Spark
Global Moderator
cribb wins the threadIt's not how much whiskey I've had that's important, but how long I've been drinking it.
cribb wins the threadIt's not how much whiskey I've had that's important, but how long I've been drinking it.
Why? India were in trouble, I remember correctly. In either case, if its not that great, Raina, and Rohit should ****ing play a knock like that.
Lol no. SSC. India scored 700Wasn't Raina's debut 100 in pretty difficult conditions too? Or am I just not remembering it right?
The problem is, both those Raina knocks came when Sachin was the best batsman in the world anyway. Raina did ****all after that, so your point isn't really valid at all.yeah and Rohit's debut 100 came wen we were in some strife too... All comparable to Sachin's effort in Chennai IMO...
Eh matchw as done for all intents and purposes. 0 pressure knock.I remember he played a really, really good lone hand at Lord's second innings.
Pity about the rest of the series. Trying to review an LBW a particular highlight.
Could you expand on this? Because I'm increasingly using this as my definition as to who is a better player.If I had to choose a guy to play for me out of the modern greats at the beginning of their career, it'd be Tendulkar. I think that's a separate question as to whether he was the best player.
Perhaps, but he was still facing some seriously high-quality fast bowling at the time.Eh matchw as done for all intents and purposes. 0 pressure knock.
Haha yeah that was one of about a dozen wickets Broad should have had on top of all the ones he actually took. **** he was ridicuous in that series.Raina did get away with a seriously plumb LBW in that Lords knock, even though it was good.
Ya Lara stands far better till now.Sanga and Lara's record as they both have played almost the same amount of games, Sanga will obviously add to his tally:
Lara
Inns NO Runs HS Ave SR 100 50 4s 6s
Lara 131 232 11953 400* 52.88 60.51 34 48 1559 88
Sanga 129 223 11995 319 58.22 54.11 37 51 1454 47
Very similar stats but the key figure that stands out here is Lara's superior strike rate, against better bowlers and relatively more bowling friendly conditions.
There is no comparison really, especially considering their respective records against the best bowling attacks of their time.
The problem is, both those Raina knocks came when Sachin was the best batsman in the world anyway. Raina did ****all after that, so your point isn't really valid at all.
My bad.Umm, he averaged ~45 in the period I'm talking about in the post (age 16-20).
I don't think anyone is suggesting that Tendulkar's poor final 2 years tarnishes his great feats for the 15 years before that. But when you are evaluating a player's whole career, every single test is given importance regardless of whether the player was in decline or in his peak. So in career terms, his last 2 years do affect his evaluation.When it comes to Tendulkar, his performances when he was 38-40 should neither tarnish nor enhance his legacy -- he was crap and might and might as well have not been playing -- and his performances as a teenager should enhance it -- they weren't to the standard of the meat of his career, but most players aren't selected at that age and it was a positive that he could contribute. The beginning part, unlike the very end, was a genuine positive.
Is 6 more runs per hundred balls that big a difference? e.g a 120 taking the same amount of time as a 108.Sanga and Lara's record as they both have played almost the same amount of games, Sanga will obviously add to his tally:
Lara
Inns NO Runs HS Ave SR 100 50 4s 6s
Lara 131 232 11953 400* 52.88 60.51 34 48 1559 88
Sanga 129 223 11995 319 58.22 54.11 37 51 1454 47
Very similar stats but the key figure that stands out here is Lara's superior strike rate, against better bowlers and relatively more bowling friendly conditions.
There is no comparison really, especially considering their respective records against the best bowling attacks of their time.
I've always wondered how different Stuart Law's career might have been had he batted at 5 and Poontang at 6 in their debut match.North, Hodge and Katich really all should have played more - Stuart Law before that.
It's amazing how talented that era of Australian cricket was, two world class leggies, a relatively decent offie (who could also bowl medium), an endless stream of hardened domestic champions just waiting for the chance to come in and perform for their side. Guys like Slater and Mark Waugh being dropped, etc.
I can see I am fighting a hopelessly losing battle in the like-war against "PEWSian CW orthodoxy" , but....So the best way to achieve a high thierry henry rating would be to make sure you weren't good enough to play Test cricket until you were amazing at it, then retire as soon as you showed signs of decline. This is really in complete conflict with what would actually be useful to a team.