watson
Banned
If you are right (as I suspect you are) then it appears that the author has made a howler when he states that -You can't compare the peer average with the adjusted average, because the adjusted average already accounts for the peer average when it is calculated - that's how it is "adjusted" in the first place. The adjusted average is the only number you need. So Bradman ends up 41% ahead of Sobers and 47% ahead of Hobbs. And well over 50% ahead of anyone else.
However, there is nothing mathematically wrong with calculating a ratio between Bradman and his Peers, and Sobers/Hobbs and their Peers, and then comparing the ratios - as I have done. And it really doesn't matter whether you choose the 'Adjusted Averages' or the actual Averages as the adjustment was minor for both Bradman and Sobers.Sobers, whose adjusted average is a magnificent 73.75 (73.04), between 1958 and 1968 is in second place. It is the first time a player, over a long period of 10 years, comes within 30% of Bradman.
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