Colin McDonald is a case in point. From 1952 to 1961 he played 47 Tests and faced the likes of Trueman, Statham, Laker, Adcock, Heine, Tayfield, Hall, Ramadhin, and Valentine with few difficulties. Consequently he should be remembered as of Australia's greatest opening batsman.You are pointing out the problem with cricket statistics in general here... Stats are a measure of how a particular player fared as part of a certain team in certain conditions against a given opposition. We always assume that stats even out over a decent period of time and then try to generalize and compare them to draw our conclusions. But honestly, I have often felt that while overall, it gives a decent representation (a batsman averaging 30 is almost always not as good as one averaging 40) it is really really very difficult to draw GOAT type conclusions based on cricket stats because the game has so many more variables compared to some of the other sports I follow, that the stats, beyond a point, can become almost pointless in debating the quality of players.
Absolutely spot on IMO.You are pointing out the problem with cricket statistics in general here... Stats are a measure of how a particular player fared as part of a certain team in certain conditions against a given opposition. We always assume that stats even out over a decent period of time and then try to generalize and compare them to draw our conclusions. But honestly, I have often felt that while overall, it gives a decent representation (a batsman averaging 30 is almost always not as good as one averaging 40) it is really really very difficult to draw GOAT type conclusions based on cricket stats because the game has so many more variables compared to some of the other sports I follow, that the stats, beyond a point, can become almost pointless in debating the quality of players.
Similar story with Kim Hughes. He had back to back home and away series against the West Indies at the end of his career which dipped his average below 40. That, and how he ended his captaincy reign always detract from how he's viewed. Jeez he could bat.Colin McDonald is a case in point. From 1952 to 1961 he played 47 Tests and faced the likes of Trueman, Statham, Laker, Adcock, Heine, Tayfield, Hall, Ramadhin, and Valentine with few difficulties. Consequently he should be remembered as of Australia's greatest opening batsman.
Unfortunately he had a poor final series against England before he retired which pushed his average down from the 40s to finish at 39.33. This 0.7 difference seems to make all the psychological difference so that while openers like Simpson and Lawry get discussed often, McDonald doesn't.
The major black mark against McDonald's name, and the reason that he didn't average 50, is that he didn't convert the majority of his starts into big hundreds (50s = 17, 100s = 5, Top Score = 170), However, there would be numerous Australian middle-order batsman who would be very grateful for his half-century against some of crickets greatest new ball fast bowlers. McDonald's reputation for being 'courageous' was well earned.
AM Rahane 103 England Lord's 2014 12.85
I do agree that a consistent batsman more worth to a team. But I am curious by what measure do you find Lara/Sanga inconsistent & Sachin/Waugh as consistent?Actually it shows neither. I was just debating on a matter of principle - a inconsisten producer of ATG innnings like Lara vs a regular run machine like Waugh/Sachin.
However there is more to it than just the batsman's bottle or whatever. Waugh and Sachin (and even Viv) were both in sides filled with ATGs; most of the time their great knocks would be overshadowed (like how Dravid's 180 loses out to VVS's 281), and very rarely did they find themselves in situations where it was up to them alone to win a game. Lara and Sanga were in much weaker sides and their great innings stand out more + they had more opportunities to produce such ATG innings.
I do believe a consistent batsman is worth more to a team; but all good sides have both. The value you place in a batsman who consistently scores runs vs one who scores them when the rest fail is quite subjective and down to personal bias.
So really you can't use this as a means to push your Sanga > All agenda (and dont act like that wasn't your intention)
Thanks. Is it possible to find out where that sits among all innings by all batsmen within the first 7 test matches in their career?AM Rahane 103 England Lord's 2014 12.85
No, because I do this all manually.Thanks. Is it possible to find out where that sits among all innings by all batsmen within the first 7 test matches in their career?
PEWS is your man IMO.No, because I do this all manually.
Looking to collaborate with someone who can code scorecards and somehow get my formula to go across every test in history, ITBT.
I'm not asking for Darvid's innings to be rated higher, so I don't don't see how your statement is relevant in the slightest.Well, the 281 was clearly the superior knock, so I don't see why?
There are only 40 innings out of the 700 billion ever played in history between the two innings. 40 is a minuscule difference in terms of position in such lists.I'm not asking for Darvid's innings to be rated higher, so I don't don't see how your statement is relevant in the slightest.
Put simply, Dravid's knock wasn't 40 ranking spots inferior to Laxman's. I can only assume his knock ranked so low because of the flawed 'someone else played a comparable knock in the same innings' penalty that all these ranking systems are beset with.
Ya I think in such cases losing margin should be a factor. A 150 in the 4th innings should not be rated highly if your team lost by 100+ runs; but it should definitely be rated highly if your team lost by just 8 runs. Of course, winning the match in the end should contribute much more though.Just noticed something about the list. Correct me if I'm wrong but it doesn't have a single knock from the 4th innings in a losing cause. Now, I do understand that there should be a modifier factoring in that a batsman failed to get the team over the line (relative to one that did), but I still expected atleast one of maybe Gavaskar's 96 or Randall's 174 in the Centenary test or Tendulkar's 136 or the Kohli knock at Adelaide, or even that Bevan Congdon hundred vs England.
Don't want you to change anything in the methodology again and again, but what's the difference in the modifier for an innings which saved/won the match against one that fell just short. Might explain why Gavaskar's 221 is so high and the 96 is nowhere to be seen.
For starters, Dravid could never played Laxman's innings in the first place as only Laxman could have demolished Warne that day like Laxman.Out of curiosity, if Laxman's innings does not exist, Dravid scores his 180, and India win the game anyway, how does the 180 rate?
Out of curiosity, if Laxman's innings does not exist, Dravid scores his 180, and India win the game anyway, how does the 180 rate?
Ya, plus if Dravid scores a 180 and noone else scores a big daddy hundred then there's no chance in hell that India win the match from such a situation. On 5th day, the situation was somewhat tight mind you (Harbhajan and Tendulkar bowled well to win us the game - if Indian lead was smaller we wouldn't have won the game).For starters, Dravid could never played Laxman's innings in the first place as only Laxman could have demolished Warne that day like Laxman.
If Dravid was at No.3 then his passive technique would have enabled the Australian bowlers to maintain both inititive and pressure. But Laxman taking on McGrath, and Warne especially, made an Indian win a distinct possibility. Seen in that context Laxman's innings was miles ahead of Dravid's.
It's the difference between a genius and someone who is merely great.