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To you but not to me. He'd be up there with Tendulkar, Hobbs, Sobers and far ahead of the rest.He would be better than Kallis but no way would his case as best after Bradman be as solid as it is now.
To you but not to me. He'd be up there with Tendulkar, Hobbs, Sobers and far ahead of the rest.He would be better than Kallis but no way would his case as best after Bradman be as solid as it is now.
You don't judge anyone from just their overall stats with such little contextLets take a hypothetical situation.
Player A averages 40 in first five years of the career and 60 in next five, and ends up with an average of 50
Player B averages 60 in first five years of the career and 40 in next five, and ends up with an average of 50
Player C averages 50 for ten years and , and ends up with an average of 50
Now how do you judge their performances?
I asked if Smith averaged 58 after 110 tests and retired, or played 170 tests and retired averaging 53.5, do you think he would be rated the same?Not compared to players of shorter career length who just retired. Yes.
If they kept performing in their letter years, of course they'd be even greater.
It's frozen compared to guys who achieved less than him and played less. Smith with 110 tests or 170 tests is still far ahead of Greg Chappell regardless of what happens between tests 110 and 170.I asked if Smith averaged 58 after 110 tests and retired, or played 170 tests and retired averaging 53.5, do you think he would be rated the same?
You said, yes he would. You didn't mention against any particular player of any particular career length. Basically, based on that, your opinion of Smith is frozen in time, regardless if there are others like Kallis who would have been more successful than Smith in their latter years and ended up with a higher average.
Not according to their logic.A small decline from peak is understandable. It will be more than made up for by the longevity, and their aggregate achievements. A huge fall-off is what is going to be held against someone, imo.
Only compared to someone who didn't play at all after the point at which such a decline occurred.Not according to their logic.
Does Steve Smith's late career performance from now on affect his standing compared to Tendulkar, Hobbs and Sobers?Only compared to someone who didn't play at all after the point at which such a decline occurred.
What if a guy was bashing minnows in the earlier "peak" part of his career. And then his later career shows him to be consistently fraudulent against strong opposition?Only compared to someone who didn't play at all after the point at which such a decline occurred.
Fraudulent part doesn't count because it's post-peak apparently.What if a guy was bashing minnows in the earlier "peak" part of his career. And then his later career shows him to be consistently fraudulent against strong opposition?
They're saying it only effects comparison between Smith and those who have a longer career than him. So right now, Smith is better than any batsman who has a less than 13 year career, regardless of how he performs from here on out.Does Steve Smith's late career performance from now on affect his standing compared to Tendulkar, Hobbs and Sobers?
YesDoes Steve Smith's late career performance from now on affect his standing compared to Tendulkar, Hobbs and Sobers?
Then you agree he can fluctuate.
If he retired after 110 tests with his current record he wouldn't automatically be better than those guys but he'd have demonstrated a level of dominance and performance that would put him in the conversation at least. He wouldn't have longevity in his favour but he has other things going for him that his competitors do not. There are other factors at play too. He's not dropping below anyone that played less than him though.Then you agree he can fluctuate.
How far can he drop if he has five years averaging 40 and then retiring? What position does he end up in on the ATG batters list?
And if he played 160-170 tests and averaged 52/53 overall, where would he end up on the listing? How many places would it cost Smith?If he retired after 110 tests with his current record he wouldn't automatically be better than those guys but he'd have demonstrated a level of dominance and performance that would put him in the conversation at least. He wouldn't have longevity in his favour but he has other things going for him that his competitors do not. There are other factors at play too. He's not dropping below anyone that played less than him though.
If he ends up with an average of 51, I'm rating Weekes, Barrington, Sutcliffe ahead of him. Sorry.If he retired after 110 tests with his current record he wouldn't automatically be better than those guys but he'd have demonstrated a level of dominance and performance that would put him in the conversation at least. He wouldn't have longevity in his favour but he has other things going for him that his competitors do not. There are other factors at play too. He's not dropping below anyone that played less than him though.
He wouldn't lose any ground he's gained up to that point though. If he continues doing well he'd be #2 for sure, otherwise he's still in the mix but not definie #2. And in no case does he suddenly become worse than guys who averaged more over much shorter careers assuming other factors are constant.And if he played 160-170 tests and averaged 52/53 overall, where would he end up on the listing? How many places would it cost Smith?
And I will continue my crusade against this logic. You should feel bad.If he ends up with an average of 51, I'm rating Weekes, Barrington, Sutcliffe ahead of him. Sorry.
Yay we agree!If he ends up with an average of 51, I'm rating Weekes, Barrington, Sutcliffe ahead of him. Sorry.