fredfertang
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Good to see Imran rates Sylvers too - will always be the best of the lot for me, save possibly Maco, but then I've said that before, ad nauseum probably
Has there been anyone of similar bowling style to Clarke? I know very little about him.Good to see Imran rates Sylvers too - will always be the best of the lot for me, save possibly Maco, but then I've said that before, ad nauseum probably
Comparing Hughes to Bradman or Richards could be an issue.Hughes-Khawaja-Clarke
Yeah but comparing Khawaja to Tendulkar, Sobers, Chappell, Weekes, Harvey etc is fineComparing Hughes to Bradman or Richards could be an issue.
No one would fall asleep with a middle order of;Partnership XI
Jack Hobbs
Herbert Sutcliffe
Don Bradman
Garry Sobers
Adam Gilchrist
Malcolm Marshall
Shane Warne
Joel Garner
Glenn Mcgrath
Bradman and Sobers have to be pat of any team, but which partnership should take the #4 and #5 slot.
Worrell, Weekes, Walcott. Fun stats.Which is the best middle order in history:
Compton, May, Cowdrey
Dravid, Tendulkar, Laxman
Worrell, Weekes, Walcott
Bradman, Harvey, Hassett
Kanhai, Sobers, Nurse
We all like to fit Sobers at number six, which is understandable for he gives you the option to fit in some top drawer batsmen above him and below the openers ( or below the Don if it is an ATG world xi. But is that really what a captain would do knowing the gifts of Sobers as a batsman and without the historical baggage of his magnificent record at all positions from 3 to 7 .Partnership XI
Jack Hobbs
Herbert Sutcliffe
Don Bradman
Garry Sobers
Adam Gilchrist
Malcolm Marshall
Shane Warne
Joel Garner
Glenn Mcgrath
Bradman and Sobers have to be pat of any team, but which partnership should take the #4 and #5 slot.
[B]# Player. Runs. Avg. 100's. Highest[/B]
3. Sobers. 1009 72.1. 3. 365 no (his best)
4. Weekes. 3372. 63.6. 11. 207 (his best)
5. Worrell. 1189. 59.5. 3. 197 no
6. Walcott. 434. 72.3. 3. 168 no
[B]Overall. 6004. 64.6. 20. 365 no (a world record for decades)[/B]
Nah, he'll be too busy taking his amazing catches. Also, thanks for that post SJS, very informative as always!Really, most people are picking Sobers at six anticipating that he'll have some bowling to do, aren't you? Mind you, he' probably rather get all his work done as early as possible so he can slip off and have a good rest after playing, rather than before batting.
It is true that Sobers did a lot of bowling in a West Indies side which did not have the unending pool of bowlers that they had after his retirement. Particularly in the second half of his career, he used himself almsot like a stock bowler which really took a heavy toll on him phyisically. Any lesser athlete than him would have crumbled under the workload for he combined his heavy duties with West Indies with full workloads as a county professional and many seasons in the Australian domestic seasons. On top of that he was a part of all World XI versus the rest type of games and played them with the same seriousness and his performances there too were mind boggling. On top of that he rarely, if ever, refused any requests for exhibition games from around the globe and since he was, by a HUUUUUGE mile the greatest draw in the game, he got many such requests.Really, most people are picking Sobers at six anticipating that he'll have some bowling to do, aren't you? Mind you, he' probably rather get all his work done as early as possible so he can slip off and have a good rest after playing, rather than before batting.
More or less same reasons for me also. Don at 3, Sachin at 4, Viv at 5, Sobers at 6, Gilly at 7.Interesting re. Sobers SJS.
For my ATG sides, like everyone, it's inevitable that Bradman is at 3. Then I gravitate between Hammond, Pollock, Tendulkar & Lara at #4. 5 and 6 are always Viv and Sobers. After the openers, Bradman, and whichever #4 plays, I want Viv and Sobers to absolutely cane the bowlers. Having Gilly as keeper (which I usually don't), makes this even more brutal. I love the thought of Viv, Sobers and Gilchrist...
Superbly articulated as usual, and all good reasons as to why Sobers is without doubt one of the two top Test Cricketers of All Time, .......but who is number three.It is true that Sobers did a lot of bowling in a West Indies side which did not have the unending pool of bowlers that they had after his retirement. Particularly in the second half of his career, he used himself almsot like a stock bowler which really took a heavy toll on him phyisically. Any lesser athlete than him would have crumbled under the workload for he combined his heavy duties with West Indies with full workloads as a county professional and many seasons in the Australian domestic seasons. On top of that he was a part of all World XI versus the rest type of games and played them with the same seriousness and his performances there too were mind boggling. On top of that he rarely, if ever, refused any requests for exhibition games from around the globe and since he was, by a HUUUUUGE mile the greatest draw in the game, he got many such requests.
In his first 35 Test matches he bore a relatively more reasonable workload of 24 overs per Test. Over the next 35 it nearly doubled to 47 per Test !!
Even as he was approaching the end of a 20 year long Test career he bowled an amazing 42 overs per Test in the last 23 Test matches with as many as 223 in the last four !!
Remember he was 40 when he stopped playing in Tests. I have absolutely no doubt that if West Indies had the fast bowling resources they got from the late 80's onwards while Sobers was captain, not only would he have been able to extend his international career but that his bowling returns would have been far far more impressive than they appear to the from his average/strike rate.
It was clear from the latter part of his career that his best and strongest suite in four different types of bowling genres was as a fast medium left arm swing bowler. He was the best left armer i that genre in the world in these years and with a couple of other bowlers, he could have bowled in shorter, deadlier bursts rather than the hour long (and more) marathons he had to indulge in. Not that he either complained or bothered about what it did to his stats. The stats had to take care of themselves, Gary couldn't be bothered with them.
Similarly, with lesser work load as a stock bowler, he could have batted higher up and scored even more than the awesome record he produced.
http://www.cricketweb.net/forum/cricket-chat/56551-cw50-2nd-edition-no-03-a.htmlSuperbly articulated as usual, and all good reasons as to why Sobers is without doubt one of the two top Test Cricketers of All Time, .......but who is number three.
To be continued.
There has always been a question mark (albeit a small one) hanging over Viv Richards with respect to spin bowling. So while he can throttle any pace attack, I don't think he could do the same against quality spin bowling.More or less same reasons for me also. Don at 3, Sachin at 4, Viv at 5, Sobers at 6, Gilly at 7.