Days of Grace
International Captain
What weighting, though?
In my setup for Tests just comparing the runs and SR factors it's more like 10:1. 6:1 is too generous imo. Especially since era plays a big part in the SR a batsman has.Been rethinking my test bowling ratings recently. I can't decide whether to rate bowlers on a combination of bowling average/strike rate or strike rate/economy rate and what ratio to give each measure.
At the moment I am leaning towards a combination of strike-rate/economy rate with a weighting of 2:1 in favor of strike-rate. Conversely, I am thinking of it being 2:1 in favor of economy rate for ODI bowlers. Or would runs per wicket and strike-rate with a 2:1 weighting in favor of runs per wicket be better for test bowlers, since the main things we use to judge a bowler when looking at his stats are average and strike-rate?
Have I got the combination and ratio correct? I would appreciate any feedback.
In addition, how much more important is batting average than strike-rate in tests? At the moment I have it 6:1 in favor of average, but maybe I could give more weight to strike-rate?
tbh I think there hasn't been enough analysis on stuff like this. For example instead of a factor model I would really prefer to just come up with different variables and use ML methods to determine which variables matter most etc. The problem is it's unclear what the target variable should be. It can't just be the match result (win/draw/loss) because when you rate innings it's not just about that - there's a certain "je ne sais quoi" you're trying to capture especially when rating batting innings since how great an innings is mostly about how much people remember it.Do you guys face problems with the variables you use being strongly correlated with each other? Where even though it seems like you are measuring different attributes, you effectively end up just giving more weight to a single attribute?
Old school as ever - none of this six vodka nonsense - presumably you're on an uncovered wicket as well?Look I've had eight vodkas tonight. I can't do stats right now
Finished on ten, well five doubles anyway. Good start to a working week. Not.Old school as ever - none of this six vodka nonsense - presumably you're on an uncovered wicket as well?
The problem with this stat is that it punishes bowlers with good support like McGrath or Marshall. And Hadlee ends up as the best bowler.That's a top question and like all really good questions it does not have an easy answer - or a simple one. Without adding to the noise or getting into an argument let me say there is one which is very important but not often mentioned. . . .
Wickets per Test played.
I once did an exercise for comparing different statistical measures to rate bowlers. I took an eligibility criteria (say 100 Test wickets . . . it could well be 20 Test matches) and then ranked all the bowlers within that criteria in different lists by different criteria . . . I found myself most impressed with the way the list shaped up from top to bottom by the W/T criteria. Its not perfect but its very telling when comparing great bowlers with decent career lengths.
PS This may have been mentioned before in this thread. If so my apologies but I haven't read the whole thread
Exactly what I was about to say. Wickets per Test played depends far too much on the strength of the rest of your bowlers.The problem with this stat is that it punishes bowlers with good support like McGrath or Marshall. And Hadlee ends up as the best bowler.
I don't really agree with that. There seems to be a lot of bowlers that are quite expensive yet also take wickets more often, and vice versa.Also, obviously there tends to be a correlation between the two. If you're a good bowler you're probably going to take wickets AND be hard to score off. It's pretty rare for a bowler to take bags of wickets while simultaneously being easy to score off. Yet an economical bowler with a good average (i.e. a good bowler) will not have the best strike rate. An expensive bowler who also concedes more runs per wicket may nevertheless have the same strike rate but imo will be a clearly inferior bowler.
The more I think about it the more inclined I actually am to prefer e/r because being hard to score off is fundamentally the quality of a good bowler. But ultimately, it's just average that matters really and the rest is horses for courses, style of bowler for the situation etc.
I don't think that example really refutes my point. Malinga averaged 33 and Vaas 29 which is not a huge difference but not inconsequential either. To my mind it supports the point that Vaas was a generally better bowler and hence was both harder to score off and conceded less runs per wicket.I don't really agree with that. There seems to be a lot of bowlers that are quite expensive yet also take wickets more often, and vice versa.
example:
Malinga: SR: 51.5, Econ: 3.85
Vaas: SR. 66.6, Econ: 2.68
very different types of bowlers, which you would prefer depends on the make-up of your team, opposition etc.