The Sean
Cricketer Of The Year
Yes, for one series each. Three-quarters of his Test cricket was played against the strongest possible opposition.He had India and South Africa to do it during his day.
Yes, for one series each. Three-quarters of his Test cricket was played against the strongest possible opposition.He had India and South Africa to do it during his day.
So pretty much all bastmen would have averages less if they had played lot more cricket. You agree to that.They played a lot less games. It's easier to average 60 over 50 tests than 150 tests. Played more in their prime/purple patch.
Because Bradman was a freak.Still doesn't explain Bradman's record. If Bradman wasn't so remarkable, why didn't McCabe, Ponsford or Hammond even average 70/80?
You misunderstand.So if he makes 5 more 200+ knocks like this vs pak in a row its completely irrelevant? Oh he's always scored runs vs pak so it doesn't count.. I get it now.
Let's all ignore that then he would average 63 overall and have 15 double hundreds.. Since only runs in SA or Aus count in world cricket anymore. Might as well cancel all other tests. What's the point it doesn't test a batsman's skill so why waste time?
Surely this logic also applies to bowlers? So both old time batsmen would average less, and old-time bowlers would average more. How would that work?I was making a point that all those batsmen would have averaged less if they had to play the amount of cricket we play now, including Bradman. By how much? I can't tell for sure.
That's why I said, the only things that may not potentially cancel out are better fielding and better tactics and possibly better preperation. I can be 100% sure that in 1930s fielding was not up to the standard of today.Surely this logic also applies to bowlers? So both old time batsmen would average less, and old-time bowlers would average more. How would that work?
One of the great things about cricket through the ages has been the steady consistency in the value of runs . Throughout every decade since the end of WW1 the average run per wicket in test cricket has hovered between 31 and 34, with the exception of the 1950s when the average dropped below 30. For every advance in things which advantage the bowling side (lbw law, better fitness, reverse swing, doosras, reduced over rates etc) there has been an equal one in favour of batsmen (better protection, covered wickets, lighter pads enabling better running between the wickets, far better bats, faster outfields, shorter boundaries etc) , which has kept the balance pretty steady over time. There is nothing to suggest Bradman would be less of an outlier in this era than he was in his own.
Wait, lets get some correct stats first. The 1,500 thing was bs.So pretty much all bastmen would have averages less if they had played lot more cricket. You agree to that.
I was making a point that all those batsmen would have averaged less if they had to play the amount of cricket we play now, including Bradman. By how much? I can't tell for sure.
Why would tactics be worse? People weren't dumber back then, they even came up with bodyline.That's why I said, the only things that may not potentially cancel out are better fielding and better tactics and possibly better preperation. I can be 100% sure that in 1930s fielding was not up to the standard of today.
Video analysis, basically.Why would tactics be worse? People weren't dumber back then, they even came up with bodyline.
Fat lot of good it does for captains like Dhoni. His tactics are just genius aren't they?Video analysis, basically.
Who he generally absolutely crushed except one series where they bowled to a tactic that exploited a weakness of his... he never had to face the types of variety in international attacks now. The idea that Bradman would still score 99.96 in todays climate with the video analysis, fielding and variation of grounds, the amount of cricket played today, the limited overs and T20 stuff that is modifying techniques, etc... it's a stretch. Calling him the greatest ever isn't a stretch due to how much higher his average was to the other greats of his day... and I covered off the fact that Bradman's average was more to do with the fact that he had a ridiculous conversion rate of 50s to 150s that boosted his average beyond anything we've seen except for Ponting for 4 years in his pomp.Yes, for one series each. Three-quarters of his Test cricket was played against the strongest possible opposition.
Oh I'm sorry for discussing Cricket in a cricket forum and making comparisons that are relevant due to the fact that only Bradman stands ahead of Sanga in many statistics now.Wow, didn't think this thread could get any more tedious, but you learn something new every day.
Enough about Bradman, please.
It isn't that at all.So if he makes 5 more 200+ knocks like this vs pak in a row its completely irrelevant? Oh he's always scored runs vs pak so it doesn't count.. I get it now.
Let's all ignore that then he would average 63 overall and have 15 double hundreds.. Since only runs in SA or Aus count in world cricket anymore. Might as well cancel all other tests. What's the point it doesn't test a batsman's skill so why waste time?
More the "Would Bradman actually suck in the modern era?" discussion that has been held about a million times before, resulted in a multitude of locked threads, and everybody is sick and tired of.Oh I'm sorry for discussing Cricket in a cricket forum and making comparisons that are relevant due to the fact that only Bradman stands ahead of Sanga in many statistics now.
By this logic though, you should remove any instance of a batsman playing extraordinarily well against a regular opposition - meaning Bradman, Hammond, Sutcliffe, Headley, Sobers, et all should have their records downgraded compared to those of say the 1980s onwards due to there being 6 nations, and now 8 (with Sri Lanka coming to the fore and RSA coming back into international cricket) who play cricket to a pretty decent standard.It isn't that at all.
Nobody's barrier to rating Sanga is related to his ability to score double tons, or his ability to belt Pakistan around in the Subcontinent, so innings in which he does that aren't going to knock down the barriers people do hold to rating Sanga. If you like Sanga, a 200 vs. a Test-class bowling attack at home is further proof that he's a gun. If you don't rate Sanga extremely highly, it's probably the one thing about Sanga you do already rate.
The biggest barriers Sanga faces, in terms of other people rating him, is related to scoring runs overseas. His England series went some way to checking that box, but some people believe the question marks are still there, given his record in South Africa and whatnot.
It is by no means that /anybody/ claims his most recent knock means nothing; it's just that he's already well-and-truly checked that box on his batting report card, and home 200s vs Pakistan don't spillover to help his overseas record, where the top box may not be checked.
Not once they changed the rules, absolutely not, possible but not probable.More the "Would Bradman actually suck in the modern era?" discussion that has been held about a million times before, resulted in a multitude of locked threads, and everybody is sick and tired of.
It's right up there with "Was Murali a chucker?", "Is Martin Guptill a Test Class opening batsman?" and "Was 9/11 an inside job?" when it comes to issues that don't need to be discussed yet again.
That's what they want you to think"Was 9/11 an inside job?" when it comes to issues that don't need to be discussed yet again.
Pfft please, isn't it obvious that Guptill isn't a Test Class opener?More the "Would Bradman actually suck in the modern era?" discussion that has been held about a million times before, resulted in a multitude of locked threads, and everybody is sick and tired of.
It's right up there with "Was Murali a chucker?", "Is Martin Guptill a Test Class opening batsman?" and "Was 9/11 an inside job?" when it comes to issues that don't need to be discussed yet again.