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How do you not?How do you arrive at this conclusion from the graphs?
How do you not?How do you arrive at this conclusion from the graphs?
Two main reasons.How do you not?
Out of curiosity, do you have a graph for the strike rates and averages of batsmen in their debut year across recent decades, say from 1990 (Tendulkar's debut)? It would settle at least one of the debates on this thread.The graphs aren't meant to actually show anything scientific or meaningful (the scales are completely arbitrary and inconsistent, for instance). More an interesting 'hey SRs have gone up across the board, maybe the game has changed and good players can adapt!' thing.
If Bevan's SR of 72 can be adjusted upwards because batsmen tend to have higher strike rates in recent years, that implies that Tendulkar became a worse batsman over time because his strike rate went down relative to the others. I don't agree with this.You're aware that Tendulkar completely changed how he played ODIs right and using the greatest ODI batsman ever as an example of how most players developed over the years is the most crazy thing.
Na you're completely missing the point. Bevan isn't similar to Tendulkar in anyway shape or form. Tendulkar when he first came onto the scene was as brash and brilliant as they came, and over the years he actively turned himself into an anchor (albeit still an effective striker). Tendulkar was quite simply one of the most brilliant youngsters to ever play the game, his natural talent arguably diminished with age but a reason he is so revered is he was able to recreate himself into an equally powerful force. That said, he was never going to strike at quite the same right even if you take into account that rules and conditions made this increasingly easier to accomplish as time went on.If Bevan's SR of 72 can be adjusted upwards because batsmen tend to have higher strike rates in recent years, that implies that Tendulkar became a worse batsman over time because his strike rate went down relative to the others. I don't agree with this.
Well, I'd definitely pick a player who averaged 53 and struck in the low 80s.If I were to guess, if Bevan had played 5-10 years later his strike rate would be around the low 80s mark.
Because that would make him one of the greatest ODI batsman of all time? Which is what he already was.Well, I'd definitely pick a player who averaged 53 and struck in the low 80s.
Probably the single greatest ODI batsman of his time. Which still wouldn't mean he'd necessarily fit the balance of an ATG team. Which is how this entire discussion started.Because that would make him one of the greatest ODI batsman of all time? Which is what he already was.
No, it was how he'd fit in the balance of the current NZ side and where he would fit in to our middle-lower order.Probably the single greatest ODI batsman of his time. Which still wouldn't mean he'd necessarily fit the balance of an ATG team. Which is how this entire discussion started.
No, that was where the discussion transitioned to. It started when I said I'd pick Maxwell over Bevan at 6 for an Aussie ATG ODI side.No, it was how he'd fit in the balance of the current NZ side and where he would fit in to our middle-lower order.
The answer to that would be anywhere you want, please sir, please.
This might be up there with 'Those who hate him hate ablities'To deny this is to deny mathematics.
People don't really disagree with this. However, players' career statistics are as much a function of how often they find themselves in each of these situations as they are a function of their natural scoring rate. That Player A has a career strike rate of X and Player B has a career strike rate of X+5 doesn't necessarily mean Player B would score quicker than Player A in a given situation; it could just be that Player A faced many more situations throughout his career where a lower strike rate made sense and it impacted on his career statistics.Look at it like this.
If your team is likely to get bowled out, then it's better to have a player averaging 40 and striking at 70 than it is to have a player averaging 39 and striking at 110.
If your team is not likely to get bowled out, then it's better to have a player averaging 20 and striking at 80 than it is to have a player averaging 100 and striking at 70.
Partially correct. Teams find a balance between cake and icing; this has always been true.The people you pick are directly correlated to how likely it is you get bowled out. Maxwell lasts on average less than 30 balls, so according to mathematics he's a liability. It's why teams don't stack their entire lineup with big hitters.