I am beginning to wonder whether he'd take the philosophical stance he has in this thread if the shoe was on the other foot, so to speak, and that's making me not want to bother engaging him on it.
I only took the stance that Aussie might not be No. 1 because they lost a series. It wasn't a position I had held until the series had finished.
As for the shoe being on the other foot, I've said twice already in this thread that if the All Blacks lose the Bledisloe by the same margin Aussie just lost the Chappell-Hadlee, I wouldn't consider them the No. 1 side in the world. So I think that answers the question. I can't really get any fairer than that, because the two examples have a lot in common.
There seems to be some serious difficulty among posters here accepting that NZ actually has a good team at the moment. Probably because New Zealanders themselves are so accustomed to being mediocre (on account of 20 years of mediocrity) that even we haven't properly accepted it yet. For example, I thought we had a pretty good chance of defending 246 and even put money on it.
The facts are, however you slice it, that the World Champions just came here and we beat them. We've beaten them in 3 of the least 5 matches. So that tells me that we have a claim to being better. If you want to use stats and rankings to argue against that claim, you have to do so in the knowledge that the strongest argument possible for which side is better is who actually wins the games.
As far rating New Zealand less, just ask me about basically any point in the last 20 years that isn't now. I have repeatedly stated, for example, that I think Astle and Fleming were mediocre to good batsmen only. This is to rate them far lower than most Kiwi posters do.
As for Kane Williamson, a methodology that suggests the only batsman in the world to be ranked in the top 10 in all formats might actually be the world's best batsman across all formats is hardly a contrivance. I think it's a very fair and reasonable point, and my bringing up is in no way suggestive of a bias (not that I necessarily deny having a bias). I don't do mindless fanboyism. I take care to back up my points with at least something reasonable.
Part of the trouble is that many subtleties are lost here for some reason. "Bevan had a poor strike rate for an ODI finisher" becomes "Bevan was a spud". Saying "Tim Southee was ranked above James Anderson as a Test bowler for much of the last 4 years and has an argument for being roughly as good" becomes "Southee is almost as good as Dale Steyn". Saying "A team that loses a series might not be as good as the team that beat them" becomes "The Black Caps are comfortably the No. 1 side in the world". Most of the things I get **** for are things I've never even said.
I note also that many of my predictions turn out to be true. I started a thread a few years ago where I put the case that KW was already better than Ross Taylor. Most people disagreed at the time. They wouldn't now. So just because I say something that is unpopular now (like NZ has an argument for being the No. 1 team) doesn't mean I am biased. I could be right.