OverratedSanity
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It's not an indication of great potential? Fmd I don't get you guysI also don't buy the idea that one hundred in a country makes you capable of anything to be honest.
It's not an indication of great potential? Fmd I don't get you guysI also don't buy the idea that one hundred in a country makes you capable of anything to be honest.
So one good innings is massive potential but a wretched series of 5 games in one country is written off as he did well somewhere else.It's not an indication of great potential? Fmd I don't get you guys
I don't blame you for ignoring my long boring post explaining whySo one good innings is massive potential but a wretched series of 5 games in one country is written off as he did well somewhere else.
Of course it is; but Root's lack of a ton overseas isn't an indication that he has less potential.It's not an indication of great potential? Fmd I don't get you guys
Now, that is a very fair point. Really tough pitch, too.Root's debut innings in India was supremely impressive given how alien that was to him.
All fair points, except they've already made in the thread already about a dozen timesOf course it is; but Root's lack of a ton overseas isn't an indication that he has less potential.
Some batsmen start off gun and make big overseas tons from their first handful of games, then taper off into a career of averaging 50+. Others take a while to get settled and continue to go up and up. Others fluctuate between brilliant form and times where they can't buy a run.
Potential isn't measured by 'overseas tons by age 25', or any other statistic. No two future ATG batsmen take the same path to that greatness; Smith started out as a 20s-averaging legspinner and Root as a Not Opener/Opener/Not Opener Again, Kohli as an ODI gun who had to translate to Tests, and Williamson a childhood prodigy.
You can't expect them to all have hit the same statistical markers by now, given how diverse their careers have been thus far. Furthermore, the statistical markers that they have or have not achieved by now mean little in measuring how they will perform going forward. If Kohli's potential is 'measured' by his ton vs. SA, why isn't Root's 'measured' by averaging 65 in England? Why isn't Williamson's measured by his newfound consistency? Or Smith's by his complete and utter gun-ness since the selectors realised he was a batsman?
Whatever statistical metric you pick to use in an attempt to argue that one of these four has more potential than the other is limited in its usefulness by the particular experiences of each batsman. Kohli's played double the amount of overseas games as Root FFS (not to mention his shedloads of ODI experience in other countries); of course it's likely that he'll have a better overseas record or an overseas ton.
At the end of a career, or even when they've each chalked up ~50-60 Tests over 5-6 years, those experiences converge and comparisons become more meaningful. Then, if Root's overseas average is still in Ramprakash territory and Kohli has played blinders against gun attacks on unfriendly decks, we can meaningfully say that Kohli is a better batsman away from home.
I'd argue very strongly that potential isn't quantifiable through statistics in the first place; it's almost the complete antithesis of what stats attempt to do. Graeme Hick had more 'potential' than Michael Atherton, I'm sure, but look who has the better stats of the two. Sometimes that potential doesn't turn into results; that doesn't mean the potential never existed.
The way you judge a young player's potential is by watching them bat, both at the crease and in the nets. What's their work ethic like? Do they work hard at their game?Yeah but potential in its most raw form like that is very unreliable, not really what Crowe was working off either I don't think
It is a very poor indicator because they are still developing their games and they are at the start of their careers.Does the past not give an indicator as to what the future may hold?
When you go to watch a game of cricket, get there early and watch the players practicing in the nets. Before, during and after the game.And how should I know who has the best work ethic, every player says they work hard, even Khawaja
Nah, you learn about players by watching them bat in a test match against good bowling. Not against a machine in the nets.When you go to watch a game of cricket, get there early and watch the players practicing in the nets. Before, during and after the game.
You learn more about a player in two hours watching them practice, than fifty hours reading scorecards and stats sheets.
Yes, but past performance isn't a particularly meaningful indicator of long-term performance at this stage of their careers, due to sample size issues and the different bases from which they started.Does the past not give an indicator as to what the future may hold?
Bee Gee was talking specifically about work ethic OS, and he's very right in what he says. If you're looking at these youngsters you will tell an awful lot about them and how far they are likely to go by watching them on the ground warming up. Some players are immensely talented and their talent alone will take them to a certain level, but if you want to identify players that will go onto greatness, find a way to get through the inevitable form losses then they are the players that will be first in the nets and last out, the ones that will throw themselves around in fielding drills before the game starts etc.Nah, you learn about players by watching them bat in a test match against good bowling. Not against a machine in the nets.