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always wondered how that worked so consistently...Area CW poster discovers that when you take out a batsman's good performances, his average goes down.
It's like magic or sumfing.
always wondered how that worked so consistently...Area CW poster discovers that when you take out a batsman's good performances, his average goes down.
Yup, took me years to figure out that if you remove all of Bradman's runs from his stats, he averages zero.always wondered how that worked so consistently...
It's like magic or sumfing.
This topic always reminds me of a post Rusty made when Richard was trying to statistically argue that MacGill was terrible.Area CW poster discovers that when you take out a batsman's good performances, his average goes down.
I don't personally think that it will be too hard to replace Warne. If you take out all the innings where he took wickets, he didn't take a single wicket in the rest of the innings! And would have stats as follows
44 Matches
547.5 Overs
0 Wickets
1751 Runs
Australia were just lucky they had other players that could step up and handle this type of "baggage"....
Global Moderator discovers logical fallacies and ignoring relative strength of bowling attacks are a good way to post.Area CW poster discovers that when you take out a batsman's good performances, his average goes down.
And that reminds me of a stat Star Sports put up recently during an India-Pakistan encounter.This topic always reminds me of a post Rusty made when Richard was trying to statistically argue that MacGill was terrible.
In shocking news, it is harder to score runs against good bowling. Never would have guessed.Global Moderator discovers logical fallacies and ignoring relative strength of bowling attacks are a good way to post.
Used to be SA, but he fixed that later on in his career.Sachin has his lowest test average against Pakistan. That always gave me a great deal of satisfaction
It's not "good" bowling - it's "bowling that isn't completely bad"In shocking news, it is harder to score runs against good bowling. Never would have guessed.
If only there were a way to statistically combine performances against all attacks, both good and mediocre, in an easy-to-understand format.
We're not talking about the Aussie cricket team, we're talking about Smith.It's not "good" bowling - it's "bowling that isn't completely bad"
The West Indian bowling attack at the moment has no one averaging under 30 with the ball, and they're worse away from home, and they were served up the types of highways that make most batsmen look like geniuses
The Indian bowling attack outside of dusty India are arguably worse.
Do you really want to contend that? Even the Aussie cricket team indicate they're clueless against the moving delivery.
Who is also reasonably clueless against the moving delivery.We're not talking about the Aussie cricket team, we're talking about Smith.
As long as in 50 years on cricketweb when those future generations question his record, someone will be able pipe up and say.."he might have averaged 60, but my grandfather Athai says he was ****".I don't think he will play enough to the average to come down. So it will probably remain around 60 so future generations will have to dig a little and ask "Hey Pollock and Richards couldn't play more because of the apartheid, why didn't Voges play more?"
That's precisely why rating systems exist, to adjust big runs vs poor opposition in roads lower.Well it's pretty easy to see from Voges career he wasn't a particularly special bat, raw numbers get a lot of flak on here but his FC record still exists and big runs, not outs, roads and poor opposition have never been exactly something even the most noobie of statsguru aficionados ignores.
*insert jab at viriyas rating system in some way*
That may be true, but name one all-time batsman ratings system/methodology a consensus cricket fans agree on? I don't know of any.Rating systems generally only take into account the opposition, not the environment or conditions they batted within.
All of these factors are taken into account in proper rating systems.Rating systems generally only take into account the opposition, not the environment or conditions they batted within. They also don't have a tendency of rating hard runs ahead of easy runs, i.e a 4th innings knock in India on crumbling wickets against the Indian bowling attack should count for much more than a fair weather bullying of the West Indies on a Perth pitch.
I like my rating system, I tend to get things perfectly right.That may be true, but name one all-time batsman ratings system/methodology a consensus cricket fans agree on? I don't know of any.
Yet you/cricrate has Voges a clear #1 in Test cricket and #4 all time... go figure.All of these factors are taken into account in proper rating systems.
cricrate | Methodology - Test Batting