Whether there are more ATG finishers or openers doesn't really matter that much since you only need to pick two and one for an ATG XI respectively.Yeah QdK is a good option if you can't have Gilly and same with Buttler for MSD. In future, who knows, they may even go on to be better than Gilly and MSD were in their respective roles.
But to me, MSD > Gilly simply because there are lesser great finishers than great openers in ODIs and it is the more difficult job of the two. And it helps he is also an ATG captain. As I pointed out earlier, MSD is one of the ATGs of ODIs, I don't think Gilly gets in that top most bracket. He is a tier down and that means, unless you go for someone like AB and ask him to keep, MSD is just an obvious choice in an ATG ODI side.
imran was the better player but flintoff took his wickets in odis quicker than imran and gough. flintoff is one of the all time elite death bowlers. a guy with his mixture of accuracy, pace and the awkward height he released the ball from must have been an absolute nightmare to try and hit out against.Can't recall both of them being too similar (just basing it off memory).
Imran was the main strike bowler and spearhead for the team, while Flintoff was more of a containment and "keep em tidy" type of a bowler, as opposed to someone like Darren Gough who would be the main strike bowler (and the best bowler in the team).
Both batted in the middle order, yes, but not sure how similar their roles in the team were. Would probably have to look at Flintoff's career again to remind myself.
pls remember that performances in world cups only count when it suits your argument. if it makes your position awkward then the sample size is simply too small.Dhoni's not definitively ahead of Gilchrist in an all time XI, but it's got nothing to do with WC finals. For all the good Gilchrist did in the finals he wouldn't have played in them if he wasn't carried there by his team.
Besides it's just too small a sample size unless you're Burgey.
You need two finishers and only one opener? ISTSL.Whether there are more ATG finishers or openers doesn't really matter that much since you only need to pick two and one for an ATG XI respectively.
If you use it for an argument to say MSD > Gilly as an ODI player then yeah sure.
But anyways this has all been done to death before. We should focus on the bigger things here, like the awful lowercase 'd' in the thread title.
And Odl."Off all time" is worse
Comparing across eras it tough, and I dont know much about early odis. Still though, I suspect Pollock deserves to be rated ahead as a bowler, before we even bring batting into it.Most great all rounders have different roles especially if we're separating WKs by batting position. Only Hadlee among those has a comparale role to Pollock but unfortunately he played too early to really tell how good he was. Imran was more comparable to Flintoff. Kapil could be replaced by Cairns or Faulkner.
Performances in world cups matter, but then going further to narrow it down to a handful of games is dubious tstl.pls remember that performances in world cups only count when it suits your argument. if it makes your position awkward then the sample size is simply too small.
I will give it a try.I'm interested in Dhoni vs Gilchrist discussion. But I don't care about fictitious ATG XI of which we have had lot of discussions already.
If you list down 25 greatest ODI cricketers, who would be ahead between the 2?
It has to be Jayasuriya?
Gilchrist and Jayasuriya are worthy contenders there. Gilly excelled in two disciplines, Jayasuriya in all including captaincy.Comparing across disciplines is hard. He's arguably the best keeper-bat, finisher and captain in ODIs so top 10 for sure.
In no particular order:
Viv, Sachin, Akram, Murali, McGrath, Garner, Bevan، De Villiers, Dhoni, Kohli
Probably
No.It has to be Jayasuriya?