Am shocked.For all the talk on Barrington, it is easy to forget that Wisden actually ranked him #7 in their all time top 10 in 2002. The list:
1. Don Bradman
2. Sachin Tendulkar
3. Viv Richards
4. Garry Sobers
5. Allan Border
6. Jack Hobbs
7. Ken Barrington
8. Sunil Gavaskar
9. Greg Chappell
10. Brian Lara
dont know about that. but it was the first of its kind and we now know it is just one such analysis by ananth narayanan who has published scores of such lists and rankings since. because this was the first list produced by wisden (by one statistician) it got all the attention. not saying it is a bad list. but a few variations in the arbitrary parameters would produce a different ranking for sure. this was a good coffee table conversation starter... but why not? coz nothing can be definitive in this topic anyways.I thought that entire Wisden list was an apology for Sachin not featuring in the top 100 knocks list?
Nah, Tendulkar was averaging 59 at that time with a buckload of runs. Had to finish in the top 5 regardless of method.Its not that. I felt the parameters were almost set up a certain way to ensure certain ratings. I would not have had this opinion had this come out first and then the top 100 innings list. But I definitely remember the innings list came out first, there was absolute hue and cry even in the pre-twitter days ( or at least the days it was not this popular) and within a few months they came up with this criteria and this list.
Smith can and certainly has been contained at times (see his last two outings vs RSA and NZ recently). Bradman is just a myth afaic....jk of course but seriously.....99.94!!Sobers traveled to the Chessington Cricket Club, my local cricket club in England, about 8 or 9 years ago. Someone had arranged for him to chat with the young players there, all little boys who had no idea who he was. He spent hours talking to everyone, and I always thought it was very gracious of him to spend time with such an in-the-middle-of-nowhere club, and with such a lowly group of cricket fans.
Bradman's stats don't make sense to me. I just tend to ignore them and put them in their own little subcategory.
Smith is confusing as well. I imagine a Black Swan/Showgirls styled jealous vendetta (between him and Labuschagne) being the only thing than can stop his further rise.
From Narayanan? Never!Its not that. I felt the parameters were almost set up a certain way to ensure certain ratings.
From Narayanan? Never!
Border's high ranking (above Hobbs) seems strange too. Nevertheless as the original poster pointed out Barrington being in the top 10 in that list too, proves his high ranking in DoG's list wasn't an anomaly.Side effect of the parameter setting being what it was. Won't rule out if that was somewhat intentional too, given how worshipped he is by the next genreation of fans as well as players.
How Viv Richards finished at #3 was also interesting. Left behind Hobbs, Sobers and a host of others. In purely statistical exercises, he generally doesn't finish that high.
Viv Richards being in the top 10 in DoG's current list as well as DoG's previous list (as well as most other lists) surprises me as well. Stats were more like "side-effect" for him, rather than the primary goal (which was domination).
He rarely stuck around once he thought he made his statement, and given the bowling attack his side had at the time, he could usually afford to do that.
Yes, but I was talking about Test cricket. ODI is another ball game. Yes, Viv was overconfident in that WC Final innings, and paid for it.Scoring 32 runs off 28 balls with seven boundaries when the target was 183 in 60 overs in a World Cup final was foolish.
Being dominating is good. But not always.
Viv had the benefit of playing for a very strong WI team. Maybe that’s why his great innings are more remembered while his failures are rarely spoken about since WI would have won the match anyway.Yes, but I was talking about Test cricket. ODI is another ball game. Yes, Viv was overconfident in that WC Final innings, and paid for it.