smash84
The Tiger King
****....I only realized this later....but you do have a point hereYou do realise this makes it less likely for people to take your opinion seriously...
We took Smali's opinion seriously in the first place?
****....I only realized this later....but you do have a point hereYou do realise this makes it less likely for people to take your opinion seriously...
We took Smali's opinion seriously in the first place?
Such an awesomely ironic post, this
(I don't mean no-one takes you seriously btw; it's just dat syntax...)
I think if you just make a blanket list of fast bowlers faced by Viv it's just as impressive as those faced by Lara. Viv faced...Of the others I would go Lara. The quality of bowlers he faced was incomparable : Donald, Pollock, Wasim, Waqar, Akhtar, Bond, Mcgrath, Lee, Gillespie. Viv and Sobers faced some great fast bowlers, the former in particular, but neither faced as many as the quality mentioned above.
Viv turned 32 in this Test, so maybe it was just the time to move down the order and have a much younger #3?This seems to be the Test he dropped down from 3 to 4, and it also coincided with Richie Richardson's first extended run in the Test side (it was Richardson's second Test, and Viv in fact batted four in Richardson's first Test too).
That big average drop was probably to do with the fact he was an "eye" player.Viv turned 32 in this Test, so maybe it was just the time to move down the order and have a much younger #3?
Also, 8 months later he moved down again to #5, so maybe it was getting harder as he started his decline (his average was 54 when he moved to # 5, down from 59 only 18 months earlier)
A mixture of all of those points. I do belive that he was a specialist #3 and I also belive in playing players from different teams and era's and Headley played in the same era as Bradman and also didn't want to have 3 West Indians in the middle order and Viv with his intimidation, aggression and ability to destroy an attack mixes well between Bradman and Tendulkar. Viv also brough more to the team with his slip and over all fielding, and when the the difference in batting is so minute, its those little nuances that makes the difference in selection.I have to admit that this is a hell of a lot closer than I would have thought considering that almost everyone has Viv in their world ATXI. Even Kyear2 has him there ahead of Headley.
Perhaps this is because a) Headley was a pure number 3, and people feel he should not be taken at another position or b) Perhaps being the better batsman doesn't necessarily make you a better pick for a world ATXI team based on other considerations or c) Since Viv and Sobers are already there, people may not want to put 3 West-Indians in the middle order of the world XI.
The thing is, with regards to the FC career, people like Vijay Merchant too had a similar record (over a 22 year period in the same era), and it should be remembered that Headley played the whole of his FC Career in the Caribbean, whose cricketing standards at that point of time were not particularly exalted. That is not to say that he isn't as great as the others. Just saying.Headley, for me. Both Headley and Sobers are two of the five batsmen who, in my estimation, are arguably the best after the Don but what separates Headley is his absolutely monstrous FC record.
He averaged 70 over his 24-year FC career, considerably over that for his peak decade and averaged a ton every other game in test cricket.
One might actually question whether him averaging 60 in tests in a small sample size of matches actually deceives his ability as opposed to the accusations of statistical flattery that most small sample sizes are met with.
The Home of CricketArchiveNot the whole of his career, the tours then were longer so there would have been more matches against Australian states and English counties?
Or did he not travel at all?
Headley played as professional for Haslingden in Lancashire League though. He was very successful there and broke the most runs scored by a batsman in one season.The thing is, with regards to the FC career, people like Vijay Merchant too had a similar record (over a 22 year period in the same era), and it should be remembered that Headley played the whole of his FC Career in the Caribbean, whose cricketing standards at that point of time were not particularly exalted. That is not to say that he isn't as great as the others. Just saying.
Not the whole of his career, the tours then were longer so there would have been more matches against Australian states and English counties?
Or did he not travel at all?
Yup, I have managed to be quite a dunce and not taken those FC matches on the English and Australian tours and the Lancashire League into account. My bad.AndyZaltzHair said:Headley played as professional for Haslingden in Lancashire League though. He was very successful there and broke the most runs scored by a batsman in one season.