Partnerships work best when batsmen complement each other, rather than mirror each other.I think the most important factor that should be considered when picking an all-time XI is picking the best players (and the best balance) who performed in adverse circumstances and not the ones with the best stats i.e players who 'rose to the occasion' or relished a great challenge should be rated more highly in this case than say more consistent but less dominant on the big state type of players. That makes Hobbs and Hutton a certainty. Bradman played the greatest innings of all time, that 270. Viv gets in based on his WC final century (an ODI, yes but it should count because of all the pressure). The #4 spot becomes more and more contentious then. Sachin has all the aggregates and a fine technique but thinking of the toughness of the level we're talking about, the difference between him and Lara, Greg Chappell and others becomes less eminent, especially considering they were superior fielders. The idea of having Vic Trumper in the middle order seems attracting too. So my question is this, should Sachin be a certainty at 4 in your opinion like the preceding 3 are? Why or why not?
Haha yeah it's sort of the litmus test for Tendulkar critics as to whether someone has a coherent cricket philosophy that Tendulkar's Test game just didn't fit into, or if they're just a biased contrarian who didn't like the fact that he was overhyped.I think many reasonable arguments and selections can be made over Sachin in a Test ATG side, but there's no way he can be excluded from any ODI side.
What’s his average when McWarne were part of the Aussie attack?Well ya know, Sachin averaged 55 over 39 matches against Australia throughout his career, so possibly not the best player to make that argument against.
Tendulkar made mine with Amla, but if someone wants an opening combo Watson/Gilly/Jayasuriya/de Kock for things besides just team batting, such as additional bowling or wicket keeping, Tendulkar is in jeopardy.I think many reasonable arguments and selections can be made over Sachin in a Test ATG side, but there's no way he can be excluded from any ODI side.
53 in tests involving either of them, 42 in tests involving both (2 centuries over 7 matches).What’s his average when McWarne were part of the Aussie attack?
Who doesn't average big in Australia, though?I would prefer to pick Lara based on cricket as a spectator sport, but you can't argue with the fact that Sachin is the most adaptable batsman in the history of the game.
His average against any opponent OR in any conditions never dipped below 40.
He averaged 55 against McGrath/Warne all thru their prime, and managed 53 against them IN Australia.
Warne averages better away from Australia than at home in career.I dont think you're a troll or a contrarian at all. It's not really about Australia, it's about McGrath/Warne.
If you average 53 playing against (arguably) the best quick of all time and/or (arguably) the best spinner of all time, in their home country, it's worth noting.
Although I may have been corrected in that it drops a bit when BOTH have played against him, but yeh, my point was he was very good against clear ATG opponents.
All good. Wasim and Waqar were probably worse terrors in NZ than Pakistan* :PYeh, as I said, it's not about being IN Australia, it's about facing a couple of full legit ATGs in their home environment.
I'd say the same if it was Marshall and Garner in the WIs or Wasim and Waqar in Pakistan that he was facing, same deal.
A lot of people actually, especially visitors. When the Aus team has been full of low-to-mid-20s averaging bowlers, which it was during most of Tendulkar's career, then clearly a lot of visiting batsmen are having hard times on tour. Cbf getting the stats up but if there isn't plenty more specialist batsmen averaging sub-30 than those averaging 55+ in that time then I'll eat my hatWho doesn't average big in Australia, though?
Dude, I gave you the url to every single batsmen who has ever batted in Australia already. It was right below below the sentence you quoted. Literally (as in really).A lot of people actually, especially visitors. When the Aus team has been full of low-to-mid-20s averaging bowlers, which it was during most of Tendulkar's career, then clearly a lot of visiting batsmen are having hard times on tour. Cbf getting the stats up but if there isn't plenty more specialist batsmen averaging sub-30 than those averaging 55+ in that time then I'll eat my hat
Well you know what Martin Crowe said about death, taxes and runs in AdelaideLara has a terrible average in Australia bar Adelaide which is a slow pitch. The bouncy tracks like Perth and MCG make his average dip to 26-27 ish.
wtf?Dude, I gave you the url to every single batsmen who has ever batted in Australia already. Tt was right below below the sentence you quoted. Literally (as in really).
Here I will post it again.
Batting records | Test matches | Cricinfo Statsguru | ESPNcricinfo
Please do me the respect of reading my posts in full (and previous) before replying to me. I seriously think it will prevent some if not many of our miscommunications.