Obviously not.What could Bradman have done differently? Be born in a different era?
Mike Coward makes some very good points IMO;
As soon as I read something like that, I tune out. Bradman averaged 100 FFS. Tendulkar averages 54 (which Coward says is "imposing"). BUT BRADMAN AVERAGED 100. Tendulkar didn't. It doesn't matter if Tendulkar played on 5000 different grounds over 80 years and played 1000 tests, his average is NOT really imposing at 54. Hammond, Chappell, Waugh, Weekes, Walcott, Lara, Viv etc etc all average THE SAME AS TENDULKAR.Mike Coward said:For all his greatness and his mind-numbing average of 99.94...BLAH BLAH BLAH
To be fair to Coward, nowhere in his article did he say Tendulkar was better than Bradman. It's a series of articles to make a case for the second best AFTER bradman. He simply was pointing out Tendulkar's workload in the modern era and variety of opposition and conditions he faced, which is a fair point but not unique to him, as other greats like Lara, Ponting , Kallis faced the same conditions.As soon as I read something like that, I tune out. Bradman averaged 100 FFS. Tendulkar averages 54 (which Coward says is "imposing"). BUT BRADMAN AVERAGED 100. Tendulkar didn't. It doesn't matter if Tendulkar player on 5000 different grounds over 80 years and played 1000 tests, his average is NOT really imposing at 54. Hammond, Chappell, Waugh, Weekes, Walcott, Lara, Viv etc etc all average THE SAME AS TENDULKAR.
Bradman is **** loads better than everyone else. Then you can argue for second. But seriously, I'm so sick of people trying to explain away Bradman's average by saying he only played in Eng and Aust blah blah blah. HE AVERAGED 100!!!!
And Tendulkar is not even guaranteed a spot in the top 5 batsmen all time imo.
*sorry about the caps. Got my Danny Katz on.
As much as I hate to be seen as a Sachin fan boy, I completely agree with the above, and have a slight problem with Monk's assertion that Tendulkar is not guaranteed a place in the top 5. If Graeme Pollock, Barry Richards, George Headley, Walter Hammond, Greg Chappell, Viv Richards and Brian Lara are considered to be in the top 5, then Sachin has to be there. I am sorry. This is as unflattering as people saying Bradman wasn't all that good. I am pretty sure Bradman wasn't as pretty to look at as Lara or Sobers either. Most accounts of his batting point to that. And it's not because of BCCI (not saying this for monk, just to be clear).To be fair to Coward, nowhere in his article did he say Tendulkar was better than Bradman. It's a series of articles to make a case for the second best AFTER bradman. He simply was pointing out Tendulkar's workload in the modern era and variety of opposition and conditions he faced, which is a fair point but not unique to him, as other greats like Lara, Ponting , Kallis faced the same conditions.
The fact that Tendulkar's resume is almost completely spotless is a very good point imo. He averages 40+ against every country in every country over 24 years, which I find absolutely remarkable. He can attack and defend equally effectively, has played several great counterattacking knocks as well as some great rearguards and superb defensive innings, plus he looks a million bucks while doing it.
Apart from Bradman at No.1, no one is guaranteed a spotAnd Tendulkar is not even guaranteed a spot in the top 5 batsmen all time imo.
I know. However, he did assert that Bradman's 99.94 average is less valuable than it would seem because it was apparently made in less arduous conditions than Tendulkar's "imposing" average of 54. That word (imposing) in Coward's article really ****s me, along with his swipe at Bradman's average..."it must be remember that Bradman played..."To be fair to Coward, nowhere in his article did he say Tendulkar was better than Bradman.
Mathematics suggests otherwise. 9 don't fit in to 5.As much as I hate to be seen as a Sachin fan boy, I completely agree with the above, and have a slight problem with Monk's assertion that Tendulkar is not guaranteed a place in the top 5. If Graeme Pollock, Barry Richards, George Headley, Walter Hammond, Greg Chappell, Viv Richards and Brian Lara are considered to be in the top 5, then Sachin has to be there. I am sorry.
TrueMathematics suggests otherwise. 9 don't fit in to 5.
Batting averages are relative to each other. They are not absolute numbers in their own right because each score made by a batsman has a context.As soon as I read something like that, I tune out. Bradman averaged 100 FFS. Tendulkar averages 54 (which Coward says is "imposing"). BUT BRADMAN AVERAGED 100. Tendulkar didn't. It doesn't matter if Tendulkar played on 5000 different grounds over 80 years and played 1000 tests, his average is NOT really imposing at 54. Hammond, Chappell, Waugh, Weekes, Walcott, Lara, Viv etc etc all average THE SAME AS TENDULKAR.
Bradman is **** loads better than everyone else. Then you can argue for second. But seriously, I'm so sick of people trying to explain away Bradman's average by saying he only played in Eng and Aust blah blah blah. HE AVERAGED 100!!!!
And Tendulkar is not even guaranteed a spot in the top 5 batsmen all time imo.
*sorry about the caps. Got my Danny Katz on.
Bradman averaged 99. The next best batsman of his era averaged 58 (Hammond).Batting averages are relative to each other. They are not absolute numbers in their own right because each score made by a batsman has a context.
The simple fact is, Tendulakar's imposing and difficult schedule adds extra value to the runs he scored relative to Bradman's less imposing and less difficult schedule. Hence, their gap in averages DOES close. It HAS to, but by much I couldn't say. That's up to the experts.
Love how you so effortlessly erased Ponting from the narrativeTendulkar averages 54. The other two great batsmen of his era average 52 and 56 (Lara and Kallis).
Would've included Waugh and Ponting, but didn't want to be seen as jingoistic!Love how you so effortlessly erased Ponting from the narrative
Probably missing the point here. He didn't say the imposing and difficult schedule is exclusive to Tendulkar. All modern batsmen have that problem. I don't think he was trying to "denigrate" Bradman and "boost" Tendulkar at all. Just adding a bit of perspective by saying modern cricketers' schedules are more demanding, and they are... that's just a fact. Hell, I picked Bradman as the greatest cricketer in that poll and have defended his record against people who won't admit he was far ahead of the rest of the pack... but schedule wise, players of old certainly had it a tad easier.Bradman averaged 99. The next best batsman of his era averaged 58 (Hammond).
Tendulkar averages 54. The other two great batsmen of his era average 52 and 56 (Lara and Kallis).
Seriously, enough with the crap trying to find ways to denigrate Bradman and boost Tendulkar. Tendulkar probably isn't even the best batsman of his generation. Tendulkar's "imposing" and "difficult" schedule is no different to any other modern batsman, and some of them have been arguably better than him. No one was even close to being arguably as good as Bradman in his era.
Surely those three are a good distance behind Tendulkar .Could have also included Sangakkara, Dravid and Inzy as batsman who are arguably better than (or as good as) Tendulkar in this era.
But by the same token, I believe that Hammond could replicate his average of 50 something if he followed in Tendulkar's footsteps. Maintaining an average of 50 is one thing, doubling it, then keeping it there is a completely different thing in the long-haul.At the time of writing Tendulkar is in his 24th year in the international arena and had played 198 Test matches on 59 Test match grounds in 14 countries, if you respect the sovereignty of the constituents of the West Indies Cricket Board. He has complemented this with 463 one-day internationals and captivated crowds everywhere with 100 international hundreds and an imposing Test average of 53.86.
I think that was his intention actually. Specifically. He pointed out the things that detract from Bradman's legacy, and pointed out the things that boost Tendulkar's legacy.Probably missing the point here. He didn't say the imposing and difficult schedule is exclusive to Tendulkar. All modern batsmen have that problem. I don't think he was trying to "denigrate" Bradman and "boost" Tendulkar at all.
Saying modern cricketers schedules are "more demanding" is such a load of **** imo. Modern cricketers are pampered beyond belief (dieticians, physios, masseuses, psychologists, personal coaches, massive wages), they play cricket for very few actual days of the year, they fly to their destinations in 1st class planes, they fly out again once the game is done, they stay in 1st class accomodation, they don't have to work "real" jobs.Just adding a bit of perspective by saying modern cricketers' schedules are more demanding, and they are... that's just a fact. Hell, I picked Bradman as the greatest cricketer in that poll and have defended his record against people who won't admit he was far ahead of the rest of the pack... but schedule wise, players of old certainly had it a tad easier.
That doesn't change the fact that Bradman was the greatest by a country mile.
None of this makes any sense to me.About the only thing that I can say at this point is that we can be reasonably certain that Bradman could not maintain his 100 average if he had to duplicate Tendulkar's schedule. To do so would be beyond normal human endurance - both physical and mental;
But by the same token, I believe that Hammond could replicate his average of 50 something if he followed in Tendulkar's footsteps. Maintaining an average of 50 is one thing, doubling it, then keeping it there is a completely different thing in the long-haul.
Indeed, it could be that an average of 50-60 is the absolute ceiling in a modern setting no matter how brilliant the batsman. And the only time that anyone is going to get close to Bradman's average ever again is if cricketing conditions return to the 1930s. Then the Tendulkar's, Lara's, and Pontings of this world might have a sporting chance