Prince EWS
Global Moderator
Goddard is a really interesting cricketer. He was known as a batting allrounder but this methodology of mine has always surprised me by basically placing him as an all-time great bowler. I thought at first that he'd perhaps just managed to maintain a good average through being used at the right times by a good captain (especially since he was captain for part of his career ), but after I coded in a metric to weed out such players (it has for a while punished the bowling longevity of bowlers who didn't carry a full bowling workload) and he stayed put it made me more interested in his bowling, so I dug into it. He was absolutely used as a frontline bowler in their attack most of the time, but his average seems to have been maintained by being frugal as **** even when he wasn't penetrative. Super-accurate, boring, left arm medium pace. I don't really know how to rate such a bowler, honestly. In weak attacks he'd be less valuable than a strike bowler with a similar average, but in stronger attacks -- or even attacks that had two gun bowlers and two lesser ones -- he'd be great at mounting pressure and allowing the more penetrative specialist bowlers some rest without letting the game get away. In attacks where he'd have the fourth or fifth best average, you'd be better off with him than someone who progressed the game more when he was on. And ultimately, he did take his wickets -- all 123 -- at a very good average (both raw and standardised), while shouldering a full bowling workload, managed to bag five several times, and also opening the batting.I wouldn't have guessed Goddard would've been so high. Wally Hammond is a bit of a weird one in there as well.
I definitely think this ranking system overrates him by placing him ahead of Grimmett, Holding, Adcock etc, but I'm not quite sure where I do rate him as a bowler beyond that. I think in the context of a lot of attacks he would be better than bowlers who aren't that far below him on the list.
And yeah Hammond seems like a weird one too; I think it's caused a bit by the batting skew I mentioned in the post you quoted. It's saying he was the second best batsman of all time and that his bowling was the equivalent of Hadlee's or Benaud's batting, which I guess doesn't seem too far off.. but Hadlee's bowling should probably be rated the equal of Hammond's batting as well.
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