Agent Nationaux
International Coach
He should. His lowest average is 74!!!!
You would expect him to repeat his successes across the board.
You would expect him to repeat his successes across the board.
We are talking about "a variety of conditions" here, people who are capable of playing well in all conditions. So I would like to know how many different grounds/countries did he play in. And in fact, he was not particularly impressive on sticky wickets, the only difficulty for the batsmen in those times, so yes, I would doubt if he fits in the criteria given.He should. His lowest average is 74!!!!
You would expect him to repeat his successes across the board.
Start another thread, seriously.We are talking about "a variety of conditions" here, people who are capable of playing well in all conditions. So I would like to know how many different grounds/countries did he play in. And in fact, he was not particularly impressive on sticky wickets, the only difficulty for the batsmen in those times, so yes, I would doubt if he fits in the criteria given.
I think it is as a cut off point for this exercise. As in a batsmans lowest avg somewhereI agree with Joe. 26 is near ATG, whereas 40 is isn't even close to ATG status.
I respectfully disagree. A bowler with an average of 30 is just average similar to me for a batsman with an average of 35. A batsman with an average of about 40 is a great (or even ATG) batsman. Morris, Richardson, Gooch, Greenidge all averaged below 45. Bowlers with averages at or below 26 who are great (but not ATG) Willis, Bishop, Gillespie.I agree with Joe. 26 is near ATG, whereas 40 is isn't even close to ATG status.
I think the point is not that Bradman would not have succeeded (of course he would have, he's the best batsman to ever have played the game), but that he didn't actually play everywhere and everyone like modern players do.If we can discount Bradman because he did not play at any non existent (in his time) test countries, then can we discount Tendulkar for having not played on a sticky wicket , "the only difficulty for the batsmen". Further, Tendulkar has not played in the UAE so out of the places he could have played he has conveniently skipped one.
Just curious, does anyone have the stat for how poor Bradman was on a sticky wicket? Average 60, 50, 20?
Nice thread. I'm surprise at how few players have tremendous records all around, everywhere.
For him it was probably the only difficulty. Yet in spite of what Karan thinks every other batsmen ran into plenty of others.The only difficulty, really? This **** is gold.
This is true. Bradman sitting out of this test is an example…Yeah, I get the point, I just don't like it. People often denigrate modern players for cashing in against weak opposition. In Bradman's time it was customary to sit out against the weaklings and send over a second 11 for these tours. He rarely played against anything but the strongest teams of his time. Somehow this now counts against him (and others of his time). Imagine if Tendulkar had played 77% of his games against Australia and bypassed Zimbos, Bangas Nz and Windies. People would be calling him God's God, rather than questioning his record.