OverratedSanity
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Ponting was terrible in India but it's not like he didn't succeed in the SC at all. He always played Murali well in SL. That's why he gets away with it a tad.
You've for some reason turned this into a debate between performing at home and away when that was no one's argument. Both Aravinda and Mahela have performed well at home, one has clearly displayed he's better at performing out of his comfort zone than the other. I'm not sure what is so difficult in understanding that.I'm not saying that's not a black mark on Mahela - and that's why I rate him lower than his peers in general - just not lower than Aravinda.
There's a double standard here - for some reason subcontinent batsmen are evaluated solely on their performances outside, but Ponting's poor India record is just "one of those things".
Subcontinent players might as well ignore home tests - it doesn't matter as long as you do well in England boys.
The equivalent here is when Rahane makes one ton in England, any number of failures in the subcontinent is fine and he is 100x better than that flat-track bully Rohit. Why isn't Rahane dominating flat tracks if it were that easy? Just doesn't make sense.
Mahela is one of the ATG home bullies - in some grounds in SL he was basically Bradman personified. That in itself should be a good thing, not a bad thing.
It is known, but he is nowhere near dumpstered like Mahela is. Granted Mahela was average in seaming conditions everywhere, but it astounds me how he is rated so low just because of that - as if that is the only thing that matters.Ponting's record in India is taken against him actually. Had he performed well in India, people would rate him higher, I am pretty sure.
I'm saying Mahela is better at performing at home. It's not the same when one player averages higher (even adjusted) over double the Tests.You've for some reason turned this into a debate between performing at home and away when that was no one's argument. Both Aravinda and Mahela have performed well at home, one has clearly displayed he's better at performing out of his comfort zone than the other. I'm not sure what is so difficult in understanding that.
So say that instead of coming up with irrelevant rants about what is more important between performing in seaming or subcontinent conditions and what not.I'm saying Mahela is better at performing at home. It's not the same when one player averages higher (even adjusted) over double the Tests.
And the "Aravinda performs better away" argument is only valid when you pick and choose what countries you want. If India/Pakistan were in Aravinda's comfort zone, why didn't he perform there? It's just a garbage argument.
If you're comparing away performances, then accept that Mahela did better than Aravinda away before picking and choosing counties. 42 vs 36. Somehow, failing in "easy" conditions is ok? I think not.
This is a good argument. Mahela was great in spinning conditions. See, for me the test of player is spin, pace, swing (England). Mahela wasn't very good in pacy conditions. I do think Sangakarra being that much better further highlighted Mahela's weakness in this regard for no fault of his.It is known, but he is nowhere near dumpstered like Mahela is. Granted Mahela was average in seaming conditions everywhere, but it astounds me how he is rated so low just because of that - as if that is the only thing that matters.
Batting well in seaming conditions is great, but batting well in the subcontinent is great too, and Mahela did that better than anyone.
So a non-subcontinental top 6 to play in sub-continental conditions.The alternate list is interesting too.
Sobers, Amla, Lloyd, AB, Kanhai and then Fleming. Most Australian greats are absent at the top of the list for one reason or the other actually. I love how well Border does. Same for Kirsten.
Sanga was only better away. They were at the same level at home.This is a good argument. Mahela was great in spinning conditions. See, for me the test of player is spin, pace, swing (England). Mahela wasn't very good in pacy conditions. I do think Sangakarra being that much better further highlighted Mahela's weakness in this regard for no fault of his.
Aravinda and Mahela have similar records in Pakistan. It's in India where Mahela's record is much better. However, Mahela didn't face Anil Kumble or India at home in the 90s. Kumble took 150 plus wickets at 21 or so in the 90s in India and was a monster at home. So you can't compare Mahela performing in India in the 2000s with Aravinda not performing there in the 90s as far as I am concerned.Aravinda didn't perform in Pakistan? The ****? I'm sure he made some amazing hundreds vs Wasim/Waqar. Don't know what his average there is.
Mahela faced Kumble + Harbhajan for half his Tests in India and he averaged 51 in those.Aravinda and Mahela have similar records in Pakistan. It's in India where Mahela's record is much better. However, Mahela didn't face Anil Kumble or India at home in the 90s. Kumble took 150 plus wickets at 21 or so in the 90s in India and was a monster at home. So you can't compare Mahela performing in India in the 2000s with Aravinda not performing there in the 90s as far as I am concerned.
I know. As I said, this is the argument you should have been making. I would still put De Silva ahead as he played well in more countries abroad compared to Jayawardene but at least you would have had some thing to argue with you put the point re India rather than number of tests played etc.Mahela faced Kumble + Harbhajan for half his Tests in India and he averaged 51 in those.
Number of Tests played is a valid argument. Your Greg Chappell vs Allan Border counter didn't make sense because Greg did better in those Tests like I said. There is no way 60 for 80 tests is equally dominant as 52 for 40 tests. No. way.I know. As I said, this is the argument you should have been making. I would still put De Silva ahead as he played well in more countries abroad compared to Jayawardene but at least you would have had some thing to argue with you put the point re India rather than number of tests played etc.
So is Amarnath good or bad for being **** in Asia? It's easy runs right? How bad does he have to be to underperform there?Jayawardene has made the most runs in Asia with 8808 runs. Not even Tendulkar has made more. Didn't know Sidhu averaged 52.80 in Asia. Mohinder Amarnath averages just 38 in Asia.