My list was not made by them.But the number of people , who thinks Kallis is Flower to Sobers the Tendulkar are 260 times more than the number of people who thinks opposite.
Then you should not question others list as well.My list was not made by them.
Tests onlyI assume this is ranked on ability somehow? Purely for test? How are you deciding how good these guys are?
Another way of expressing this ,What is cons. final btw?
Lara just didn't maintain his excellence long enough. From start of 1998 to end of his career in 2007 he just averaged 36. Before that he was averaging 46-47 which in those days was very rare. At that stage, only Bevan had a higher average among his contemporaries I will guess.
Hyperbole but somewhat true regarding Pollock; not true regarding Kallis. He could easily hold his own or beat some of those guys.Tests only
Ability , achievements, stats ( except for Procter and Rice)
I think Clive Rice would have been a greater Cricketer than Kallis if played in international level.
Anyway , I will have Rice in my 2nd AT 11 above miller (just )
Kallis may be in 4th AT 11
1st 11
Gavaskar, Hutton, Bradman, Sachin, Lara , Sobers , Gilly, Procter, Hadlee, Akram , Murali
2nd 11
Hobbs, Barry, Viv, Hammond (or Pollock) Headley , Rice, Knott , Imran , Marshall, Warne , Lillee
Also , imagine any of other Great ARs ( Sobers , Procter, Hadlee, Imran , Kapil , Botham, Miller and Rice ) playing in the same team of Kallis or Pollock. They can easily overshadow Kallis and Pollock and become far bigger superstar. ( I know it's not a definitive measure of being greater Cricketer)
I was asked the question first lol.Then you should not question others list as well.
No , he just wanted to know the reason.I was asked the question first lol.
Kapil , Botham type of players can not be fully understood by stats. Chris Cairns stats looks better than Kapil's both in Batting and bowling , yet no one rates him close to Kapil.Ability is a bit subjective. I'm not sure what the difference between stats and achievements is. Pollock and kallis are stats beasts, kallis in particular.
I don't think rice would be so good. Its a big step up for his type of bowler to test level usually. Would be lcky to compete with the worst here.
I dont think you can compare botham to kallis or pollock unless looking at peak. If so, they pull even further ahead of dev. I cant see how you would rate him ahead of them. It's a tenuous enough argument in odis, but ok. In tests, how?
NahKapil's bowling just below ATG level.
I told the reasonNo , he just wanted to know the reason.
Ya, this is not remotely convincing compared to say pollock. If you wanted to compare peak 60 kapil would average a similar anount with bat and ball. Pollock would average nearly twice as much with the bat as the ball. If you want to remove the flat home wickets question and just look at away records, kapil averages mid 20s with the bat and mid 30s with the ball.. Bot good enough to make even the typical tesm. Pollock is an atg level bowler and a specialist quality bat. No comparison.Kapil , Botham type of players can not be fully understood by stats. Chris Cairns stats looks better than Kapil's both in Batting and bowling , yet no one rates him close to Kapil.
Kapil's bowling just below ATG level. His batting can threaten greatest of bowling line ups . Also he performed well against best opponents.
I rate Kallis and Pollock about the same. Entry level ATGs in primary skill. Useful in secondary skill. Botham and Kapil were slightly inferior in primary skill , but better in secondary skill.. and they were capable of destroying the opposition either by bat or by ball.
Talking about peaks ,
Botham as everyone know , was Bradman/ Sobers league in first half of his career.
Kapil , suffered by flat tracks and mediocre support , took 250 wickets in first 60 tests while being capable of hitting 100 plus Strike rate century against a bowling attack of Marshall , Holding , Garner and Roberts.
Strike rates consistently above 80 for batsmen is a thing that's only rally happened this century. In the 70s, 80s and 90s the pitches were far more bowling friendly. They weren't minefields but 220 was often a defensible total and chasing anything over 260 was difficult and 300 impossible.Strike Rates are very interesting. Old times!
And questioned his ranking difference between Kallis and Sobers.I told the reason
Yet Kapil remains a bigger great in cricket history than Pollock. Reasons ?Ya, this is not remotely convincing compared to say pollock. If you wanted to compare peak 60 kapil would average a similar anount with bat and ball. Pollock would average nearly twice as much with the bat as the ball. If you want to remove the flat home wickets question and just look at away records, kapil averages mid 20s with the bat and mid 30s with the ball.. Bot good enough to make even the typical tesm. Pollock is an atg level bowler and a specialist quality bat. No comparison.
And kallis is a better test player thsn pollock
Agree except probably the bolded part. It was more interesting in many ways, but one thing that has changed for the better IMO is how batsmen approach chasing big totals. In old days the nerves and tension were palpable. Batsmen didn't have a clue what to do. They often messed things up after a strong start too. This is one aspect where modern day batsmen are better than old timers and this has nothing to do with better bats, shorter boundaries, 2 new balls, more field restrictions etc.Strike rates consistently above 80 for batsmen is a thing that's only rally happened this century. In the 70s, 80s and 90s the pitches were far more bowling friendly. They weren't minefields but 220 was often a defensible total and chasing anything over 260 was difficult and 300 impossible.
And honestly the game was more interesting to watch. A single player could turn the course of a match with either bowling or batting. These days it's common for four batsmen to hit half centuries and one of them go on to the hundred.
I think modern captaincy is too conservative. Pack the cordon and force the batters to take risks by bowling wide outside off early in the innings and force them to drive. Snag early wickets and you'll chase a lot less runs.
It did help that there were half a dozen ATG bowlers running around in the 80s and 90s.
Thereby making it more interesting to watchIn old days the nerves and tension were palpable. Batsmen didn't have a clue what to do. They often messed things up after a strong start too.