Yes. Definite red ink master. Insists on batting at 5 when he could (and should) be taking more responsibility higher up. Terrible at farming the strike or upping his aggression when batting with the tail. Racks up lots of not outs in collapses, and not enough innings that hell arrest a slide. Also doesnt communicate with other batsmen in the middle, tends to bat in his own shell.wait, so Chanders is assumed to be selfish and playing for his average on here? rememeber im new
Opinion isn't unanimous or anything.wait, so Chanders is assumed to be selfish and playing for his average on here? rememeber im new
NZ during Sobers' time were minnow, OZ during Kallis' time weren't. When a batsman fails against strong opposition, it counts against him. But if he fails against minnow, it's assumed due to lack of form rather than opposition causing any problem.. Lara only averages 34.55 against India but you won't see anyone bringing it up.. India were pretty weak bowling unit during that time.Kallis has a better record overseas and if people are going to say Kallis isn't rated so high because of Australia then why not the same with Sobers and New Zealand?
If "x-factor" means ability to take game away, then Sobers had that.. If you look at the scorecard of late 60s/ early 70s, you will see he normally scored quickly, most of the times with the SR of around 60.urgh "x-factor" is such a flowery factor in these discussions
I think this is just the impression you get. IMO this is true of Kallis in ODIs, but not in Tests.Kallis isn't rated lower than others because he was dour, it's because his knocks were less consequential than the others. Steve Waugh was dour but was rated up there with the best Australia produced for a reason. Kallis scored mountains of runs and took tons of wickets, that's a guy you want in your side no question. But a bloke like him affected the contest for a session, a day or a Test. Guys like Ponting, Lara and Sachin scared the pants of the opposition for years and affected contests even when they weren't in great form. That's the province of the best.
Yes in your view but the question was about CW. Only some have that view on CW. It is totally split, just like how views on Kallis are split.Yes. Definite red ink master. Insists on batting at 5 when he could (and should) be taking more responsibility higher up. Terrible at farming the strike or upping his aggression when batting with the tail. Racks up lots of not outs in collapses, and not enough innings that hell arrest a slide. Also doesnt communicate with other batsmen in the middle, tends to bat in his own shell.
Great player, but selfish.
Why has no-one pointed out that 1960s New Zealand were amongst the greatest sides of all time before?Kallis has a better record overseas and if people are going to say Kallis isn't rated so high because of Australia then why not the same with Sobers and New Zealand?
It's only important to do well vs good teams, doing bad vs bad teams means nothing, everybody knows that. In fact, it just shows that the player wasn't a minnow basher - which is to his credit.Why has no-one pointed out that 1960s New Zealand were amongst the greatest sides of all time before?
Wasim seems to have a better percentage than Murali in your list.I think this is just the impression you get. IMO this is true of Kallis in ODIs, but not in Tests.
A simple stat that seems to suggest otherwise - Kallis had the most MoM awards (23 MoM awards over 166 tests):
Records | Test matches | Individual records (captains, players, umpires) | Most player-of-the-match awards | ESPN Cricinfo
This is at almost the same rate as Murali (14%) who was the greatest matchwinner in Tests.
Really? Felt it was the majority view hereYes in your view but the question was about CW. Only some have that view on CW. It is totally split, just like how views on Kallis are split.
Yea, I didn't mean that Murali was the best matchwinner just based on the percentage of course, just a good benchmark to compare Kallis to since he's #2.Wasim seems to have a better percentage than Murali in your list.
There are a couple of factors here.. Firstly for a large part of his career (almost until 2007), Kallis did not get the 'tough runs'. Australia being just one of them, but for a long time, he would score massively against weaker bowling sides like India and West Indies but then under perform in tough tours of England and Australia. Although England's attack in the late 90s and early 00s, was weaker than the attack post 2004, Kallis did not score that heavily against them. What this meant was Kallis would have a pretty high average still, but he would not do against Warne and McGrath that Lara or Tendulkar did against them...but he was able to maintain an average pretty close to theirs at that time, and ultimately higher than them.Kallis has a better record overseas and if people are going to say Kallis isn't rated so high because of Australia then why not the same with Sobers and New Zealand?
I honestly don't know how or why someone can make this kind of an argument. How can us as the spectators watching on TV or at the ground tell this? I would think the only people who would probably be aware of this would be the players in the dressing room. I think it's quite unfair to question someone's intentions because for us, there is no objective way of deciphering this.Really? I would say if you are an aggressive batsman and you're averaging in the 30s, you're gonna be rated less. You don't get a free pass. I'm not sure there is an aggressive all-time batsman averaging 50+ who consistently was 'too aggressive'. There's a difference as to why people critique Kallis and that's because he tends to play the way to improve his numbers, rather than his team's chances to win and while a lot of the time that overlaps; it's not necessarily a joint interest.
Cronje died in 2002, played his last game in 2000.I distinctly remember Windies touring RSA in 2003 or so after the WC and Boycott was on commentary and always talked about how Kallis was very worried about his average and that he wanted to get it back up since he had rather ordinary start as a youngster in tests. Cronje declared on him when he batted way too slowly going for a declaration with him on 80 odd or at least on the verge of a milestone score.
So you've only seen England and India play then?i havent seen much of his career actually. most of my cricket viewing was watching whoever toured australia
To go back to the original topic, a major reason why he is not picked in All Time XI (other than the one I mentioned above) is because he is slotted as an all rounder. So when people are making their teams, they are not thinking of putting him in the middle order (where there are 4 spots available) but more in the role of an all rounder and there is only room for 1 there and he is competing with Imran and Sobers. He was an amazing all rounder as his records suggest, but neither was he a better bowler than Imran, nor is he considered a better batsman than Sobers. So he misses out.The guy is a statistical marvel.. His batting average is up there with the best of his era. Nearly 300 wickets.. And if this wasn't enough, he was a brilliant slip fielder; one of the best the game has ever seen.
Yet he almost never makes any all time XI.. Is this all because of Barrington-like nature of his batting?
I sort of get the argument about our 90's batting line-up. Wessel's, Hudson, P.Kirsten, McMillan probably would have played a bit of test cricket in the 80's but the changes were probably G.Kirsten in for Wessel's & Gibbs in for Hudson, Kallis in for P.Kirsten and then Cullinan , Cronje, Rhodes, McMillan.I can see why there is no real Jacques Kallis love. He did come across as selfish sometimes, and he certainly had the talent to do what AB de Villiers does.
But I think there are some complex factors behind this. When Kallis started playing for SA he played for a fairly mediocre batting side - there was no De Villiers, Amla etc. You had a couple of strokemakers, like Cullinan and Gibbs, but neither of them averaged above 50. Both were good players but not on the level of De Villiers or Amla for example. This probably influenced the way Kallis played Tests. He was a bit of a dasher when he was younger - I remember him square driving someone for six playing for Western Province in 1996 or so. But being in a team which often suffered from the 90/5 syndrome it was important he kept his wicket intact.
Also, I think his upbringing played a part. The SA team in the 1990s was, for the most part, fairly dour. I really think having been brought up in apartheid SA played some part in that - the society we grow up in influences us more than we think. Now guys who were ten years younger than Kallis started coming into the team, and grew up in a much freer society, so you get your Amlas, De Villiers, De Kocks etc.
Kallis has also played some great knocks. This innings against that great England side in Durban in 2003. Kallis was the only guy who stood firm, guiding SA to 332 after being 118-6. Also two hundreds in two innings versus Pakistan in Karachi. There was also this century versus India when only one other person made a fifty in the innings.
I get why people don't feel the same about Kallis as about players with similar (or even worse records) but without Kallis, SA certainly wouldn't have become the team they did. He is a legend of the game, and I'm glad SA was lucky enough to have him.
I think there's a few points. His first series in Australia 97/98 he did fairly poorly averaging 38 with the bat. However next time 01/02 he averaged 49 in 6 innings. For me this was a series I thought we were going to run through them easily. Kallis' "slow" batting was a thorn in the side. He never made a century that series but his fortitude at the crease was impressive to me. Again in 05/06 his three matches including the "World XI" test he averaged 69.Wow a simple question on why Kallis does not make it to more CW All Time XI turns into a full on analysis on his career and stats. This is why I CW. You will never get these conversations with dumb casual fans on FB.
There are a couple of factors here.. Firstly for a large part of his career (almost until 2007), Kallis did not get the 'tough runs'. Australia being just one of them, but for a long time, he would score massively against weaker bowling sides like India and West Indies but then under perform in tough tours of England and Australia. Although England's attack in the late 90s and early 00s, was weaker than the attack post 2004, Kallis did not score that heavily against them. What this meant was Kallis would have a pretty high average still, but he would not do against Warne and McGrath that Lara or Tendulkar did against them...but he was able to maintain an average pretty close to theirs at that time, and ultimately higher than them.
Now, Kallis was certainly not the only top batsman of that time to struggle in Australia. Almost everyone struggled against them, even Tendulkar (compared to his standards).
So why is Kallis singled out? It is more a set of factors beyond his control. Dravid has a pretty poor record in Australia too and I have mentioned this before on CW and I know I am going to ruffle a few feathers with this.
But here's the thing..Dravid has that one double century in Adelaide, in that one season when McGrath and Warne were both not playing, against one of the weakest bowling attacks that Australia had fielded during that era, and it resulted in one of the most famous wins in the history of Indian cricket. Coming just 2 years after the greatest win in India's history, and the first and only time India drawing a series in Australia, Dravid was forever enshrined in the history books, and people started to think that he has a great record in Australia. Had that double hundred not resulted in a famous win, people would be looking far more harshly at Dravid's record in Australia.
Kallis unfortunately was not part of such a famous win for his team. So his record was looked at for what it was, and it is deservedly looked at harshly. If you average 55 but go AWOL against two of the greatest bowlers of your time, that should go against your record.