stephen
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
This doesn't work because he doesn't open the batting, which are the only directly comparable and simple stats to measure. An ODI innings is 300 balls. In today's game, he'd be lucky to get much of a bat batting at 6. In the 90s he faced a lot more balls than he would today.Just curious what is Bevan’s “adjusted” SR?
But to do the simplistic analysis, his adjusted average for the *90s* is 71.2 and his adjusted strike rate is 94. It's worth remembering that his 90s batting average was 60.
Yes, absolutely. If we're rating his overall record of 45 at 88 as being better than modern opening batsmen, then we have to assume he gets to inflate his stats by a sufficient margin to make that so.Are you really taking those adjusted average seriously . Do you really believe Tendulkar would strike @ 117 while averaging 57 in modern era ?
The fact is that openers have benefited from the modern game better than any other type of batsman mostly because when batting conditions get easier, they get to bat longer and more aggressively.
You can adjust the *openers* that way because *openers* have the same resources available every match. You can't do the same for anyone further down the order. The middle order in the modern game gets squeezed for balls because the top order spends longer at the crease.If you absolutely muuuuust do that kind of average era adjustment then you should do it properly and formulate it in terms of above-replacement level, i.e. how much better a certain player was than a generic "median" standard international of the same type in the same era. Not just percentage comparisons.
And the maths works out the same if you take the VAR. For example - in the 90s, Waugh averaged 37% higher than the average top 8 opener of the 90s. Today, averaging 37% more than the average opener gives him and adjusted average of 53.5.