subshakerz
Hall of Fame Member
Waugh had 46 tests averaging 36 tests until his peak began in 93 and he was more or less quality until he retired.Both started slow. Kallis topped and maintained a 40 average after 29 tests. Waugh after 61 (which took 8 years cos he was struggling to get a spot in the side). Kallis topped and maintained 50 after 73 tests, Waugh 161. Kallis spent the entire back half of his career averaging mid to late 50s. They are not comparable... however you rate them, Kallis was clearly a top level bat for a lot longer, and was considered as such.
Kallis had a sluggish 22 tests averaging 30 early in his career, and then 17 tests dip around 2008-2009, outside of which he was worldclass.
No. 4 is still considered a position to set the pace and dictate the tone. Other team alphas like Lara, Tendulkar, Kohli and Smith also batted largely on No.4 and were expected to be aggressive, not accumulate.This is wrong. The closer you get to the top of the order, the less important it is for quality bats to score fast. The top sees off the new ball, tires attacks and is less likely to run out of partners. You can argue that it is still better for the top to score quickly (its debateable), but there is no arguing that it is relatively more important than the middle.
Not true, he had Kirsten, Gibbs, Cullinan, Cronje and then Smith for much of the early period. It's not like he was Lara battling alone.RSA were 3 or 4 down for nothing every second game from readmission until when Kallis started to come right. Wasn't till about 2008 that they had a reliable top other than Kallis.
Yes, but we are comparing ATGs who are expected to have at least a few stellar performances over their career. At least you admit Kallis is lacking here.I don't think Kallis had too many stellar perfomances by ATG standards.
An ATG innings gives you an idea of a player's ceiling, but unless that player is Chris Martin, knowing there ceiling gives little indication of how good they are.
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