It really is a shame his body is **** (well, he's buffer than me, but y'know what I mean).A guy who averages 36 & 32 would have to come into contention, surely, especially if he batted up at the top of the order and fielded at first slip?
Unfairly treated, or further proof that stats aren't everything?
I showed Botham's average against West Indies/Australia to show how lopsided his batting performance was even during his peak years. He made a lot of runs against teams like India but his performance against the top teams was well below test-class.Come on, that's a very misleading statistical analysis. Why are you taking only West Indies and Australia for Botham? You're conveniently clubbing Imran's records at 5 and 6 to show he could bat in those positions when actually imran batted only 4 innings (!) at no.5 in his whole career.
In all honestly, I don't think Imran or Botham were quite good enough to bat at 6 if you had a specialist batsman as an alternative. I do think however that Botham overall was a better batsman than Imran. For an all-rounder at no.6-7 I'd much rather prefer the attacking ones like Botham to Imran. Imran is probably my favorite cricketer ever but man is his batting overrated on here. He has the flashier average but for lower order batsmen, the one who gets more runs before getting out is more useful imo. Botham might average lower, but he just gets lots of runs... 50+ runs/match is something none of the other great 80s all rounders matched
All very fair points. My only issue was that you used Australia/West Indies for Botham but didn't point out his several great innings against Hadlee and Chatfield, or the fact that Imran averaged 29 against West Indies, and did pretty much ****all when Australia had Lillee. As I said, I don't think either of them are good enough to bat in the top 5. They were both no more than useful lower order batsmen of very different kinds,I showed Botham's average against West Indies/Australia to show how lopsided his batting performance was even during his peak years. He made a lot of runs against teams like India but his performance against the top teams was well below test-class.
There is no question that Botham was a more talented batsman than Imran but the latter actually performed consistently at number 6 for a reasonable number of tests whereas Botham didn't especially against the top sides. I don't see how one could possibly pick Botham over Imran at no. 6 based on their actual performances.
I don't buy this idea that number of hundreds is more important than average. Someone who makes hundreds and has a lowish average gets out cheaply a lot which puts a lot of pressure on the tail since two wickets will have fallen quickly and the bowlers' tails will be up. Gritty 30's and 40's from a no.6/7 can be very valuable; three or four of them are at least as valuable as a hundred and three low scores.
Granted he never performed as he should have against the West Indies, but Botham's performances against Australia, well below test class?I showed Botham's average against West Indies/Australia to show how lopsided his batting performance was even during his peak years. He made a lot of runs against teams like India but his performance against the top teams was well below test-class.
There is no question that Botham was a more talented batsman than Imran but the latter actually performed consistently at number 6 for a reasonable number of tests whereas Botham didn't especially against the top sides. I don't see how one could possibly pick Botham over Imran at no. 6 based on their actual performances.
I don't buy this idea that number of hundreds is more important than average. Someone who makes hundreds and has a lowish average gets out cheaply a lot which puts a lot of pressure on the tail since two wickets will have fallen quickly and the bowlers' tails will be up. Gritty 30's and 40's from a no.6/7 can be very valuable; three or four of them are at least as valuable as a hundred and three low scores.
No way, mate. 27 five fers is no joke. it is four more than miller and pollock combined. He also averaged a healthy 3.8 wkt/match. (he was averaging more than four wickets for 91 tests). add the 4 ten-fers, that pollock cannot match despite playing in more tests, the honor should be with him.Reckon Pollock and Miller are both better bowlers than Botham.
disagree, once again.Reckon you're overstating Kapil's batting a touch too. Good player, but pretty undisciplined with the bat most of the time.
Pollock is easily at the top of the pile in the field.Batting
Miller
Botham
Kapil
Imran
Cairns
S.Pollock
Hadlee
Bowling
Hadlee
Imran
Botham
S.Pollock
Miller
Kapil
Cairns
Fielding
Botham
Miller
Kapil
S.Pollock
Cairns
Hadlee
Imran
Nah, he's improved it these days -- 20.08. He's a genuine (albeit terrible) opening batsman now that he's above the 20 mark.Imrul Kayes has a batting average of less than 20. It doesn't make him a bowler.
When he averaged 13 he was a genuine terrible opening batsman as wellNah, he's improved it these days -- 20.08. He's a genuine (albeit terrible) opening batsman now that he's above the 20 mark.