Both as middle order players (since both had a stint as opener)Voting Astle, but if McCullum had more of his career without the gloves it probably would have been him
Yeah I definitely have the childhood hero bias towards Astle.Both as middle order players (since both had a stint as opener)
McCullum fares very well
Until you do games played away from home only - smaller sample size for McCullum
https://stats.espncricinfo.com/ci/e...al1=span;team=5;template=results;type=batting
But to be fair, he did have some success opening overseas, so overall all positions goes back up a bit
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I feel like you could make a case for either. My gut says Astle but they may be because I like Astle more as a person and player so definite bias.
I was thinking along similar lines the other day, actually. McMillan would likely have a better record too.Astle would have a Nicholls esque record if he batted with a better team imo.
Revenge served tepid, those were close to the flattest tracks I’ve ever seen NZ bat on.As a specialist test bat McCullum was more consistent and even had decent returns at the opener's position, where I don't think Astle ever batted. If Astle arguably batted in an era of better bowling, McCullum had to front up when the team was really short on quality players - until his last 2-3 years when KW-Taylor-Watling all became world class.
That said, Astle played some excellent forgotten test innings. Back-to-back hundreds against Ambrose and Walsh on their own turf in 1996, that last wicket century stand with Morrison against England in 1997, and a century when unwell in Ahmedabad in 2003 (a series in which India promised revenge for the pitches NZ dished out in 2002-03).
Astle was a very instinctive hand-eye player. Couldn’t help himself from having a leaden-footed lash at a floaty outswinger. Once those reflexes started to dull his output really declined (from 2004 in particular). McCullum was more technically correct (at least in terms of foot movement), had a wider array of shots and imo was more talented - thus he tended to get better and better until the last year of his career when he seemed to be pretty mentally exhausted and was looking forward to retirement.Baz by a fair way in Tests. Once he lost the gloves, he was a far superior batsman. And did it both as an opener and a middle order bat.
Astle in ODIs probably just as comfortably.
Yeah, you're probably right in terms of ODI players.Astle was a very instinctive hand-eye player. Couldn’t help himself from having a leaden-footed lash at a floaty outswinger. Once those reflexes started to dull his output really declined (from 2004 in particular). McCullum was more technically correct (at least in terms of foot movement), had a wider array of shots and imo was more talented - thus he tended to get better and better until the last year of his career when he seemed to be pretty mentally exhausted and was looking forward to retirement.
As ODI players I think they’re quite hard to compare. Astle probably takes it in terms of being better for longer, but McCullum’s batting in the final stage of his career was just ridiculous – imo the greatest pinch-hitter in ODI history by the length of a straight.