OverratedSanity
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Definitely Grace imo
Not that it particularly matters because it's always hypothetical, but I imagine players will play at a level that they were able to demonstrate over a considerable period of time. There was never a time when Steve Waugh was a great all rounder for a considerable time in tests. His bowling was handy early, and kept him in the as you mention, but then in 1989 he went nuts in England and people realised what a good bat he was. He slumped and then was dropped for Mark etc, but when he came back (apart from 94 in a few tests that you mentioned) he was never really an all rounder.why does it matter for these threads? Can't we assume they're at their peak with bat and ball when playing in this hypothetical situation
If we have to him at one point in his career I'll take 1994 where he took 15 wickets @ 15 and hit 677 runs @ 67
sounds like a test AR at the peak of his powers to me and he basically 30 by then so well into his career
Yeah I remember when I got my nerd on and tried to look into this. I came to the conclusion that Grace was quite arguably as successful as or even more successful than Bradman on batting alone in the context of all First Class cricket.. and on top of that he took over 2000 wickets. It has to be Grace IMO.Definitely Grace imo
Even in terms of average relative to his peers.. if you standardised the county season averages in the same way I standardised Test averages in my big thread on that, Grace had a standardised average of 120+ over a ten year period. Nuts.Yeah I made a post about him recently where I dug up his statistics for a 10-15 year stretch where he was so far ahead if every other batsman it was absurd. Not just in terms if average, but the sheer volume if his run scoring output. He had like three quarters of all fc hundreds scored for a decade long period.
And then there's his bowling obviously.
Crazy stuff. It's kinda annoying how cricketing n00bs look at his career fc average and go "meh", but simultaneously I think it's cool that the crazy nature of his numbers require a little bit of research.Pretty decent run from Grace here :
Bejeebers, that's awesome. Must have pulled up stiff in 1868.Found it.
Crazy stuff. It's kinda annoying how cricketing n00bs look at his career fc average and go "meh", but simultaneously I think it's cool that the crazy nature of his numbers require a little bit of research.
There's an idea that Grace 'normalised' scoring a first class hundred. It used to be a big event, then Grace showed it could be what a batsman aims for every time. Which sounds reasonable until you compare it to any other sport. Imagine a footballer who 'normalised' scoring a hat trick and started doing it 10 times a season. That's the kind of craziness we're talking about.
Touring national teams often played against a ridiculous amount of opponents from local teams. Up to 22.Lol the scorecard from the Australians vs Auckland in 1896 The Home of CricketArchive
Please note that all members of the minor team would not just bat, but also take the field. In 1876, W.G. Grace made 400 not out for United South XI against Twenty-Two of Grimsby, with 22 men in the field throughout his innings.Touring national teams often played against a ridiculous amount of opponents from local teams. Up to 22.
Here is W.G. in 1872, aged 24:Bejeebers, that's awesome. Must have pulled up stiff in 1868.
Aged between 20 - 28 in that period, the beard can't have been quite as impressive.
The only rival for that is probably Ponsford's run in December 1927: after warming up with 133 against South Australia at the start of the month, he scored 437 against Queensland on 16-17 Dec, 202 & 38 against NSW on 23 & 26 Dec, and 336 against South Australia on 30-31 Dec. 1013 runs in just over 2 weeks.Please note that all members of the minor team would not just bat, but also take the field. In 1876, W.G. Grace made 400 not out for United South XI against Twenty-Two of Grimsby, with 22 men in the field throughout his innings.
This was simply a warm-up for the most prolific trio of innings ever made in first class cricket. as he followed this exhibition with 344 for Gloucestershire against Kent at Canterbury, 177 against Notts at Clifton, and, with the visiting Yorkshire players now expecting him to be exhausted , 318 not out against them at Cheltenham.
Even by Bradmanesque standards, that really is some superhuman stamina and concentration.
Thanks, now done.Use...code..
McGrath could do everything Lillee could but 2 runs a wicket cheaper.agreed.
And in the words of Ian Chappell, "Lille could do everything that McGrath could and he could do it 10 miles quicker."