benchmark00
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Straw man.
You are right that it is a ludicrous argument as we really have no idea how he is going to go for another 4 years or whatever and players do deteriorate so he could for all intents and purposes just end up having 2-3 year peak before regressing back to the mean so to speak.I don't think he is yet, or at least I hope he isn't cause that is just so ridiculous. Even if you wanted to be bit more lax on how you determine an ATG, he'd still need to bowl as well as he has, but probably even better*, for the next 4 years or more. That is such a ludicrous requirement that it makes no sense even to consider at this stage.
*averaging 25 for the past two years is good, but it is by no means amazing or worthy of ATG status or anything. Will probably have to have a fair more 2010's to enter into that territory.
Perhaps by you, not necessarily me or anyone else.Yes but when he retires, he will be judged on his overall stats and not on the good run he has had in the last few years.
Like that other non-great who averaged 25.4... Shane Warne?And anyway, I was just pointing out that most people look at overall figures. It will be the same for Anderson. He is only being rated highly because we have all followed his career. 20-30 years down the line, unless he gets his average below 25, he won't be considered ATG.
I always tend to differentiate spinners with fast bowlers.Like that other non-great who averaged 25.4... Shane Warne?
Swinging the ball both ways has been done before and isn't anything magical. Yes he does out-swing it more than most and that is pretty special and mesmerising to watch.Perhaps by you, not necessarily me or anyone else.
Jist of what I'm saying isn't that Anderson is now an 'ATG' or whatever term you want to put on it, just that I believe he will be in my eyes, and many others, by the time his career is over and he's doing things now with the ball that are quite magical - that not a lot of people in history could do.
Every man and his dog can outswing it. Jimmy ducks it in late to right handers, and away from left handers, as well as the conventional outswing.Swinging the ball both ways has been done before and isn't anything magical. Yes he does out-swing it more than most and that is pretty special and mesmerising to watch.
Personally think a fast bowler is far more special when he is able to use the pitch to change the direction rather than swing. That is why I would rate someone like Broad more than Anderson. Broad in UAE was brilliant because he was the only one consistently using the pitch to get wickets. This is why McGrath was so special and also Asif (although he was a ****).
Englands attack in 05 performed at an amazingly high level. We haven't seen a side utilise reverse swing that well since.Well they both failed in 05 against a lesser attack at their peaks.
can it, ****lol love how the new thing is to label everything a 'straw man' (worst expression of all time) everytime it contradicts your opinion on something. Horrible.
I agree entirely that Anderson is far more than the pure numbers he has accrued over 70 tests. He has far more ability with the ball than many bowlers who've done better than him. Watching Anderson bowl is one of the most enjoyable things in cricket. For what it's worth, he's actually my favourite player and I like him a whole lot more than I ever liked McGrath.Again, I don't care about Anderson's overall stats. It's what he is now. We can all be more analytical than dialing up Cricinfo's numbers
I would say that judging fast bowlers against each other is pretty hard. A fast bowler might have a career of 8-10 years, yet only be in their "peak" for 3-4 years. The rest of the time they will still be very good, but not quite as potent.It's the same with Akram. A lot of people play him down because did not convert his skills with the ball into great results that he was capable of. Although it doesn't help having crap fielders. In my eyes Akram was the most skilful of bowlers.
Which is why the length of the peak is one of the main things that separate great bowlers from merely good ones. There are lots of bowlers who are great for a couple of years, it is the ones who are still great 10 years later who are special.I would say that judging fast bowlers against each other is pretty hard. A fast bowler might have a career of 8-10 years, yet only be in their "peak" for 3-4 years. The rest of the time they will still be very good, but not quite as potent.
Akram is a case in point. Youtube him in his prime and he was absolutely amazing. Ball bending like a banana at incredible pace. High quality batsmen looking like complete nuffies.When he lost a bit of pace he was still a really good bowler, but not quite as potent. I'm sure if you isolated 2 or 3 years of his career, his stats would look ridiculously good.
Then you have a guy like McGrath. Highly skilled, but not reliant on pace. Action was economical. He could sustain his "peak" over a much longer period than Akram could sustain his. So his career stats are amazing. However, if you asked top batsmen whether they'd rather face Akram in his prime, or McGrath in his prime, I'd reckon most would rather face McGrath.
So the problem with judging really quick bowlers who have long careers on stats alone is that their "peak" is a relatively short period of time compared to their actual career length.
* Aware McGrath was a great bowler, just using him as comparison..