HeathDavisSpeed
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Match referee and proud South Australian Barry Jarman?
Goes back further than that. I can remember that Healy was picked in part because he was useful with the bat. Maybe we can blame Dujon? Marsh??I blame the shift towards looking at a wicketkeeper's batting ability instead of glovework
basically Gilly's fault WAC
John Maclean, Queensland, and Australia ??Club, State and Country
I think you've nailed it. Has to be Jarman. I remember JBMac saying that he was carried in his parents arms to see Bradman bat in the 1936 series. After that I think he saw Bradman in 1948.I knew he was a former cricketer but this is the first time he has let us know he played for the country - presumably Australia.
Since he kept wickets and watched Bradman batting that does not leave too many options. The short list includes:-
- J A Maclean : born 1946 - too young to have remembered Bradman although the initials are so close. I also think JB is in his seventies now because we exchanged notes on our ages a few years ago but my memory might be playing tricks.
- Len Maddock : born 1926. Old enough to have played with Bradman during the post war years. I dont think our JB is in his mid 80's :o)
- Barry Jarman : Born 1936. Fits the age group perfectly, JB could stand for Jarman, Barry although the complete initials are BNJ. The most illustrious of all possible candidates and the only one who came to India during the period I was watching the game - as understudy to Grout in the 64-65 team under Simpson. Jarman ended up playing 2 of the 3 Tests.
So who is it ?
Yes I think so too. Here is waht he had posted in a thread he started a couple of years agoI think you've nailed it. Has to be Jarman. I remember JBMac saying that he was carried in his parents arms to see Bradman bat in the 1936 series. After that I think he saw Bradman in 1948.
Yes. I think thats it. These earlier posts of JBMac confirm itYes I think so too. Here is waht he had posted in a thread he started a couple of years ago
I first saw him in '46 but was at the gabba test in '36
I presume the Gaba Test he attended in December 1936 was this one against Gubby Allen's England, when he was a just under ten months old.
Stump, I stated I was at the '36 Test match and I was but being just a wee bairn did not see him play until 46/47 series after WW2
Further to my post above stump, I last saw Bradman play in 1954 in a Testimonial Match for Bill Brown or Lindsay Hassett(memory eludes me which). He scored 18 in the first innings and 80 odd in the second. Tilly's old man (Ken Archer) played in that game and his old man has one of the original programmes from that game
. . . and I think that bit about being reduced to an "arm chair umpire" is an oblique reference to his being one of the first international match referees.There is no need to feel that way mate. I was fortunate to grow up in an era of NO television. Only had the wireless to listen to Allan Mcgilvray call the cricket if we were not there. I count myself fortunate to have played in a time when most of the Aussie players also had to work because there was not enough money to be earned from the game. Hence, my first coach was Wally Grout. I have played Grade with the likes of Ken Mackay, Your namesake, and still count among my friends Jeff Thompson and Wesley Hall who I played both with and against at Grade level. I have played on the SCG and the Gabba in a "second" QLD 11 but was never good enough to go beyond that. Gave the game away at 42 because after an early heart attack found that off drives had become late cuts and the guys were bowling too fast. Played a bit of "Warehouse" after that and coached the NT side to the finals of NT Country Cricket week. I have seen some great players and never missed a Test at The Gabba until Rheumatoid reared it ugly head and even then 2 of my boys organised me to go to the First Test of the last Ashes series but now I am relegated to "armchair umpire" and I am told I am a very severe critic. I suppose that comes with the age. I was present at all the days play of the Tied Test between the Aussies and the West Indies. That was probably my most memorable days of the Cricket. That, and I realise it only now was "watching Bradman play"
:Eric Freeman
Tom Veivers
Barry Jarman
Bob Holland
Peter Taylor (peter Who)
Rick Darling
Dirk Welham(could have captained Australia)
Keith Stackpole
Ian Craig (Youngest ever test captain)
Ron Archer
Keith Wright
Sam Trimble
There's a twelve man side of unsung/forgotten hereos.I know there is 2 keepers in there but what the heck!
:o)Er, boys, Country Cricket is not Test Cricket...
I may be being thick, but how can.... . . and I think that bit about being reduced to an "arm chair umpire" is an oblique reference to his being one of the first international match referees.
... possibly lead to the conclusion that the mystery man is a test cricketer?I have played Grade with the likes of Ken Mackay, Your namesake, and still count among my friends Jeff Thompson and Wesley Hall who I played both with and against at Grade level. I have played on the SCG and the Gabba in a "second" QLD 11 but was never good enough to go beyond that.
Yes, that's the problem. Currently available stats are not good enough to give us a measure of how much a keeper contributes towards a win (or a loss) of his team. Lot of reasons really, from subjectivity in distinction between a bye and a wide to variables like the pitch or the bowlers. We'd need probably some of the technology available in baseball (I invite you to check the wiki about pitch FX), but that's extremely expensive, and it would not be worth it to implement it even at CC level. I'm sure that eyes and instinct will still be the best cost-effective tools, expecially when we talk about tactical and team skills.(...) There aren't any stats for that
I don't want to revise long held opinions. If those opinions are right, I'm only happy about it. I'd just love to know more about the matter, just trying to put some objective perspective on it, and I won't deny that it's also because I'm annoyed at how much keeping is overlooked by the general public.As much as I applaud the initiative, I don't agree that the measures that you are using are representative enough of wicketkeeping quality/performance to be particularly valid in terms of revising long-held opinions.
For instance. Catches/Match or Byes/Match are completely useless stats, they really have TOO many variables; some side will tend to stay more or less in the field, some side will play with three spinners, some has Mitchell Johnson. Would be as useful as 'runs per match'. That's why I'm trimming it down only at 'same player, same keeper', considering only dismissals in which the keeper was personally involved, and every how many balls are they able to physically produce a wicket togheter (as weird as it may sound ). While not perfect, by a statistical point of view is surely better, the question is by how much? Will it be enough?Comparing Dravid's catches/match stat to Mongia & More should be enough to settle that.
I have casually watched the last couple of summers of baseball so I'm quite aware of that kit (by nature if not by name); I wonder how different it is to the Hawk-Eye tracking?Гурин;3000884 said:Yes, that's the problem. Currently available stats are not good enough to give us a measure of how much a keeper contributes towards a win (or a loss) of his team. Lot of reasons really, from subjectivity in distinction between a bye and a wide to variables like the pitch or the bowlers. We'd need probably some of the technology available in baseball (I invite you to check the wiki about pitch FX), but that's extremely expensive, and it would not be worth it to implement it even at CC level. I'm sure that eyes and instinct will still be the best cost-effective tools, expecially when we talk about tactical and team skills.
Have you read my rants about keeping? The latest is Cricket Web - Features: Playing for KeepsI'm annoyed at how much keeping is overlooked by the general public. In a bad team, if you are a great batsman, you'll still have runs to show, and if you're a great bowler, you'll still have wickets to show. If you're a great keeper, people will maybe only remember those two catches that you dropped with the tip of your fingers (and on which lots of other keepers wouldn't have come even close), while lots of other catches you had taken comfortably thanks to your lateral footwork will be deemed as 'easy catches' and the merit will entirely go to the bowler; on the other side some guy who moves less but everytime rolls on the ground after and easyish catch will be deemed a 'quality keeper'. If I can in some way demonstrate that with a certain keeper the bowlers will take more wickets, I'll be a happy man.
Same opposition? Same ground? It just doesn't feel statistically valid. I know there was this nonsense going around for years that Gilchrist was a sub-par gloveman (no, he wasn't, Wade is a sub-par gloveman) but it really doesn't feel sensible to conclude that he was significantly better than Healy: I cannot think of anything within the skill-set of the game itself that would explain that away ergo I am loath to subscribe to this particular model.For instance. Catches/Match or Byes/Match are completely useless stats, they really have TOO many variables; some side will tend to stay more or less in the field, some side will play with three spinners, some has Mitchell Johnson. Would be as useful as 'runs per match'. That's why I'm trimming it down only at 'same player, same keeper', considering only dismissals in which the keeper was personally involved, and every how many balls are they able to physically produce a wicket togheter (as weird as it may sound ). While not perfect, by a statistical point of view is surely better, the question is by how much? Will it be enough?
England have already been doing that for some years, I think, certainly in proper cricket, and I think it is new statistics and new analysis that will be the way forward rather than parsing old scoreboards, as they give nothing of the game situation that's so essential to analysing any passage of play.Yes, I agree, keepers sometimes will stand up, sometimes will stay back (would be interesting ti see batsmen averages and strike rates in such situations, if some of them particularly suffer the keeper standing up to medium pace. Actually I was thinking also something on the melody of 'average per stroke played' or 'per zone where the ball bounced', but that's something else for some other year )
Nice to hear that, do you know these websites? They are really good if you're interested in analysis. I expecially recommend anybody interested to take a look at their statistical glossary, just to understand how much advanced is the statistical understanding of rounders.I have casually watched the last couple of summers of baseball so I'm quite aware of that kit (by nature if not by name); I wonder how different it is to the Hawk-Eye tracking?
I've read that. But taking stumpings off pacers it's something extra, (very) good if you do but I doubt that we should rank county or test keepers based (only) on their ability to pull out something extraordinary; I'd prefer much more to reward those extremely solid in fundamentals. By eye you couldn't recognize if some dude is able to gain an extra wicket (or creating one chance more) every 25 instead of every 30 overs just thanks to his better execution of basics or his longer arms; and that's what I want to know.Have you read my rants about keeping? The latest is Cricket Web - Features: Playing for Keeps
I find that taking stumpings off opening bowlers is usually enough to get noticed. Either that or dealing with leg-side tripe whilst standing up.
Same opposition, same ground, because I'm looking for the discrepances between teammates, ex. between Somerset seamers at Taunton and away, Derbyshire seamers at the Conty Ground and away and so on, how big the discrepance is inside the various sides. Sample size of only around 15 games (I doubt they'll play all of the 16 games) is my biggest worry, but over 2 or 3 seasons it could be interesting.Same opposition? Same ground? It just doesn't feel statistically valid. I know there was this nonsense going around for years that Gilchrist was a sub-par gloveman (no, he wasn't, Wade is a sub-par gloveman) but it really doesn't feel sensible to conclude that he was significantly better than Healy: I cannot think of anything within the skill-set of the game itself that would explain that away ergo I am loath to subscribe to this particular model.
Happy to hear about England (I'd still like to look into those averages, but that's simple nerdy greed), and I agree 100% with the rest. Only, to get new analysis we'll need an increase in the collection and processing of datas; and that's not up to us.England have already been doing that for some years, I think, certainly in proper cricket, and I think it is new statistics and new analysis that will be the way forward rather than parsing old scoreboards, as they give nothing of the game situation that's so essential to analysing any passage of play.
Sorry if I'm here doing multiple posts, but don't you think that his much bigger reach could be a reason, more than compensating for his agility deficit? That's the first thing that came to my mind apart from reflexes.I cannot think of anything within the skill-set of the game itself that would explain that away ergo I am loath to subscribe to this particular model