Arachnodouche
International Captain
Always thought Thorpe was a very elegant batsman and cricketer in general. He played some of the greatest spinners and quick bowlers of all time, and acquitted himself quite well.
If KP had been born 10 years earlier he would have been playing for south africaThorpey is probably my favourite England cricketer, so I'm unashamedly biased.
Pietersen had the higher ceiling, I don't think too many would demur from that, but Thorpe wasn't just a Collingwoodesque grinder (which sounds like the worst niche gay dating app ever), he really could play too.
As Cozza suggests earlier, there was a completely false dichotomy between them at the start of the 2005 Ashes and, although obviously, yay we won, it's pretty hard to imagine Graham wouldn't have contributed more to the cause than Ding Dong Bell in doing so. I've still haven't forgiven Fletcher for that call and will never be convinced he didn't crap the bed.
I'll just float this out: if Thorpe had been born ten years later and surrounded by a better class of batting conferes there's a very strong case this career would've been even more impressive than it was as he'd have had more shoulders to help carry that burden.
However if KP had been born ten years earlier and had to endure the schissershow that was 90s English cricket, given his temperament and fondness for a flounce, could one really imagine he'd have had the career he did with less sympathetic handling?
I mean, Thorpe once cried off a tour because his missus was diddling her tennis coach and he was decried by the ever understanding gentlemen (it's invariably gentlemen) of the fourth estate as a softmember. If a ****old's horns and the death throes of a marriage weren't considered reasonable grounds, KP's (comparatively) piddling concerns would've been laughed out of Fleet Street.
It wasn't all peeled grapes and pedicures in Pietersen's time, but he was generally treated with a lot more understanding than Thorpey was.
An ability to score the runs he did opening the batting can only be down to talent. If that's not talent then Flem really was right all those years ago that there's no such thing.Cook wasn't crazy talented. Didn't have the eye or the technique for that to be said.
Better test match batsman? One from a prolonged period of being ****e for England and the other from a brief stay at the top.
Talented, yes. Crazily talented, no. Has to be a difference between him and someone like ABdV who was crazily talented.An ability to score the runs he did opening the batting can only be down to talent. If that's not talent then Flem really was right all those years ago that there's no such thing.
Why? To succeed as he did, at the top of a sport, from the age of 21 is impossible without absolute excesses of talent. Unless the word means something different to its definition.Talented, yes. Crazily talented, no. Has to be a difference between him and someone like ABdV who was crazily talented.
Not necessarily - Dravid was immensely talented, just not as talented as Sachin, and the same would probably apply even if their S/Rs were reversed in tests. Root doesn't have a crazy S/R, and is generally considered immensley talented but also a disappointment. It's 'relative' talent isn't it? Cook was, IMO, less talented than Pietersen.Was he really less talented or was he just a bit weird looking shot maker? He made an immediate impact as a young lad. Classic high SR = talented logic.
Of course Cook is ALSO 'talented' - but we aren't saying one is talented and the other isn't. We are saying one is MORE talented than the other which is of course not quantifiable at all (which makes it an argument based on fandom more than anything else).as usual i was correct to question the correlation between strike rate/style/fandom and 'talent' back in the day but unless we get cook in a time machine for the reflex test i've seen mentioned by chris martin (comparing his not good scores to brendon mccullum) i guess we'll never know.
opening the batting is one of the three hardest jobs in cricket, probably the hardest, so to be really good at it from an age where most future test batsmen are still getting to grips with first class cricket shows cook had something in spades.
yes, correct, you cannot measure it and therefore cannot compare across batsmen (bowlers have more obvious signs of talent - the ability to bowl 150kph is extremely rare) so attempts to use it as a factor in selection is fruitless and plauged the biases of the observer. when selecting from the first class level, results, mental game and technique are the only things that matter.'talent' is unquantifiable
Okay cool, argumatronic. Cook was crazy talented.Why? To succeed as he did, at the top of a sport, from the age of 21 is impossible without absolute excesses of talent. Unless the word means something different to its definition.
great shout.Looking at home in international cricket from a very young age is a clear mark (but not the only one) of serious natural ability. Talent isn't just shot making.
This sums it up rather well. Thorpe my favourite England bat of the 90's by a long way.KP was a rare genius and a better batsman than Thorpe, but also a king sized prat.
Two As and Two Bs, man... He will from now be the BABA of CW.Okay cool, argumatronic. Cook was crazy talented.