Those fielding stats are utterly bizarre -- Kaushal #1 and Shingi #2? Warner, McCullum and Smith in the 'Worst' list?
I mean, good on you for having a go, but this certainly hasn't worked at all.
You are looking at the wrong list. The current list is really just a reflection on what happened recently. Kaushal recently affected a direct hit, Warner, McCullum and Smith had recent dropped catches that affected their current rating.I think it unfairly penalises people who create chances but don't take them all, whereas there's no penalty for someone who can't create that chance and hence have no chance of dropping them. Limitation in the nature of parsing commentary I guess.
Suggests its a little too short-term to me tbh.You are looking at the wrong list. The current list is really just a reflection on what happened recently. Kaushal recently affected a direct hit, Warner, McCullum and Smith had recent dropped catches that affected their current rating.
What you want to look at is the career list. That would be more of a reflection of who's a better fielder:
cricrate | Best/Worst Test Fielding Careers
cricrate | Best/Worst ODI Fielding Careers
I try not to count catches that are tough as drops so that's not the reason.
Current fielding lists are going to be more short-term than batting or bowling just because the events are binary.. you either drop a catch and get a big negative or get a great catch and get a big positive. There's no real equivalent to getting 30 runs like in batting because taking regulation catches isn't counted for much.Suggests its a little too short-term to me tbh.
Monty Panesar > Andrew Symonds as a fielder in Tests is ITSTL; I still think it's flawed.
Collingwood, Dravid and Jayawardene all rating high in the worst list is bizarre; Dravid has over 200 catches ffs, most of them in the slips!
Innings are rated generally based on the quality of opposition and the bowling attack, not necessarily on the quality of the shots in the innings. A scrappy hundred against McWarne will always, rightly, be rated higher than a 200(170) against Bangladesh where you cream every other ball to the boundary. It's just how it is.The problem is your rating system rates catches by the quality of the batsman dismissed and not the quality of the catch.
So if you take a dolly off Sanga's bat its worth more than taking a blinder off Murali's bat. And that's just stupid IMO.
I don't think this makes much sense -- fielding is arguably the only skill where the quality of opposition doesn't affect the worth of the outcome. Fielding isn't diametrically opposed to the other team in the way batting and bowling are; a freakish diving catch off a tailender is far better (as an isolated incident) than a sitter when Ian Bell bops one to mid off while on 35.Innings are rated generally based on the quality of opposition and the bowling attack, not necessarily on the quality of the shots in the innings. A scrappy hundred against McWarne will always, rightly, be rated higher than a 200(170) against Bangladesh where you cream every other ball to the boundary. It's just how it is.
He's done the same for fielding, I guess.
As NUFAN suggests, this discussion should go on the fielding thread especially since you guys are making judgment calls without even paying attention to how the ratings are calculated.The problem is your rating system rates catches by the quality of the batsman dismissed and not the quality of the catch.
So if you take a dolly off Sanga's bat its worth more than taking a blinder off Murali's bat. And that's just stupid IMO.
I don't think this makes much sense -- fielding is arguably the only skill where the quality of opposition doesn't affect the worth of the outcome. Fielding isn't diametrically opposed to the other team in the way batting and bowling are; a freakish diving catch off a tailender is far better (as an isolated incident) than a sitter when Ian Bell bops one to mid off while on 35.
The quality of the batsman isn't the defining thing in fielding, the difficulty of the chance is.
Don't get me wrong, I don't think it makes much sense... I was just thinking what might've been viriya's thought process for taking the batsman's quality into account, that's allDravid was better than Sehwag but it definitely wasn't more difficult to catch a chance off Dravid than Sehwag.
Unlike some others I don't think this fielding rating exercise is a completely fruitless endeavour, but factor in the quality of the batsman really makes absolutely no sense at all.
Except my ratings would agree that "a freakish diving catch off a tailender is better than a sitter when Ian Bell bops one to mid off while on 35". Not sure what the argument here is.Don't get me wrong, I don't think it makes much sense... I was just thinking what might've been viriya's thought process for taking the batsman's quality into account, that's all
Why is it worthless when getting a great catch to get the opposition's best batsman out is probably the most impact a fielder can make? Or dropping him for that matter.Why even bother with involving batsman's quality in the first place is what we have an issue with. Even to an absolutely minute amount. It's worthless.
Yes, but the idea is that in the long run, every fielder gets a chances. Keepers/slips/point fielders might get more attempts, but that also means they have higher chances to mess up. I do agree that you would want to compare fielders of the same position, and for that you'd have to go by what's known.. Collingwood and Ponting would be a fair comparison for example.But a fielder cannot pick where he is put to field. The "impact" you make on a game by holding a catch off Sanga's bat at deep midwicket is as much down to your fielding ability as it is down to the captain who put you in that position.
All a fielder can do is hold a catch. Who's bat that comes off is completely irrelevant to the actual process of taking the catch. In your analysis, players who are lucky enough to be placed at the right place in the right time to hold the catch off a good batsman's bat will get more credit that one who gets to hold the catch off a tailender.
Say there are two fielders and the entirety of catching chances they have got in their career are 5 tough ones off Sanga and 5 tough ones off Murali. Fielder 1 takes all 5 off Sanga, drops ones off Murali. Fielder 2 does the opposite. Who has more impact in the game? Who will be remembered for his fielding? Who should be differentiated by a higher rating?If it evens out then why even bother factoring it in?