Fuller Pilch
Hall of Fame Member
Also considering his monster SS scores on the same pitchesGiven the way Aussie pitches behaved in the 30's I'm very surprised Ponsford's H/A gap is that large.
Also considering his monster SS scores on the same pitchesGiven the way Aussie pitches behaved in the 30's I'm very surprised Ponsford's H/A gap is that large.
Good points Geoffrey.So your main point of agreement is boycott ducked Lillee& thomo and the West Indies in 76? Did boycott have special powers (other than being englands greatest opener since 1970) by knowing who Jeff Thompson was? How did he know Lillee would be in prime form after a broken back? He also made plenty of runs against Lillee and Thompson in his career anyway. As for the West Indies in 1976 once again nobody really knew how hostile they were. He made a hundred in the Port of Spain in 1973. Look at him playing Marshall garner holding Croft in England in 1980 and the Caribbean in 1981. True brilliance from a 40 year old man. Perhaps never matched against that attack when they were prime like in 81. Your argument is terrible, not mine. I know my opening batsmen.
Good points Geoffrey.
Sorry Geoffrey, but you played all of one match against an attack with both Lillee and Thomson, and were out for no score in the first innings. Furthermore, if you had batted faster than 34.73, you might have been able to get that second-innings century rather than being stranded on 99 not out.He also made plenty of runs against Lillee and Thompson in his career anyway.
No-one, apart from me, has made a Boycott/Lawry comparison and I mentioned them in the same breath as they both were resolute when it come to their attitude to batting - neither cared for overly flamboyant stroke play.Keep trying to compare him with bill Lawry
I've never compared the two (till this post); of course in your posting, 'you' seems to mean every other poster without differentiation.“Geoffrey” made 3 tons against Dennis Lillee and 2 against Jeff Thompson in his career. Unfortunately for you that is FACT.
Your efforts in devaluing boycotts career are going very badly for you. Keep trying to compare him with bill Lawry and see how that gos for you. And by the way I like Bill Lawry but boycott is streets ahead. The attacks boycott faced are some of the best ever. Bill not quite so.
Ps I’ve done you again haven’t I?
No-one, apart from me, has made a Boycott/Lawry comparison and I mentioned them in the same breath as they both were resolute when it come to their attitude to batting - neither cared for overly flamboyant stroke play.
By all means defend Boycott's record but forget how I brought Boycott and Lawry up as a comparison - it was about attitude and application, not about performance and ability.
Every highly rated batsman in history has scored hundreds against strong attacks, except of course Gavaskar.Lawry made hundreds against very strong attacks. Here's one against Trueman, Statham and Lock, in England:
https://www.espncricinfo.com/series...ralia-2nd-test-australia-tour-of-england-1961
And another against Statham and Trueman in England:
https://www.espncricinfo.com/series...ralia-4th-test-australia-tour-of-england-1961
Another against a P Pollock lead South Africa:
https://www.espncricinfo.com/series...d-test-south-africa-tour-of-australia-1963-64
A double ton against Hall, Griffith, Sobers and Gibbs:
https://www.espncricinfo.com/series...th-test-australia-tour-of-west-indies-1964-65
One against Snow and Underwood in England:
https://www.espncricinfo.com/series...ralia-5th-test-australia-tour-of-england-1968
And his final test hundred against the same West Indian attack as the earlier link:
https://www.espncricinfo.com/series...th-test-west-indies-tour-of-australia-1968-69
Bill Lawry faced attacks at least as good as Boycott and scored big runs against them.
Bish, pls. Did you miss the ****ing 1980s?You’ve missed the point. I brought up the 73 ton in West Indies to prove the point that boycott wasn’t ducking the West Indies quicks when he removed himself in 74. Why would he have? Boycott was one of the bravest bats of all time. Only seen Steve Waugh tougher to be honest.
England First was implying that Lawry never faced strong attacks, unlike Boycott. Just some evidence to the contrary.Every highly rated batsman in history has scored hundreds against strong attacks, except of course Gavaskar.
You don't know **** from clay mate.So your main point of agreement is boycott ducked Lillee& thomo and the West Indies in 76? Did boycott have special powers (other than being englands greatest opener since 1970) by knowing who Jeff Thompson was? How did he know Lillee would be in prime form after a broken back? He also made plenty of runs against Lillee and Thompson in his career anyway. As for the West Indies in 1976 once again nobody really knew how hostile they were. He made a hundred in the Port of Spain in 1973. Look at him playing Marshall garner holding Croft in England in 1980 and the Caribbean in 1981. True brilliance from a 40 year old man. Perhaps never matched against that attack when they were prime like in 81. Your argument is terrible, not mine. I know my opening batsmen.
Y so defensive?Every highly rated batsman in history has scored hundreds against strong attacks, except of course Gavaskar.
It is interesting to see Stephen bringing up the good knocks every time we speak of an Aussie cricketer (Lawry in this case or Hayden in the other forum), but chooses to focus on the easier series which batsmen from other countries had(for instance 1971 series for Gavaskar).Y so defensive?