flibbertyjibber
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One thing you can give Cronje credit for there getting him out 5 times. Never thought I would say that again about that cheating scumbag.
The 146 in Cape Town is one of my favourite innings by Sachin. Brilliant cricket all around.Yeah, I don't think I've seen another player play Steyn so well. Maybe Clarke. But in those two back to back series in 2010, Steyn was bowling at video game levels of brilliance and Tendulkar still managed 4 tons.
Thing about Tendulkar is that his career was so vast, you would end up thinking that he played his "most memorable knocks against X" where X is any team you are focusing on.169 in Cape Town would be personal favorite..
155 against the same team probably was his most dazzling display of stoke play I can remember (those boundaries at third man!)
He sure did play some of his most memorable knocks against SA..
His half-century against Australia in Mumbai 2001 was also memorable for the stroke play.169 in Cape Town would be personal favorite..
155 against the same team probably was his most dazzling display of stoke play I can remember (those boundaries at third man!)
He sure did play some of his most memorable knocks against SA..
Sachin might have avg:ed 33 from those inns vs AUS where Mcgrath too was an opponent bowler. This is not difficult to trace out from cricinfo site. But here some 'Charles' guy is seen having head-head record of Sachin vs each bowler. Almost unbelievable.To be frank can't believe it to be true.Sachin' head to head vs McGrath is not believable. I remember crincinfo published a numbers game after McGrath's retirement which showed that Sachin averaged 33 against McGrath. Lara's average was similiar to Sachin's.
His partnership with Azhar in that '96 Cape Town match is one of my favourite childhood memories. Every time Donald strayed on his pads, he'd effortlessly clip it to the square leg boundary. Practised that shot so many times pretending to be Sachin, throwing the ball at the wall and trying to copy it.Crapinfo does not do proper batsman vs bowler figures though.
BTW, speaking of SAchin's knocks, I do think his efforts against Australia and RSA stand out more than his other test knocks. Esp. against RSA it always seemed as if every time he went big it was more of a stroke filled effort, except an amazing defensive (I think solo, as well) effort against Steyn at his best in 2010. For instance, he hardly ever played any stroke filled genius knocks against England or New Zealand. They were the more solid efforts in his career but when it comes to capturing the imagination, his knocks against RSA somehow do stand out. And funnily enough, against Australia, he seemed to have played a number of both types of knocks.
I still believe you can rely on Davis, and no one else does the sort of stat work he does, but, and to contradict an earlier post , he makes the occasional error. In the Tendu set he didn't count a dismissal by Donald which would take his ave against that bowler down to 34 from memory. Still pretty impressive to be averaging that against someone like Donald.
Went back and checked.. Under both instances, number of dismissal is correct: 5 and 3 respectivelywhat not Afridi getting out Sachin 3 times in tests as per the list.Can't get more incorrect than this.
Yeh, remarkable to think his career started with Sidhu, Azhurradin, Prabhaker and Kapil; and ended with Pujara, Kohli, Dhoni and Ashwin.Thing about Tendulkar is that his career was so vast, you would end up thinking that he played his "most memorable knocks against X" where X is any team you are focusing on.
In his debut series he played against Imran who debuted in 1971. He also debuted when all the 4 great all rounders and Viv were playing.Yeh, remarkable to think his career started with Sidhu, Azhurradin, Prabhaker and Kapil; and ended with Pujara, Kohli, Dhoni and Ashwin.
That his career started in the year Australia thrashed England in the 1989 Ashes. That he debuted in the same year as Mark Taylor and Mike Atherton.
And that he's still only 43 years old.
That's true. I posted before looking. Davis has updated his records id say.Went back and checked.. Under both instances, number of dismissal is correct: 5 and 3 respectively
Yes, if you see those numbers in OP his poor record against Broad, Anderson and Mcgrath indicates that he's vulnerable to ball coming back into him.define useless
I think they're worth something with context. Can reveal a batsman's preferences in styles of bowling, and a breakdown of how they score the runs against each bowler can reveal which ones they preferred to attack and which ones they just wanted to get off strike to.
That average of 33 is probably his combined performances in ODIs and Tests vs Mcgrath.Sachin' head to head vs McGrath is not believable. I remember crincinfo published a numbers game after McGrath's retirement which showed that Sachin averaged 33 against McGrath. Lara's average was similiar to Sachin's.
Tendulkar comes from traditional Bombay school of batsmanship - strong backfoot players and playing shots with a straight bat. What separates him from the likes of Gavaskar, Manjrekar or Rahane is that he was more free flowing in his strokeplay. It's probably because of this why he relishes bouncier pitches more than soft pitches of England.Crapinfo does not do proper batsman vs bowler figures though.
BTW, speaking of SAchin's knocks, I do think his efforts against Australia and RSA stand out more than his other test knocks. Esp. against RSA it always seemed as if every time he went big it was more of a stroke filled effort, except an amazing defensive (I think solo, as well) effort against Steyn at his best in 2010. For instance, he hardly ever played any stroke filled genius knocks against England or New Zealand. They were the more solid efforts in his career but when it comes to capturing the imagination, his knocks against RSA somehow do stand out. And funnily enough, against Australia, he seemed to have played a number of both types of knocks.