Maybe you're right. I had cause to look at Walsh's record v Aus as background to a post from Satyanash that I'll respond to when I find it. Its actually pretty damn good. I would have sworn he was a 30+ bowler against us in our prime but he isn't. He averaged under 30.I rate what you post generally, but this seems a bit OTT to me. Walsh was a great fast bowler.
I remember that series vividly. It was the 4th test where Amby was injured and then Hayden made a hundred where he was dropped at least 5 times. I honestly think that had Amby been fit, then the WI would have been in with a shot of maybe squaring the series.Look Walsh was alright but there's a reason he lived in Ambrose's shadow. I remember a tight series in 96/97 when an injury to Ambrose gave us the break we were looking for. All of a sudden the series was busted wide open. No pressure and with Walsh leading the attack - well lets just say he looked all alone and badly out numbered. Same with Bishop.
Walsh did the dirty work bcos he wasn't good enough to be the lead man. Can't help but feel he was made to look good associated with a group of glamour fast bowlers. Longevity is admirable but lets not parlay it into greatness.
TBH along with Lara, Walsh is the one who really kept us in the 99 series at home to Oz and I distinctly rememeber a series away to India in 94 i think (where incidentally Amby was unavailable) and Walsh lead from the front and was quite instrumental in helping us to square a series in India vs an excellent batting line up.Maybe you're right. I had cause to look at Walsh's record v Aus as background to a post from Satyanash that I'll respond to when I find it. Its actually pretty damn good. I would have sworn he was a 30+ bowler against us in our prime but he isn't. He averaged under 30.
Which is bloody good when you'll see him compared to other top bowlers and their record v Aus. So lets say I'll have to upgrade my opinion of him. But I can still remember that time when Ambrose was injured and the pressure just came off. So alot better than I thought but perhaps suffering in recollection due to fine company he kept.
It depends what you value. Not even I would have Walsh that high and my values seem to align to his contribution a lot more than most, but I certainly think you could make a case for him being as good as someone like Lillee, even if it feels intuitively wrong. Sure he didn't lead a great attack like Lillee did, and sure he never reached the heights of skill that Lillee did, but in terms of what actually matters - contributing as positively as possible to the results of as many games as possible - they're very comparable.For the record, I have nothing against Walsh, and I think he was a great fast bowler, but the second or third greatest fast bowler of all time? Never, ever seen anybody rate him that highly.
I don't really see how you got that from what I said. Retiring earlier may give you better averages but it'd give you worse longevity, so if anything a longevity-heavy approach to rating players would help players who played on past their best to the detriment of their raw statistics. There's actually little that annoys me more than someone saying Player X was better than Player Y because he had a better career average even though Player Y actually had a much better record than Player X at the age Player X retired.There has to be a certain amount of longevity, but to rule someone out of being the greatest anything ever just because they played on past they best makes no sense.
Y'know I'm not sure it is, even looking at it from an "overall value" point of view. Isn't the marginal gain from very good to amazing worth that much more at the top level?It depends what you value. Not even I would have Walsh that high and my values seem to align to his contribution a lot more than most, but I certainly think you could make a case for him being as good as someone like Lillee, even if it feels intuitively wrong. Sure he didn't lead a great attack like Lillee did, and sure he never reached the heights of skill that Lillee did, but in terms of what actually matters - contributing as positively as possible to the results of as many games as possible - they're very comparable.
As a neutral observer of a match you'd obviously take what Lillee brought to the table every time, but if you had a long-term stake in the results of a cricket side, would you rather take someone who was a rockstar in his prime but declined after he turned 32 and stopped playing altogether at 35, or someone who was always a very fine bowler and gave you world class service until he was 39? Sure, Walsh wasn't as eye catching and you certainly wouldn't take him at his best over Lillee at his best, but as someone with a stake in the performances of their teams, the fact that Walsh was an infinitely better bowler when he was 38 than Lillee was when he was 38, for example, is just as relevant as the comparison of them at 28.
When we look at picking all-time teams and such we're not really looking at what a team would give up over a 20 year period and nor should we because it's not exactly an exciting way to form a team, but when we look at who was better over a career, someone's ability to continue to perform at an elite level for a long time is very under-rated. I think we get a little wrapped up in players' peak skill and our all-time eleven thought processes when rating players instead of looking at what they'd actually add to different teams across history. Maintaining the ability to perform at an elite level is a skill in itself, even if it's not exactly an exciting one.
I didn't. My post was a general comment, not a specific reply to yours. I read on here recently that had Ian Botham retired in 1985 he would be a contender for the greatest all-rounder ever. As far as I'm concerned he was a great player for long enough that the overweight medium pace trundler years don't alter his status in the game.I don't really see how you got that from what I said.
Yeah, and I wouldn't pick Walsh in a theoretical all-time world XI for that reason. But in terms of how good he was at a level of cricket that actually exists, he was already at that "amazing" level. He took 500 wickets at 24; he wasn't just very good.Y'know I'm not sure it is, even looking at it from an "overall value" point of view. Isn't the marginal gain from very good to amazing worth that much more at the top level?
We like to think of bat versus ball in terms of a sliding continuous scale and probabilities (no doubt averages play their part here) but sometimes it can be more discrete, sometimes there's an amount of skill and craft and thought that you have to get to to beat the opposition, and in the rarely agreed upon world of ATG selection that amount might be very very high indeed.
It's like the photoelectric effect. Or top trumps, or something.
In particular I'm thinking of that first Test against SA this summer where Amla and Kallis piled up 600 odd. England's attack, in the main, bowled fairly well. The the difference was pretty marginal - but it was consistently marginal all day. So England's seamers bowling consistently and roughly as well as they had done with success against Pakistan didn't do anything, and Amla and Kallis were too good for it on that. The difference in skill wasn't huge - but sometimes it's the nature of cricket that you don't have to have that much more to break through, you just have to have the skill to do it.
Ahh okay, fair enough. I don't mark players down for playing on at all. I just mark them up if they can do it successfully. If Botham retired before he became a joke cricketer I'd rate him exactly as I rate him now.I didn't. My post was a general comment, not a specific reply to yours. I read on here recently that had Ian Botham retired in 1985 he would be a contender for the greatest all-rounder ever. As far as I'm concerned he was a great player for long enough that the overweight medium pace trundler years don't alter his status in the game.
Agreed his reputation is tarnished amongst statsmongers and people who think longevity at peak of performance is important. The irritating thing is that he could have been twice the cricketer the eternally lauded Imran Khan was but he had about 5% dedication compared to Imran's 100%.Beefy is a particularly irritating case though because he was so crap for so long it tarnished his reputation in the eyes of most - made it worse that he didn't choose to give up his bloody bowling after that back injury and concentrate on becoming the really great batsman he had the potential to be - but he just couldn't be arsed
Yeah, you've explained all this before, but my point is it's not just selection of all-time XIs and wotsits, it's that sometimes that higher level exists within Test cricket and you don't ever want the opposition to be just too good.Yeah, and I wouldn't pick Walsh in a theoretical all-time world XI for that reason. But in terms of how good he was at a level of cricket that actually exists, he was already at that "amazing" level. He took 500 wickets at 24; he wasn't just very good.
At a theoretical level above Test cricket, I think someone like Lillee would be better than him by enough during the peak period to count for more than the longevity, but that level of cricket doesn't actually exist, so it's a bit of an irrelevance for me in deciding who the better bowler was. In the real world of Test cricket, I think Walsh's ability to be in the top 1% of Test bowlers at the time for six years longer than Lillee did is more more than Lillee's ability to go up to the top 0.5% during his absolute peak. At a level above you'd probably only use Lillee during his peak and not use Walsh at all so Lillee would be the more useful of the two - a bit like how Chapple is a better county bowler than Simon Jones but Simon Jones was the better Test bowler, lets say - but Test cricket is our ultimate at the moment.
It's why forming an all-time world XI and ranking Test cricketers are two pretty different exercises for me.
All very true - I'm probably being slightly selfish, but it is sad that the likes of Bhupinder Singh can rattle on about Imran's stats when Botham's might, for want of a bit of dedication, have been so much better than they actually areAgreed his reputation is tarnished amongst statsmongers and people who think longevity at peak of performance is important. The irritating thing is that he could have been twice the cricketer the eternally lauded Imran Khan was but he had about 5% dedication compared to Imran's 100%.
Still it was his life and he enjoyed pissing about more than he enjoyed playing cricket. Even now he wouldn't be seen within a million miles of a cricket ground if it wasn't his living.
So to you longevity at peak of performance is not important?Agreed his reputation is tarnished amongst statsmongers and people who think longevity at peak of performance is important. The irritating thing is that he could have been twice the cricketer the eternally lauded Imran Khan was but he had about 5% dedication compared to Imran's 100%.
Still it was his life and he enjoyed pissing about more than he enjoyed playing cricket. Even now he wouldn't be seen within a million miles of a cricket ground if it wasn't his living.
I don't think you have to dismiss someone as a "statsmonger" if they suggest that an extra 95% dedication is worth something.Agreed his reputation is tarnished amongst statsmongers and people who think longevity at peak of performance is important. The irritating thing is that he could have been twice the cricketer the eternally lauded Imran Khan was but he had about 5% dedication compared to Imran's 100%.
Still it was his life and he enjoyed pissing about more than he enjoyed playing cricket. Even now he wouldn't be seen within a million miles of a cricket ground if it wasn't his living.