Prince EWS
Global Moderator
I'm sure I could sway you
Did you have a think about it and remember that I was a stubborn bastard?I reckon I could possibly sway you over time from a multitude of different angles.
I'm sure I could sway you
Did you have a think about it and remember that I was a stubborn bastard?I reckon I could possibly sway you over time from a multitude of different angles.
You do realise that just because you're being consistent by making two mistakes doesn't make the reasoning correct?Oh I agree with your second line. But you're wrong about the first line. Read back a few pages. I don't think Bradman makes this mountain as a 'certain selection', let alone Sobers or Tendulkar.
I have WG Grace and Kerry Packer as my first two certainties on the mountain. I don't even know if Kerry Packer ever even played the game in his backyard.
Ha.Did you have a think about it and remember that I was a stubborn bastard?
Ha. I do not believe that I am mistaken. Read back if you have time. Mr Mister has put his position on Bradman being a certain selection.You do realise that just because you're being consistent by making two mistakes doesn't make the reasoning correct?
There is already a Hall of Fame.Sir Don Bradman
Sir Viv Richards
Sir Gary Sobers
Sachin Tendulkar
I'm not much of a hipster, mate. Those are the four icons of the game, for me, not the only four but we had to pick four.There is already a Hall of Fame.
I've not once said Tendulkar isn't iconic, clearly he is. Even the sentence you just quoted stated that. I just didn't immediately think of him as being one of the 4 heads to be carved into the mountain, whereas Bradman, Sobers & Grace were immediate locks as far as I'm concerned, and I explained very clearly why and what criteria I used. The 4th choice was not as so easy or clear for me, I initially went for Hobbs, but I could be swayed into selecting the likes of Marshall, Tendulkar, Imran, Richards or Murali, to name a few.Zinzan, what would it take for an Indian cricketer to be considered iconic (according to your criteria)? Or do you intend to keep trotting out the extremely simplistic 1.25 billion argument for every single hypothetical answer?
I don't see why Bradman should be a shoo in for his cricketing prowess tbh. He took batting to a different level, but he did so more with established orthodoxy than necessarily reinventing or redefining the game.Literally other than Grace and Bradman, no other cricketer should be a shoo-in you'd think.
Which bowlers would you have there? Genuine question. You wouldn't want Warne there - his character precludes him from being on a monument, surely? And I don't know if the stone masons would have the energy to carve a giant asterix next to Murali's head to accommodate what a lot of people still, rightly or wrongly, think of his action. McGrath is the leading pace bowling wicket taker of all time, but is he worthy of a spot more than, say, Marshall? It's not an easy choice to make imo. Maybe Sydney Barnes, but again, by a lot of reports he was a shunt. Maybe Bosanquet, who invented the wrong 'un?3 batsmen (one who was a useful bowler in Sobers) and a bowling all rounder. Cricket is a batsman's game in your mind?
Not an unreasonable suggestion, but KP was, like his modern initial-sake, motivated by money rather than the good of the game. Not saying that should exclude him, but it's worth keeping in mind.Almost unanimous. There is a few of us in the Imran greater than Sobers camp. We are outnumbered, but we exist.
I have WG Grace and Kerry Packer as certainties on this mountain.
I am not sure Kerry Packer ever played the game, but he is up there on that mountain for mine. Cricket under lights, players in pyjamas, white balls, players professionally reimbursed, players not retiring so early because they are paid to play, multiple camera angles, great tv product, new rules...
Thats my point tho; it's an elitist view of what the 'cricketing community' entails.The 'cricketing community' I refer to is anyone who is well educated on the history of the game, which incidentally refers to pretty much everyone I know on this forum for a start.
You think I'd take the opinion of Amrita Patel of Rajasthan, who could name no more than 10 cricketers on a good day than say your opinion, on a cricket related topic?
Bodyline aside? Why should that be aside? It almost ruined diplomatic relations for a little while.I don't see why Bradman should be a shoo in for his cricketing prowess tbh. He took batting to a different level, but he did so more with established orthodoxy than necessarily reinventing or redefining the game.
Cricket has a storied history, and he's a huge part of it because of the amount of runs he scored and the average he scored them at. But as a player I don't think you can say he changed cricket through what he did (Bodyline series aside). Maybe if you threw in his work as a selector and administrator you'd nearly get him there, but if you're looking at these things purely on the amount of runs scored and wickets taken, you may as well just build a new monument every ten to 20 years as the next generation comes along, plays more cricket and makes more runs.
If you wanted to look at people who've changed or influenced cricket, I don't reckon Bradman is a shoo in. Grace would be, Ranji as well with his leg side play. Maybe include that lady who bowled over arm for the first time because of the hooped skirt. But I don't think you get a Guernsey just because you were a hero to your country, be it the selfish **** from Bowral or the selfish **** from Mumbai.
Viv not going to SA on a rebel tour was massive for WI cricket, and he was basically offered an open cheque book. They offered him basically whatever he wanted. There's some great insights into his consciousness in Fire in Babylon, and also a doco from the 80s called something like "Viv Richards, King of Cricket". I think it's on YouTube if anyone's interested in watching it.I think the names who are remembered most closely with cricketing 'revolutions' partly due to them being awesome and partly due to being in the right country at the right time would be ideal.
Grace, Bradman, Viv, Tendulkar.
First two are obvious. Viv due to the whole grovelling thing and averaging 80 and dominating everyone between 76-80 and establishing WI not just as gentlemen having fun but the most formidable team to ever take a cricket field. Other players, especially the bowlers were as important but most importantly, Viv was the symbol that the new WI will take no prisoners and tolerate no nonsense.
Tendulkar's case as a symbol is obvious. You could make arguments that Murali, Kallis and maybe Warne were better test cricketers etc. but due to a combination of India's liberalization and growing middle class leading to increase in the significance of the BCCI and Tendulkar being the excellent ODI cricketer of his generation in a time where ODIs become the most commercially valuable form of a cricket and his career touching four decades, for better or worse and due no small part to fortune, Tendulkar is the representative of post-90s cricket, IMO. People who're taking about an objective assessment of cricketing worth are missing the point of symbols. Just my opinion.