Agreed, Test cricket seems to be declining in importance and sadly, popularity vs T20 and the likelihood that anyone (and it would also have to be a spinner with little competition for wickets and helpful home wickets) will get to play as much test matches as Muralitharan is remote if not non existent. That record is as safe as 99.94.No-one will beat Murali's record IMO.
Can you belittle Murali's achievements a little more pleaseAgreed, Test cricket seems to be declining in importance and sadly, popularity vs T20 and the likelihood that anyone (and it would also have to be a spinner with little competition for wickets and helpful home wickets) will get to play as much test matches as Muralitharan is remote if not non existent. That record is as safe as 99.94.
How am I belittling his achievements. It takes more than just talent (even as great as Murali's) to average 6 WPM, Murali benefited in that regard by not having much competition for wickets and having favorable pitch conditions at home. It's a fact not a slight.Can you belittle Murali's achievements a little more please
On other hand, they would have been exposed and battered at the age of 16 and might not have developped properly in to world class players.Eh, it's a legitimate point. Obviously Murali's record is amazing but it's amazing primarily because :
1) He's one of the greatest bowlers ever, and arguably the greatest spinners ever
2)As he said, it's getting obvious now that tests won't be as frequent as they once we're.
3) Murali did have plenty of factors in his favor in terms of pure quantity of wickets. Being the only world class ATG bowler in a weak attack is a huge benefit (look at Hadlee) and imo I don't see how anyone can argue against it.
And am I the only one who doesn't find Murali and Tendulkar's records THAT remarkable in terms of pure number of runs/wickets. Tendulkar got so many runs because he debuted incredibly early and played at a world class level for longer than anyone in test cricket, not necessarily that he was better than everyone else. Murali while he was a wicket taking machine if seen in proper context his stats are incredibly brilliant instead of "omg best bowler ever he's unbeatable", because of the aforementioned factors in his favour. You may take this post as belittling their achievements, but that wasn't the intention. If their records don't get beaten I don't think it shows they were better than ever one else. If Lara/Ponting had been spotted and drafted into the national team at 16 they probably would have 16000 runs. Similarly if Warne had played for Sri Lanka instead of Murali I'm sure he would've got 800 wickets
Actually Murali has fantastic record in England, SA, Pakistan,WI and NZ. They weren't prepared to suit Murali.How am I belittling his achievements. It takes more than just talent (even as great as Murali's) to average 6 WPM, Murali benefited in that regard by not having much competition for wickets and having favorable pitch conditions at home. It's a fact not a slight.
Being a spinner also helps as it allowed him and Warne to bowl longer spells and also benefit from longer careers.
Of course that's possible. But they didn't have the chance, did they? Tendulkar definitely deserves credit for performing at that age but that's the primary reason he has the record. Think about it... Cook is being tipped to break his record because he's consistent, he's debuted quite early and England play more tests than anyone else. Those are the kind of factors that come into play here in such records rather than simply how good the player isOn other hand, they would have been exposed and battered at the age of 16 and might not have developped properly in to world class players.
The Oval 1998 pitch might as well have been.Actually Murali has fantastic record in England, SA, Pakistan,WI and NZ. They weren't prepared to suit Murali.
I think they would have. You don't. Let's just agree to disagree.Exactly. They didn't have the chance. So please stop saying Ponting/Lara would have amassed 16000 runs. We would never know.
Lol I think you are over-reacting. Nobody was here arguing whether if Murali and Sachin were the best in their categoryI think they would have. You don't. Let's just agree to disagree.
And I never said it's not an incredible achievement. But Tendulkar's and Murali's records are not something that shows them to be better than their peers, unlike 99.94. Why is this so hard to understand?
Fully agree with everything in your first paragraph, the second one is more interesting.Eh, it's a legitimate point. Obviously Murali's record is amazing but it's amazing primarily because :
1) He's one of the greatest bowlers ever, and arguably the greatest spinners ever
2)As he said, it's getting obvious now that tests won't be as frequent as they once we're.
3) Murali did have plenty of factors in his favor in terms of pure quantity of wickets. Being the only world class ATG bowler in a weak attack is a huge benefit (look at Hadlee) and imo I don't see how anyone can argue against it.
And am I the only one who doesn't find Murali and Tendulkar's records THAT remarkable in terms of pure number of runs/wickets. Tendulkar got so many runs because he debuted incredibly early and played at a world class level for longer than anyone in test cricket, not necessarily that he was better than everyone else. Murali while he was a wicket taking machine if seen in proper context his stats are incredibly brilliant instead of "omg best bowler ever he's unbeatable", because of the aforementioned factors in his favour. You may take this post as belittling their achievements, but that wasn't the intention. If their records don't get beaten I don't think it shows they were better than ever one else. If Lara/Ponting had been spotted and drafted into the national team at 16 they probably would have 16000 runs. Similarly if Warne had played for Sri Lanka instead of Murali I'm sure he would've got 800 wickets
No one was. Just pointing out why I don't find their records quite as remarkable as others do.Lol I think you are over-reacting. Nobody was here arguing whether if Murali and Sachin were the best in their category
Exactly what I was saying... That such records show longevity, not necessarily quality.The reason that Sachin and McGrath gets into my first team over Lara and Lillee/ Ambrose/ Hadlee respectively is because of the length of their careers and their consistency over their entire careers. The sheer volume of their numbers just can't be totally over looked and the fact that they succeed every where is an added bonus.
But for me personally Lara was the better batsman
it doesn't. It was just one of the criteria that someone above my post listed.Out of curiosity, why does that affect who is greater though? You can use that to say Andy Flower > Tendulkar and Lara.
That's exactly as I think too for SL. I don't rate Muttiah as the greatest, but what he did for SL over the years, and the way in which he conducted himself. I mean I'd rather watch Sanga bat than Murali bowl, but he's not in the same class for what he's done for Sri Lankan cricketI'm not a particularly big fan of either of these two but I think they both have their pros and cons and are undoubtedly the best players their respective countries produced. I'd probably have them neck and neck or perhaps Tendulkar slightly ahead due to the longevity factor. However, from a personal perspective I'd vote for Murali, purely because I shudder to think how the last two decades would have turned out without him in the team. I'm of the opinion that we are unlikely to have remained a test playing nation if he wasn't around to bring some measure of success for us and we'd have succumbed to lack of interest and corrupt boards long ago. There isn't much doubt in my mind that the role he played was so significant that it bordered on defining us, not only as a cricket team, but as a cricket playing nation as a whole.