting never played a single world cup at home. Ponting comes out way ahead for me, to do all that AND do it all away from home is immense.Sachin's World Cup stats are great. He has the most runs, the most hundreds and the highest average. The things that count against him are these - 1) 3 of his 6 hundreds are against minnows (2 vs Kenya, 1 vs Namibia); and 2) he's never anchored a world cup final win.
That's not exactly a whole lot to hold against the guy. In fact, I'd quite rightly hail him as a genious for what he's done in WCs. Ponting, however, has been in 3 WC winning sides, has made 4 of his 5 WC centuries against test nations and has made two of those centuries at key moments in the World Cup Campaign (2003 final, 2011 quarter final).
Given Ponting's usefulness in the field and as an ODI skipper, I'd suggest that in important games in the World Cup, Ponting is the guy you'd pick ahead of Tendulkar. Here are their respective stats against top 8 teams in World Cups. As you can see there's not much between them:
Batting records | One-Day Internationals | Cricinfo Statsguru | ESPN Cricinfo
Batting records | One-Day Internationals | Cricinfo Statsguru | ESPN Cricinfo
Not that I want to reopen the debate, but to clarify: my point is that what you may consider a good contribution only so happens to be because he is a part-timer, and not a full-time bowler. In a match though, regardless, if a bowler is going for 5 per over and takes 1 (or none) wicket then it counts against your team all the same - which ironically describes the grand majority of Tendulkar's bowling innings.Nobody is saying he was good enough to be a specialist bowler. He was decent in the role which was assigned to him which was to bowl a few overs now and then. It just adds to his CV and is measurable easily whereas the fielding stuff of Ponting you quote is from your memory and he might not be as good as you think he is if you go through data. Think thats what a lot of people in the thread are taking exception too. Could be wrong. But I never am.
Was once, but aint no moreRicky Ponting: He's no Virat Kohli
Yeah? We haven't seen any run out stats so far. Link me to it.Not that I want to reopen the debate, but to clarify: my point is that what you may consider a good contribution only so happens to be because he is a part-timer, and not a full-time bowler. In a match though, regardless, if a bowler is going for 5 per over and takes 1 (or none) wicket then it counts against your team all the same - which ironically describes the grand majority of Tendulkar's bowling innings.
I think there are actual stats for catching and direct hits or affected run-outs; but not for runs saved, etc.
Point 1 is totally invalid IMO .....Sachin's World Cup stats are great. He has the most runs, the most hundreds and the highest average. The things that count against him are these - 1) 3 of his 6 hundreds are against minnows (2 vs Kenya, 1 vs Namibia); and 2) he's never anchored a world cup final win.
If we for a moment take out Aus for Sachin and Ind for Ponting, considering only common oppositions, Sachin's average and S/R are better by some margin ....Again, except for the recent WC, Aus attacks have generally been superior to the Indian ones ...Not saying we should remove those entirely for comparison, but we do need to take that into account ...That's not exactly a whole lot to hold against the guy. In fact, I'd quite rightly hail him as a genious for what he's done in WCs. Ponting, however, has been in 3 WC winning sides, has made 4 of his 5 WC centuries against test nations and has made two of those centuries at key moments in the World Cup Campaign (2003 final, 2011 quarter final).
Given Ponting's usefulness in the field and as an ODI skipper, I'd suggest that in important games in the World Cup, Ponting is the guy you'd pick ahead of Tendulkar. Here are their respective stats against top 8 teams in World Cups. As you can see there's not much between them:
Batting records | One-Day Internationals | Cricinfo Statsguru | ESPN Cricinfo
Batting records | One-Day Internationals | Cricinfo Statsguru | ESPN Cricinfo
Again, a total misunderstanding of the usage of a part-timer ...... Jeez, even the Yuvraj example didn't help, did it ?No, two crap part-timers wouldn't take the place of a proper full-time spinner. If Tendulkar was economical, I could see his use. But he wasn't. He was, overall, a pretty crappy bowler who had some innings of note.
no, he's not an average fielder overall. Clearly above average .... Probably the best throwing arm amongst regular fielders in the deep after Lee/Sanath since the 90s IMO ... pretty safe catcher as well ...Maybe in the Indian team. Overall? Average IMO. I am saying, the comparison seems inane. You are comparing a skillset that Tendulkar is not even that decent at to one where Ponting is arguably the greatest ever at.
He was below average as a captain in tests, average in ODIs IMO ... One of the captaincy gaffes of his in ODIs that remains etched in my mind is him completing Mick Lewis' quota of overs , but not Lee's in that 434-438 matchActually, he was a pretty good captain tactically in ODIs. I feel people keep hitting him with criticisms of his captaincy which are more relevant to Tests. As a ODI captain he was very good.
cool. Just checked the same for Sachin, its 21.....I will try to find it. I remember an article on Cricinfo with it. I am not sure how to get it directly with Statguru. Anyone know? Also, there is a robelinda video with an hour's worth of run-outs...maybe you can watch through that and count LOL.
Found it: 58.
Thats a flimsy argument,WC's at home are far more unforgiving as far as pressure goes, which goes a long way in explaining why only one home team has won in 10 attempts.I'm being the devil's advocate here but you could also argue that Sachin has played 2 WC's in the SC and 4 outside, Ricky has played 3 outside the SC and 2 inside. Away records are more important in tests anyways where Sachin is comfortably ahead.Sachin averages 40+ everywhere and 50+ in more countries.Ricky averages less than 50 away from Oz actually!Love Ricky but gotta put things in perspective.Also, Sachin has had 2 world cups at home, Ponting never played a single world cup at home. Ponting comes out way ahead for me, to do all that AND do it all away from home is immense.
Interesting to say the least!I have no interest in this argument. I know from experience that arguing against Ikki is a futile exercise and you are better off breaking your head against a brick wall...
But here is a solution for you to tackle your impasse...
Tendulkar
Matches: 459
Wickets: 154
Catches: 139
Runouts: 21
So fielding contribution per game = (154+139+21)/459 = 0.68
Ponting
Matches: 375
Wickets: 3
Catches: 160
Runouts: 58
So fielding contribution per game = (3+160+58)/375 = 0.58
May be Ponting's difference in saving runs can make up for that gap and may be some more...make your own
conclusions from it..
This is a great point. I guess from this Murali > Warne in ODIs as well.How much would Ponting and the rest have shaved off McGrath's bowling average?
blah blah blah, therefore Wasim > McGrath [/thread derail]