Nikhil99.99
U19 Cricketer
O’Reilly >Trueman.Akram - Greatest bowler Since Barnes
Trueman - Greatest bowler between Barnes and Lillee.
O’Reilly >Trueman.Akram - Greatest bowler Since Barnes
Trueman - Greatest bowler between Barnes and Lillee.
It's not an eye test as a spectator, its a testimony of the players who played against Wasim who they found more difficult to play. It has to count for something. In fact, I can say that Wasim in his good years was rarely attacked by batsmen who were more concerned with playing him out of respect for being so awkward and skilled.Based on eye test it would have surprised no one if Akram averaged 18 picking 5 wickets a match. But he didn't and someone like McGrath with seemingly less exciting bowling style did better (don't @ me on McGrath, you will be preaching to the coir). So you gotta ask what did Akram fail to do. We know cricket is a game of small margins. Akram despite all the tools was giving impression of being hardest to face more than actually getting players out (relative to other greats). It also shows up in his disproportionately large share of tail wickets: 35% wickets of batsmen playing at 8-11. Incidentally, Trueman with 31.6% is middling. For reference McGrath took only 25.2% tail wickets. http://howstat.com/cricket/Statistics/Bowling/BowlingAggregates.asp
Akram is the classic case of why eye test fails in rating players.
Akram - Greatest bowler Since Barnes, if we discount a dozen or so ATGsAkram - Greatest bowler Since Barnes
Trueman - Greatest bowler between Barnes and Lillee.
John or Jimmy?Akram - Greatest bowler Since Barnes
That's just confirming what you already think is true. Hardly means it's some great metric to use for every player in history.Checks out mostly with what is happening at any given point. E.g. Smith and Imran have highest batting and bowling peaks according to ICC ratings since 1950, completely consistent with their form. I don't see much wrong tbh.
Akram vs McGrath is sort of similar to Bumrah vs Cummins discussion. While Bumrah can bowl those game changing spells out of nowhere he also has the tendency to blow cold like how Elgar looked untroubled against him in Jo'burg, Cummins on the other hand doesn't have many of those memorable game changing spells but he's far more clinical and consistent than Bumrah.Based on eye test it would have surprised no one if Akram averaged 18 picking 5 wickets a match. But he didn't and someone like McGrath with seemingly less exciting bowling style did better (don't @ me on McGrath, you will be preaching to the coir). So you gotta ask what did Akram fail to do. We know cricket is a game of small margins. Akram despite all the tools was giving impression of being hardest to face more than actually getting players out (relative to other greats). It also shows up in his disproportionately large share of tail wickets: 35% wickets of batsmen playing at 8-11. Incidentally, Trueman with 31.6% is middling. For reference McGrath took only 25.2% tail wickets. http://howstat.com/cricket/Statistics/Bowling/BowlingAggregates.asp
Akram is the classic case of why eye test fails in rating players.
Happy to see an example of what you think was a glaring error in player rankings.That's just confirming what you already think is true. Hardly means it's some great metric to use for every player in history.
WasimHappy to see an example of what you think was a glaring error in player rankings.
See, I don't recollect Wasim bowling too many "unlucky" spells at all. He had every conceivable tool in the shed, allied to being a left-armer and having real bowling smarts. You have to look elsewhere, outside his raw stats - and we all know where - to understand why he didn't average as less as say Marshall, which he by rights should have.I was going to use Bumrah as an example but didn't want to get called out for getting too excited about Indian bowlers Yes, Bumrah has a tendency to bowl those magical deliveries that make for great spectacle but tends to bowl "unlucky" spells often. Gets poetic praise for his good spells. But Cummins is far more clinical and consistent.
Some batters may well say Bumrah is harder to face, but that won't be enough to sway my view on who is better between the 2.
Well yeah, that's the thing. It's a paradox. Wasim could have averaged 18 and no one would have said that stats flatter him. To the raw eye, he was the most skillful pace bowler of his generation or since.See, I don't recollect Wasim bowling too many "unlucky" spells at all. He had every conceivable tool in the shed, allied to being a left-armer and having real bowling smarts. You have to look elsewhere, outside his raw stats - and we all know where - to understand why he didn't average as less as say Marshall, which he by rights should have.
haha, well playedWasim
Well yeah, you’ve only addressed the bit prior to Waqar going on a tear and you’ve highlighted the 1992 WC which Waqar missed. But for the few years after that Waqar was unmistakably more devastating.I recall Wasim was seen as better. Especially after his big take off in Australia in 1990, he was rated the next big thing in cricket. And then the 92 World Cup cemented that reputation. Waqar only really captured higher attention after the 1992 England tour though he had built up a reputation in county cricket by then.
My memory might be off, but there was a point where Waqar and (a pre injury) Bishop were seen as the best young bowlers in the game. At least the fastest. Wasim was crafty, but Waqar was destructive.Well yeah, you’ve only addressed the bit prior to Waqar going on a tear and you’ve highlighted the 1992 WC which Waqar missed. But for the few years after that Waqar was unmistakably more devastating.
I recall quite a few unlucky spells from Wasim where the batsmen were bamboozled and just focused on survival. Example:See, I don't recollect Wasim bowling too many "unlucky" spells at all. He had every conceivable tool in the shed, allied to being a left-armer and having real bowling smarts. You have to look elsewhere, outside his raw stats - and we all know where - to understand why he didn't average as less as say Marshall, which he by rights should have.
Good reminder of Bishop, seems to have been forgotten as a bowler. Also came on the heels of another express and forgotten bowler, Pattrick Patterson.My memory might be off, but there was a point where Waqar and (a pre injury) Bishop were seen as the best young bowlers in the game. At least the fastest. Wasim was crafty, but Waqar was destructive.
Yeah Waqar was a wrecker of NZ no doubt. But Waqar's peak ended with his back injury in 1995.I acknowledge here that I am biased because NZ played Pakistan regularly between 1992-1996 and Waqar substantially built his reputation against us. He was definitely the more scary prospect of the two in NZ.