Gilchrist was far from the best but definitely brought so much to the table with his battingIt's a real shame Gerry Alexander gave up first class cricket right when he started batting really well. Sounds like a real gentleman to me. Also, I think Gilchrist's keeping is overrated. I've seen him drop plenty recently while watching those Fox Sports classics.
Not with the gloves he was.
I am assuming you wanted to say "nary"Walcott was a very good keeper, especially to spin. Kept to hundreds of overs of Ramadin and Valentine with bary a bye.
There is no doubt in my mind that Gilchrist was a very good batsman but having seen both of them bat would you say that he was a better batsman than Sanga?Gilchrist's batting is very underrated, especially because it tailed off so bad. For much of his career he was a clear 50+ averaging batsman. Even his average now is incredible, considering his SR. What more, when you take a look at his averages home and away and against each opponent his record is very complete.
I wouldn't... Sangakkara is damn classy and has never had the freedom that Gilchrist did. It's all fun and games when you come in after Hayden, Langer, Ponting etc. but when you're one half of a two man batting team (Jayawardene being his significant other), you're burdened with a huge responsibility- something that he has performed exceptionally with.There is no doubt in my mind that Gilchrist was a very good batsman but having seen both of them bat would you say that he was a better batsman than Sanga?
yeah.....agree with a lot of what you have to say.......I wouldn't... Sangakkara is damn classy and has never had the freedom that Gilchrist did. It's all fun and games when you come in after Hayden, Langer, Ponting etc. but when you're one half of a two man batting team (Jayawardene being his significant other), you're burdened with a huge responsibility- something that he has performed exceptionally with.
I don't know, it depends what you value. If you value a complete record or a batsman who is able to strike fast and score a lot of runs, it's Gilchrist. I don't think it's that clearcut as you stated it. Gilchrist in any other team would bat higher. I think he would have scored more aggregate runs and people would have given him more weight as one of the great bats of his era.There is no doubt in my mind that Gilchrist was a very good batsman but having seen both of them bat would you say that he was a better batsman than Sanga?
How can I forget this match.....so so painful....Yeah, he does.
1st Test: South Africa v Australia at Johannesburg, Feb 22-24, 2002 | Cricket Scorecard | ESPN Cricinfo
Also, do you remember this?
2nd Test: Australia v Pakistan at Hobart, Nov 18-22, 1999 | Cricket Scorecard | ESPN Cricinfo
Against, Akram, Waqar, Akhtar and Saqlain. Came in 5-126 chasing 369 in the last innings.
Gilly was in top 15 of the recent CW50. He didn't make it because of his bowling or wicket keeping.Gilchrist's batting is very underrated, especially because it tailed off so bad. For much of his career he was a clear 50+ averaging batsman. Even his average now is incredible, considering his SR. What more, when you take a look at his averages home and away and against each opponent his record is very complete.
You can certainly argue that he did make it due to his keeping. It would be interesting to see where people would rate Gilchrist purely on his batting. If you compare him to other Australian cricketers from the past 15-20 years would he compare favourably to the likes of Martyn, Jones, Hayden, Langer, MWaugh, Slater, Taylor, Hussey, Clarke?Gilly was in top 15 of the recent CW50. He didn't make it because of his bowling or wicket keeping.
This is a good comment, I remember opening up his in depth statistics and trying to find holes in it, but it was extremely difficult to. It's a shame our ATG team has only a 'passable' grade wicketkeeper though.Gilchrist's batting is very underrated, especially because it tailed off so bad. For much of his career he was a clear 50+ averaging batsman. Even his average now is incredible, considering his SR. What more, when you take a look at his averages home and away and against each opponent his record is very complete.
How about his record against India where he just averaged what most keepers did.This is a good comment, I remember opening up his in depth statistics and trying to find holes in it, but it was extremely difficult to. It's a shame our ATG team has only a 'passable' grade wicketkeeper though.
Agree with the part in bold but would you rate him as a better batsman than Sanga?How about his record against India where he just averaged what most keepers did.
I loved Gilly and I'm a firm believer that he's one of those players that added more intangible things to the side that cant be judged from his career average. These include demoralising opponents, being flexible enough to bat up the order when quick runs were needed, making important runs in tough situations, starting the series with a big score etc, etc.
Playing devils advocate here, Gilly played almost all of his career when team scores were at its highest.
Healy was far superior to Gilchrist, of course. I'd take Healy over Gilly because of his skills behind the stumps. It just frustrates me that apparently wicketkeeping is no longer what we choose a wicketkeeper for.He kept more than adequately to Warne all of those years, not to mention Lee, Gilespie and Mcgill. He was much more than a passable keeper.