Ikki
Hall of Fame Member
That has a lot to do with the fact that both Tendulkar and Ponting also played in the 90s - with Ponting also barely getting to play the minnows of the time. Sangakkara has exclusively played in an era of high run-scoring and flat pitches with a huge amount of his scoring coming against 3 opponents. In 40 tests against Bangladesh, Zimbabwe and Pakistan; he has 19 100s and 18 50s at an average of 88.Ponting was superb and there was a reason from 2002-2006 that he was unquestioned as a modern great and probably ahead of even Lara and Tendulkar at the time - but no one has had the extended period of results that Sangakkara has delivered - the guy would literally have to suck like Ken Rutherford for the next 30 tests to get his average down to where Ponting and Tendulkar ended up.
The guy honed his skills while he was a keeper for a significant portion of his career and when he finally put them down he'd become a fantastic Test batsman. There seems to be an insinuation that the 'true' Sangakkara has only come to fore since then which is nonsense IMO. He was never going to average 70+ for his career even if he never had picked up the gloves.It's an unfair comparison, expecting a wicket keeper who bats at #3 to perform at the peak of his batting potential, especially in conditions like the UK and South Africa where invariably you're out in the field for a while because the Sri Lankan pace bowling attack has never been what you would consider threatening ( with exception to Vaas, quality ) and then your openers, inexperienced at facing new ball in seaming environments get out early and you're in within the third over.
There is no surprise in my view that he caught fire the moment he left the gloves behind and concentrated on his batting - there is also no surprise in my view that even with the gloves, you're having to split hairs between his away average against the Top 8 and Tendulkar's away average against the Top 8... ps Sanga's average has been climbing away from home for the last ten years, by the time he ends his career even if he declines by 15% over the next few years, he'll end up with a better away average from home than Tendulkar did.
Again, Tendulkar's averages can't be compared run for run with Sangakkara's since he debuted in the 80s and had a full decade of much tougher conditions, reflected in those averages. Even if Sangakkara has slightly better averages; Tendulkar has by far the more complete record.
Last edited: