Line and Length
Cricketer Of The Year
I had the same reaction to hb's comment on PFK's posting.I didn’t read the rest of your post. It was just that bit in isolation that had me gasping for air.
I had the same reaction to hb's comment on PFK's posting.I didn’t read the rest of your post. It was just that bit in isolation that had me gasping for air.
If you reduce their careers to the above numbers then the two players might look similar on paper, but those numbers miss some very important context. Compton was a prodigy of the game, debuting in Tests as a teenager and I believe still remains the youngest England player to score a Test century. That he was only able to play relatively few Tests before he turned 28 was due to the not insignificant matter of a World War.Don't forget, Compton was not quite 39 when he played his last test; Barrington was a way off 38, so they finished at similar enough ages. Both played the majority of their test cricket later on: 70 matches after the age of 28 or so for Compton, 80 matches after the age of 28 for Barrington.
Suddenly, they look very similar in terms of career timing.
I'm not meaning to spend time putting Compton down (though clearly that hasn't stopped the other side of the equation doing likewise), but none of that means anything. To play this exercise, i'll note that debuting in tests as a teenager is not necessarily a reliable guide to quality over a whole career, and you could say he played his first five tests against teams with only one quality bowler each, for example. Fact is that if late-career decline is an excuse for lopping part off Compton's career in order to make comparisons, they both played the vast majority of their tests over the same span of age.If you reduce their careers to the above numbers then the two players might look similar on paper, but those numbers miss some very important context. Compton was a prodigy of the game, debuting in Tests as a teenager and I believe still remains the youngest England player to score a Test century. That he was only able to play relatively few Tests before he turned 28 was due to the not insignificant matter of a World War.
Barrington developed into a great batsmen relatively late. He was less than a year younger than Peter May but didn't break into the Test side as a regular until about 8 years later than May did. He had a good but not exceptional first class career prior to that. That he played most of his Tests after the age of 28 reflects the fact that that it wasn't until around then that he got really good.
How you account for the prime years some cricketers lost to wars is up to you, but I do think it's fair to say that Compton was a world class player for far longer than Barrington was.
Lindwall and Miller were 25 and 26 respectively when they made their test debuts, so probably lost several years to WWII as well.
Compton averaged 42.84 when one or the other or both of those two were playing.
Exactly.I love how the English sip their wine and go "we should judge players on their overall careers" and then pull off stunts like WG GRACE BEST CRICKETER OMG BECAUSE HE PLAYED TILL 50 SO STATS AFFECTED OTHERWISE CHECK HOW HE WAS WHEN HE WAS 35"
That was an example, he already did enough to be ranked 2nd greatest to Bradman with his first 15 years. Which is a reasonable career length. You can not take it back, he achieved it already.That's the context of the conversation, and you know it. See the first paragraph of your previous comment.
Why? How good a player is is based on how well they—y'know—perform, and if they have a period where they do badly, that needs to be counted in as well. You can't judge to an ideal 'everything going well', otherwise you just end saying something that is on the same level of argument as 'they'd have averaged over 100 if you removed all their scores of 99 or below.'
Neither. False dichotomy, false choice, etc. That he batted like bilge for the second half of his career can't be discounted just because you don't like it, which is basically what your argument is. Also, where do you draw the line? What about a 29 year career? 28? 25? 23? 20? 19? 16? 14? 11? 9? 7? 5? 2? 'Oh, they did better earlier on, must be late career decline', 'later' being two tests later perhaps.
You are doing the converse, punishing players who don't play some arbitrary length of time, not that you are perceptive enough to see that. And you are also begging the question with late career decline: some have declined more than others, statistically some might be able to hold their own. For all you know, Barrington might have had a sound enough technique to keep going at a similar level for another few years.
Futhermore, what is a 'similar career'? In this case, whatever satifies @Pap Finn Keighl's predetermined notions: two careers will be similar when he likes the outcome, and not similar enough when he doesn't.
Slcing and dicing careers to make a point about someone's career as a whole is a thoroughly dishonest exercise.
Likewise, I'm not trying to downplay Barrington. I've not even answered the OP which is definitely a close enough call to warrant discussion: they are both undeniable England greats. My point was that when you compare the full arc of these guys' careers, there is a clear longevity argument for Compton and I don't think it is outrageous of someone to not hold it against Compton that he wasn't as good after the age of 37 given most batsmen have retired from Tests before then. That seems a very reasonable thing to take into account for any batsman who played on so late.I'm not meaning to spend time putting Compton down (though clearly that hasn't stopped the other side of the equation doing likewise), but none of that means anything. To play this exercise, i'll note that debuting in tests as a teenager is not necessarily a reliable guide to quality over a whole career, and you could say he played his first five tests against teams with only one quality bowler each, for example. Fact is that if late-career decline is an excuse for lopping part off Compton's career in order to make comparisons, they both played the vast majority of their tests over the same span of age.
Don't really want to get into this as it's hypothetical so you can argue however you want, but:And about WWII, I also accounted for it earlier, though perhaps in a way you didn't:
Lindwall and Miller were 25 and 26 respectively when they made their test debuts, so probably lost several years to WWII as well.
Compton averaged 42.84 when one or the other or both of those two were playing.
ExactlyPlayer A and B both start their career in 1990 at the age of 20. Player A retires in 2003 with 100 tests, 8000 runs @ 55 at the age of 33. At this point, player B has 100 tests, 8800 runs @ 58. He then plays till 2008, retires with 125 tests, 10500 runs @ 54.
In this particular hypothetical scenario, it would indeed be dumb to rate Player A higher (unless there are other important factors etc etc).
Innings 131 (n.o 15) | runs 5807 | average 50.6 |
add new innings 54 (n.o 6) | add new runs 2829 | |
164 | 8636 | new average becomes 52.65 |
Innings 131 (n.o 15) | runs 6806 | average 58.67 |
add new innings 70 (n.o 8) | add new runs 3206 | |
178 | 10012 | new average becomes 56.2 |
fwiw I take longevity into account. But... nah to this. WG has ridiculous career stats considering his era, it wasn't until Ranji/Fry in the twilight of his career that better batting stats came along. And then he got all those wickets as well. Most of CW either declines to rate him or thinks he's in the AT top echelon of players. Barely anyone rates him as a regular great and they never will, for good reason.Exactly.
Either WG was a regular great player or Most Dominant cricketer ever who ruined his stats by playing longer. Majority of CW will rate him as a regular great it seems. Sad.. But thats how they Think.
lol. not really. Barrington's home FC pitch was The Oval -- perhaps the most spin-friendly surface in the world at that time. And Barrington's FC average at The Oval was a mere 41.8. Compare May's 47.8. Or Compton's 51.5.His 69 indicates he was capable of handling spin.
Is that what they called it back then?The Oval during Compton's earlier career at least was probably the flattest surface in England, and one of the flattest in the world, thanks to 'Bosser' Martin and his massive roller.
Ah yeah, Hutton's 364...The Oval during Compton's earlier career at least was probably the flattest surface in England, and one of the flattest in the world, thanks to 'Bosser' Martin and his massive roller.
http://www.sportstats.com.au/hotscore.html gives some of the strike rates calculated by Charles Davis.iirc Barrington was originally a strokeplayer but changed to be more of a stonewaller because it was more successful for him. If Bradman hadn’t existed he’d definitely be on my shortlist for the #3 spot in an ATG XI.
I can’t remember the bloke who did the historical strike rates for test players (Charles Davis or someone?) but something that did surprise me was a lot of older players with very different reputations (e.g boring accumulator vs flashy strokeplayer) actually ended up with similar strike rates to one another.