This but unironically.Better than Lillee imo.
So how would you defend this position?In all seriousness, averaging low-20s over the last two and a half-ish years, 28ish average under Kohli, has now got his career average below 34.
At worst, I reckon he's the fourth-best Indian quick of all time. I think Sharma > Srinath is a pretty defensible position, which would put him third. At best, he could end up surpassing Zaheer by the time he wraps up his career.
Gives you a top ten of Indian quicks along the lines of:
- Dev
- Zaheer
- Sharma
- Srinath
- Shami
- A Singh
- B Kumar
- M Nissar
- J Bumrah
- U Yadav
with the obvious expectation that Bumrah goes a lot higher.
I think that Ishant has shown himself to be a bit more well-rounded than Srinath ever was. Srinath far better at home, but Ishant's overall away record looks stronger to me. Srinath faded out by 30, so Ishant's gonna have him on longevity above and beyond just number of Tests. Srinath was probably more new ball reliant, given Ishant's shown himself to be valuable both upfront and at first change over the past few years.So how would you defend this position?
Not saying Ishant necessarily was, but if a player is costing their side games by being bad (not that you can often pin a loss directly on one player) for a while (be it before or after their peak), you've got to count that against them when evaluating their career. There's a distinction between pre/past a peak being just worse than their best, and pre/past a peak being actually a bit rubbish. I didn't pay much attention to Ishant's early career mind, so won't make an assessment on him either way.Ishant has had me thinking about how to value a player's peak versus their career as a whole while evaluating them.
Ishant in the last 5 years has 120 wickets at a good average. If that was taken as a career in isolation, I think it would rate higher in people's minds than Ishant's career as a whole. And that is weird to me. How can playing more cricket before or after the peak be a bad thing? Plus, when picking an ATG XI or similar hypotheticals, aren't we assuming a player at the peak of their powers?
If Ishant keeps this up for a few more years, and ends up with a 7 year stretch where he took 200 wickets at around 25, then I think he should be considered more or less on par with other quick bowlers that have similar numbers. Darren Gough, Alec Bedser, Trent Boult (if he retires tomorrow), Jason Gillespie, Merv Hughes. He will have also eclipsed Srinath and Zaheer.
Yeah the problem is Ishant was that 1. his pre-peak period was so long and 2. he genuinely was pretty bad during that period. Maybe it's a bit exaggerated but it still wasn't good.Not saying Ishant necessarily was, but if a player is costing their side games by being bad (not that you can often pin a loss directly on one player) for a while (be it before or after their peak), you've got to count that against them when evaluating their career. There's a distinction between pre/past a peak being just worse than their best, and pre/past a peak being actually a bit rubbish. I didn't pay much attention to Ishant's early career mind, so won't make an assessment on him either way.
Fwiw, I think my first sentence applies to your inconsistent types who often get branded 'matchwinners' - when they go badly, they're outright liabililties
I regularly hold this against him when he's compared to other players tbf.yea but Ishant doesn't choose to play himself in the team. He get's picked by the selectors. He's thrown out there and tries his best.Ryan Harris is remembered fondly for his exploits at Test level, but it's never held against him that he was too **** to even be picked for South Australia for the large majority of his career.
I get what you're saying and pretty much agree - I guess it depends of whether you're evaluating a career based purely on how good it ways in terms of raw effectiveness, or in terms of relative value to their side - for example, no-one suggests that any on Bangladesh's early Test Players were particularly good, but equally no-one holds it against them because of context - you can criticise a player's performance/part of their career in objective terms without holding it against them and being angry at them, if you get what I mean?yea but Ishant doesn't choose to play himself in the team. He get's picked by the selectors. He's thrown out there and tries his best.
If he is picked while he's terrible that isn't his fault, so I don't see why that's held against him (or any player, really). At least he was good enough to get selected, right? Ryan Harris is remembered fondly for his exploits at Test level, but it's never held against him that he was too **** to even be picked for Australia for the large majority of his career.
And like I said - in hypothetical ATG discussions we never evaluate players based on their bad days, nor do we speculate what it would be like if they were selected too soon or played on past their peak. Just because we know that Ishant was **** before he became good doesn't mean we then devalue all the work he did while he was good.