There is no way Gilchrist should be in that list over Murali. He is just Jayasuriya with gloves - and Jayasuriya could bowl.Viv, Tendulkar, Wasim, McGrath, Gilchrist.
Dhoni extremely close to Gilchrist with captaincy taken into account and will jump to 4 if he wins this WC for India - will be something crazy with how low pre-WC expectations were among the cricket tragics.
Bevan, Murali, Ponting and Pollock the others in the top 10 for me.
Yeah, I rate Garner extremely highly. He's probably the best ever in terms of quality and has the best ODI match performance ever but doesn't really have the massive WC output that guys like Wasim//McGrath have. 13 wickets across 2 WCs at 22ish with one outstanding (beyond outstanding tho) performance.Garner, Teja!
That explains it probably. Good point.There's probably a bit of mythologizing but I think the gap can be more readily explained by the voting system - 5 points for first place, 3 for second and 1 for third. If, in an extreme example, every one of the 50 voters ranked Richards as the greatest ever ODI cricketer, every-so-fractionally ahead of Tendulkar, then Viv would be 100 points ahead of Tendulkar despite every judge thinking there was a hair's breadth between them. I don't think the gap in points between the two is a reflection that the judging panel things Viv is proportionally that much better.
Tendulkar averaged 48 as an opener with a SR of 88. That's miles better than any other opener, sustained over an enormous amount of matches.44.8 vs. 39.2
Basically, Gilchrist is an extremely high variance player due to the style of his gameplay but it has to be his credit that the upsides of his style happened to come in some extremely crucial games.
Wouldn't you guys rate Afridi (I'm not comparing him with AG here) drastically differently if a few of his random 100 (40) came in WC semis/finals?
This is like how some people pick Warne in their ODI ATG XI based on 2 performances in 99... All is forgiven because all we seem to remember is that one time.Yeah Gilchrist producing the goods in 3 consecutive finals is an amazing accomplishment.
I think that's a bit silly as Warne was probably not an OTG ODI player, mainly because he didn't play enough games.This is like how some people pick Warne in their ODI ATG XI based on 2 performances in 99... All is forgiven because all we seem to remember is that one time.
They do, but then I would make an argument for Aravinda in the top 5 then.. you can't just pick him for this list based on WC performances - it has to be overall.I think that's a bit silly as Warne was probably not an OTG ODI player, mainly because he didn't play enough games.
Having said that the argument is still very valid, as a player you play for the big games and the big moments, those are the are a true test of your skill and the ones that matter and that are remembered. So yes the performances of Gilchrist in WC finals count a great deal more than the meaningless hundreds churned out in pointless bi-lateral ODI's in India.
Strike rate is irrelevant where finishers are concerned.I think with time I would rate players like Bevan lower. When you get players like Dhoni, you realize Bevan's SR was not impressive even for his time. He just was a man for the crisis, but not necessarily the best finisher.
I said India because they play more there than anywhere else.I like how you mention India specifically because bilateral ODI series in other countries are apparently so meaningful.