Adorable Asshole
International Regular
bigger than Viv?Possibly the most significant cultural icon of the four, but a short Test career is being seen increasingly as an inescapable caveat. Graeme Pollock's stock has probably fallen on CW too.
bigger than Viv?Possibly the most significant cultural icon of the four, but a short Test career is being seen increasingly as an inescapable caveat. Graeme Pollock's stock has probably fallen on CW too.
Yeah for WI cricket, he was our first really great worldclass cricketer.bigger than Viv?
I am really not torn up about rating players that I have not seen. Roughly, I will go..Curious how @honestbharani sees this one cos he rates Lara > Sachin, even if by a very clear smidgeon.
Learie Constantine.Not a ATG but a really big name in cricket in that time frame.Yeah for WI cricket, he was our first really great worldclass cricketer.
Bradman was probably offended by his nickname comparing the two.Headley is an interesting one. Nearly half his first-class cricket was played in England where he averaged 68. Only Bradman had a higher average there and that includes English players.
Despite reports to the contrary it seems he was no dasher. Statistician Gerald Brodribb calculated that in all first-class innings of fifty or more in England, Headley scored at the same rate as Woodfull and slower than Hutton. It could be argued he shouldered much more responsibility than either.
He was very much a back foot player who favoured the on side. Grimmett said he was the best on side player he bowled to, but in general Headley's reputation appears to have been highest in England. Bradman thought Weekes was better.
At least they didn't call Bradman the White Headley.Bradman was probably offended by his nickname comparing the two.
I could be wrong, I remember reading a Bradman biography when I was much younger and that exact phrase being used by some English bloke.At least they didn't call Bradman the White Headley.
Pre-internet shitposting. Nice.I could be wrong, I remember reading a Bradman biography when I was much younger and that exact phrase being used by some English bloke.
Where do people get this notion that he never played vs full strength English teams. The tours in 1933 and 1939 in England look like full strength teams to me. Ditto the 34-35 series in the WI.Sobers was a complete player in a sense he didn’t have an apparent weakness against any non-kiwi team.
Viv struggled against Chandra in one or two games and also mentioned in his biography that he doubted his place in international cricket. So, there is a hypothetical possibility that he might have hard time against top tier spin bowling. Although, his doubt is completely reasonable because any player would feel the same had they failed in first couple of games. And it doesn’t necessarily mean he wouldn’t have eventually overcome it.
Headley had a small sample size and didn’t play against full strength english teams. I have already discussed what I think was Lara’s weakness so won’t repeat it here.
It’s between Sobers and Viv and I prefer players who can dominate pace bowlers since pace > spin for me. So, answer is Viv.
The series in England in 1933 had the likes of: Sutcliffe, Hammond, Leyland, Jardine, Verity and Ames , Allen.There is no chance that the England tour party in the 30’s to the Windies would be full strength. At best you’d get a handful of Test quality cricketers then scratch around for rag tag and bobtail.