Add in his bowling and surely he's top 3 behind Bradman and Sobers?Or it a more a case that here he's been pitted against the greatest bats of all time in an exercise that doesn't factor his 300 test wickets?
Add his bowling and there's a good argument he gets in the top 5 out of this lot in terms of greatest cricketers.
ImranAdd in his bowling and surely he's top 3 behind Bradman and Sobers?
As well as his catching - surely top 3.Add in his bowling and surely he's top 3 behind Bradman and Sobers?
Mr Sutcliffe was/is not considered among the very greatest batsmen despite considerable statistical evidence to the contrary, but personally I think your reasoning above is nonsense.His last name not beginning with H probably contributed just a teeny bit in his legacy not being as strong as the other 3 great english bats of the inter-war era amongst cricket tragics
He did refer to "out of this lot" iirc Imran isn't on this list.Imran
Neither is BradmanHe did refer to "out of this lot" iirc Imran isn't on this list.
You could apply a lot of that to Steve Smith.Mr Sutcliffe was/is not considered among the very greatest batsmen despite considerable statistical evidence to the contrary, but personally I think your reasoning above is nonsense.
Sutcliffe was hardly the most elegant or exciting player in history. A steady accumulator with great patience and a watertight defence, he made copious use of an angled bat and seldom played in the region between point and mid-on — the strokes of grace and grandeur that elevated cricket to visual delight and stimulated poetic paeans from the likes of Neville Cardus. He played in possibly the highest scoring era ever with very few all time great fast bowlers, made extensive use of his pads at a time when the ball had to pitch in line with the stumps in order for an LBW to be given, and never made any gargantuan scores in Tests.
Which kind of proves my point, because he probably also isn't rated as highly as the stats suggest he should be.You could apply a lot of that to Steve Smith.
No. He was dismissed LBW in a home test quite a few times.
lbw JR Ratnayeke 40 2 v Sri Lanka Sialkot 27 Oct 1985 Test # 1027
lbw ALF de Mel 63 2 v Sri Lanka Karachi 7 Nov 1985 Test # 1028
lbw JE Emburey 4 2 v England Karachi 16 Dec 1987 Test # 1086
lbw BA Reid 107 3 v Australia Faisalabad 23 Sep 1988 Test # 1105
lbw M Prabhakar 13 2 v India Faisalabad 23 Nov 1989 Test # 1128
lbw DK Morrison 27 2 v New Zealand Karachi 10 Oct 1990 Test # 1151
lbw EA Brandes 70 1 v Zimbabwe Karachi 1 Dec 1993 Test # 1237
lbw DH Brain 31 1 v Zimbabwe Lahore 16 Dec 1993 Test # 1241
ok, thanks for that - don't know where I got that piece of non-information from...
I was surprised there were so many so had a look at these scorecards - didn't go beyond that though I hasten to add - but it does look like on all bar two of those occasions the Pakistanis were either on their way to victory or a draw was almost certain and whichever way you cut it the home side were not going to be in any difficulty with Javed back in the pavilion - the two exceptions are the Emburey and Brain ones where, in neither case, was the game sufficiently far advanced to reach that conclusion at the time of the decision, but in neither match did Pakistan ever get into difficultyThink it was a bit of an urban myth going around about him in the 80s and 90s.
Only out by a generation though - the genes were the right onesLol. My bad. Will edit that later
According to Charles Davis's stats, he (Sutcliffe) and Bradman have the longest average innings in Tests (164 balls per dismissal).he maybe had more stamina and patience than anyone bar Bradman.
AB actually got two Test double tons - there was also the 200 not out in England in '93.#16
Allan Border (251 points) FC average of 51.38, FC H.S of 205, 70 FC centuries
A short stocky frame and a shot repertoire consisting mainly of swipes across the line and the odd slash through point, Border will take no prizes for aesthetics. But his grit and determination and his ability to score runs in all conditions must have counted heavily in his favour when the lists were submitted. He averaged over 50 in England, West Indies and India in an insanely tough time for travelling cricketers. Border only scored one test double century, which was also his highest ever first class score, and his 50s to 100 conversion rate wasn't pretty, but the amount of important fifties he scored when his side was in dire straits is commendable. Constantly having to dig his side out of a hole after blokes like Greg Ritchie failed is a tough ask. He was also the first player to crack 150 tests, so his career longevity was also unheard of at the time. And averaging over 50 against some of the bowlers he faced is a true achievement.