Fuller Pilch
Hall of Fame Member
Well he did turn 47 in 1895The correct way of summoning him is to to say Grace was past it by 1895. Shrewsbury and then Ranji were comparably good.
Well he did turn 47 in 1895The correct way of summoning him is to to say Grace was past it by 1895. Shrewsbury and then Ranji were comparably good.
this is the one i remember, from @OverratedSanitygrace
the delta between him and his contemporaries was bradmanesque
there were some pretty good numbers run on it in a thread on this forum. hopefully someone else remembers the exact thread.
Pretty decent run from Grace here :
Absolutely ridiculous
Fair point. I thought about Barrington, but forgot about Ranji.Ranji's name missing in the options
Really? In sport that is the usual equation. Bocing has Ali and Robinson regarded as greatest because they are, according to most, the best.greatest ≠ best
WG was the greatest cricketer in possibly the only fair comparison you can make and that is the way he dominated his era and for the length of time he did it. Then add his substantial influence on the game. Might cast my vote for him now.I'm amazed that WG features so strongly in the voting. It's like voting on the best car ever and picking a Model T Ford ahead of a Ferrari.
In a few seasons, such as 1871 where Grace made 10 of the 17 centuries scored in the season.Wasn't Grace outscoring all of England in terms of centuries?
Greatest pretty much encompasses all of those things. I know absolutely nothing about boxing but Ali is surely an example of this, don't really get more iconic than him.Really? In sport that is the usual equation. Bocing has Ali and Robinson regarded as greatest because they are, according to most, the best.
In cricket I have always heard it has greatest = best.
Maybe you are thinking of most influential or iconic?
Grace wasn't fat when he was dominating the game in the late 1860s and 1870s though. Those iconic photos were all taken towards the end of his career when he was past his best. If you wondered what Grace looked like as a young man, take a look here:Grace was a fat hairy cheat, but he was the greatest cricketer.
Far ahead of his contemporaries and it’s said he was the second most recognisable person in the empire in his era.
I have no interest in boxing, but in pretty much any sport where the standard of play over time can be directly compared using purely objective measures such as recorded times and/or distances, the quality of play has improved since Ali and Robinson's generation and pretty much all the world records have been set in the last 30-40 years. So sure, Ali and Robinson may well be the most influential and iconic boxers ever, but it would go against all the objective evidence we have about the evolution of sport to claim a couple of boxers from 50-80 years ago actually reached the highest standards ever achieved in their sport and would beat every boxer from later generations.Really? In sport that is the usual equation. Bocing has Ali and Robinson regarded as greatest because they are, according to most, the best.
In cricket I have always heard it has greatest = best.
Maybe you are thinking of most influential or iconic?
Grace was at his very best from the mid 1860s until he started to gain weight in the late 1870s, but he remained one of the leading cricketers in the world for another couple of decades.The correct way of summoning him is to to say Grace was past it by 1895. Shrewsbury and then Ranji were comparably good.