Umm, he averaged ~45 in the period I'm talking about in the post (age 16-20).How hard is it to differentiate 27 and 40 ffs. "whatever, something close to that".. ok
Umm, he averaged ~45 in the period I'm talking about in the post (age 16-20).How hard is it to differentiate 27 and 40 ffs. "whatever, something close to that".. ok
Isn't Ponting generally considered a better ODI batsman than Sanga?If he has included adapting to different formats, I don't have a problem with that. I still rate Lara as the best test match batsman I have seen by a close but clear Margin over Sachin, Sanga and Ponting etc.. But if you include all formats and how well players adapted to each and how close they were to their best when playing in all formats (which I do not agree with, as an aside) I feel Sachin, Sanga are clearly the best. I believe Ponting should surely be in the discussion too but Lara lost his head in ODIs since the late 90s and got too funky with his batting position as a captain to actually be consistently close to his best in that format... In terms of ODIs, Lara is one of the biggest underachievers in terms of ability to actual output...
Yeah Sanga's been a bit of a late bloomer in ODIs; he was still averaging under 30 after 100 games.Isn't Ponting generally considered a better ODI batsman than Sanga?
And you know that's not the case.Or the batsmen in his national team sucked less than Sachin's when they were 18...
And you know that's not the case.
As I was saying, this is a very easy judgment to make in hindsight -- "oh by 2011/12 Sachin was in decline and probably should have retired". Well, yes, I think we can say that he was, but at the time Sachin/Indian selectors were probably both convinced that more runs for Sachin were just around the corner, and that it was just a rough patch. When it became an extended rough patch indicating terminal decline, Tendulkar/Selectors obviously realised it was all coming to an end and let Sachin leave on his own terms.Chennai 2013 against Australia, I think was not so great.. MCG 2011 I will give you. As you pointed out, he did take on Steyn just months before the 2011 WC and showed how good he was back then. Mine is a general point about him playing on circa 2012 and 2013 when he was so clearly past it... I am not sure why it deserves any particular kudos when most were home series and we did have batsmen good enough to cut it at least in those conditions... As I said, I am not sure why it should be praised blindly..
He was playing for two years before you were born.Sachin was playing test cricket several years before I was born and up until his last test he had been playing test cricket my entire life.
And I'm almost 24.
As I was saying, this is a very easy judgment to make in hindsight -- "oh by 2011/12 Sachin was in decline and probably should have retired". Well, yes, I think we can say that he was, but at the time Sachin/Indian selectors were probably both convinced that more runs for Sachin were just around the corner, and that it was just a rough patch. When it became an extended rough patch indicating terminal decline, Tendulkar/Selectors obviously realised it was all coming to an end and let Sachin leave on his own terms.
I highly, highly doubt Sachin was sitting in the dressing room in mid-2012 thinking to himself "I can't make Test runs any more, but I'll keep going anyway".
CW terminology pedants have been out in force today.He was playing for two years before you were born.
Yeah, I think I'm on board with this because there's no way what PEWS said about somebody continuing on and averaging 7 should 'enhance their legacy'. It's not the fault of the players or a representation of their ability if one board refuses to drop one player when he's clearly past his best so he can continue scoring Test runs but another drops their aging legend when he starts to decline. If anything the former player would benefit by playing in a weaker team/for a weaker board.Absolutely...but then if Tendulkar was better at a younger age, and Sanga was better at an older age, and in the end Sanga's record is appreciably better...how do we get to "Tendulkar is better"?
Is it just the argument that Tendulkar had such a long career, and that you can take the middle chunk of his career where he had a similar record to Sanga, and the rest (several years of decent contributions at the beginning and end) is the cream on top which puts him above Sanga- arguably well above, given his career overall was 7-8 years longer than pretty much anyone's?
I understand the argument but it just doesn't do a lot for me. So he played really old, and he played really young, and during those times he wasn't nearly as good as he was during his prime years. That would probably apply to pretty much anyone else ever, Sanga included. I get the longevity argument, but "longevity while being inferior to your prime by about the amount you would expect someone out of their prime to be" seems to me a weird thing to lavish praise on someone for.
I guess if you stay around past your best (or before your best) and your record deteriorates because of it, I'm not going to disregard your excellence at peak, but nor am I going to give you credit for getting worse. And maybe if I'm comparing you to someone who also had a really long career and yet never deteriorated, I might lean towards that guy, because IMO sub-par performances have to count for something. Not diminishing from earlier performances, but they just have to be acknowledged in their own right.
Haha nah I'm not that crazy. I just don't think it should decrease it. If you're averaging 7 then you might as well not be playing but it doesn't nullify what you've already done.Yeah, I think I'm on board with this because there's no way what PEWS said about somebody continuing on and averaging 7 should 'enhance their legacy'.
Player A and player B start to play for the same team at the same time.Yeah, I think I'm on board with this because there's no way what PEWS said about somebody continuing on and averaging 7 should 'enhance their legacy'. It's not the fault of the players or a representation of their ability if one board refuses to drop one player when he's clearly past his best so he can continue scoring Test runs but another drops their aging legend when he starts to decline. If anything the former player would benefit by playing in a weaker team/for a weaker board.
We're talking about better. Andy Flower, Heath Streak and Shakib Al Hasan are probably more valuable to their sides than Ricky Ponting or Michael Holding.Who's the better player?
Who's the more valuable player?
IMO there's a difference.
Well that's not what I said at all really.Player A and player B start to play for the same team at the same time.
Both play for 10 years averaging 55. Player B retires after that.
Player A plays for another 5 years and averages 45 in those 5 years. (or say 54, since I've heard it often that longevity doesn't matter after a certain point)
You're saying you'll rate B higher, right?