It's like he's just deciding an arbitrary cutoff to suit his agenda and prove a non existent point. Stats picking of the worst kindSL btw around 18.
And this is hilarious. An average of Less than 24 . Because Imran averages 25.13 in the West Indies and 24.64 in England so put the cut off at 24
I will anyday rate WI bowling attack over India's.Nothing wrong with saying Sachin is better but your argument is weak. Btw Sachin faced mighty WI attack in India in his last test and didn't hit a hundred.
Didn't Grimmett mentor him though?That's true about Benaud but he only watched Grimmett and O'Reilly once as a 9 yo just before the war. Entitled to his opinion just as I'm entitled to be sceptical of the value of it in those limited and naïve circumstances. Another thing about Benaud is that he has an annoying tendency to promote the new in an effort to appear hip some of the time. .
Wasn't an arbitrary number, it's the number he didn't average less than anywhere.It's like he's just deciding an arbitrary cutoff to suit his agenda and prove a non existent point. Stats picking of the worst kind
What the ****? Whoever said anything like this? I said Imran is in the same ballpark as MM. There isn't daylight between Malcolm Marshall and a lot of the other fast bowlers. The 1 or 2 run average difference doesn't mean that Marshall was definitively better than his peers. Heck his 1-2 run better average probably results from the fact that he played for such a strong team. He had great support that the others lacked. It really isn't quite as clear cut for MM as the greatest paceman as you make it out to be.The initial point was that Imran was basically the same as MM as a bowler, was just disputing that.
l.
It's arbitrary because you've taken that number 24 to be some sort of accepted figure over which a bowler's performance isn't considered great. It's like saying, If you average 66 at home, like Sobers did, then why does he only average 50 away? Why the difference? Why does he average less than 47 (an arbitrary number I chose to suit my agenda) in half the countries he plays in?Wasn't an arbitrary number, it's the number he didn't average less than anywhere.
This is the one. I would have sigged it if it wasn't so longYeah but what you or any other one individual thinks isn't relevant to what you're actually arguing. If you want to say that Sobers was the best allrounder then your opinion and your reasons for it are absolutely important, but what you're trying to say is that there's an absolute consensus, that it's beyond doubt. "For you" is an irrelevance to that argument.
Have you ever considered that might be because of where you live? Does it really surprise you that the one place you've seen someone say a West Indian wasn't the greatest is the place you converse most often with cricket fans from outside the West Indies?
Sobers is widely regarded as the greatest allrounder to play the game. However it is certainly not beyond debate; there are many who think otherwise, myself included. Whether or not you think they're wrong isn't the issue here; you claimed that there was "no doubt" he was, and whether you think he is or not, or indeed whether he actually is or not, there certainly is doubt and an argument to be had. And that's a good thing; all these ATG threads you post in would be bloody boring if there was a universal consensus on everything.
Marshall is even more debatable. I actually agree with you on your actual opinion there - I think he was the best fast bowler of all time - but again there are definitely some differing opinions across the cricket community about that.
I struggle with you sometimes. It's hard to quite put into words. I've heard people say you put your opinion across as fact, but it's not quite that; it's something a bit different. You seem to be in a life-long pursuit of a consensus among fans as to who the best players were, and this causes you to make claims of universally agreed upon pseudo-facts on certain things when they're not really there. When called on it you, for some reason, reply with your own opinion as if it somehow backs up your point. People aren't actually arguing with your opinion of the best allrounder or the best fast bowler so telling us why you think they were best doesn't support or defend your argument; what people are doing are saying there is some disagreement there across the wider cricket community, even if not always from themselves. To argue that you should not be telling us what you think but in fact supplying evidence of what everyone else thinks, which is a hard task (and no, I do not mean 20 ATWXI's either).
The difference is that I wasn't applying any standard to the number, that's just the number as it stands. Wasn't even comparing him to Sobers in any way either.It's arbitrary because you've taken that number 24 to be some sort of accepted figure over which a bowler's performance isn't considered great. It's like saying, If you average 66 at home, like Sobers did, then why does he only average 50 away? Why the difference? Why does he average less than 47 (an arbitrary number I chose to suit my agenda) in half the countries he plays in?
Now do you realise how stupid this sounds? It's a ridiculous loop with no end, where you point out some "flaw" in Imran's stats and don't apply the same standard to Sobers. Smali then replies by poking some hole in Sobers' record to prove that point. You see? Try to find some other way to debate their merits and demerits instead of just trying to read into some stats from the surface which don't really have anything to say
Have no problem with that post really. Quite good actually.This is the one. I would have sigged it if it wasn't so long
Agree with three quarters of your post. The last bit though is disingenuous. You have no doubt that Kallis I'll be seen by history to being behind Lara, Sachin and Ponting as a batsman but will be seen as the equal to Sobers as an All Round player.Coming to the thread topic, I think Tendulkar is better by a reasonable distance as a batsman. He's definitely more versatile than Kallis when it comes to balancing attack and defence and switching that gear and going on a burst of quick runs when he feels it's necessary. The first half of Tendulkar's career was just filled with superb counterrattacking innings the likes of which kallis probably hasn't produced that often. I realise he's a different sort of batsman but Tendulkar could play the kallis sheet anchor role to perfection, too. And did on numerous occasions, especially in his second peak. It just makes Tendulkar a more complete batsman in my opinion.
History will undoubtedly remember Tendulkar as a greater batsman because he produced too many memorable and iconic moments/innings to ignore. It may or may not be a fair way of judging who is the greater batsman but a relative lack of iconic innings is something which will probably relegate kallis to below the trio of Tendulkar Ponting and Lara. I personally think it's fair. Those three produced roughly the same output in terms of runs but had more iconic moments in terms of batsmanship in the eyes of most fans.
As a cricketer, I have absolutely no doubt whatsoever that with time, he will come to be rated as an equal of Sobers. He's too good to not merit an equal standing