Yes. Bazball would make Wasim look like a discount Starc.Yeah but Wilt played against plumbers.
Would anyone here argue that if we took Sachin, Lara or Wasim from the early 90s to play a test tomorrow that they'd really struggle?
During the times I mentioned, from 1920 to 1950 to 1980, we were in a period of exponential global population growth, which is a real bitch. Add to that the growth of the game of cricket in the minds of the general public (radio, television booms), coincidentally the former of which coincided with Bradman's career. And finally the fact that the number of test nations expanded from 3 to 7 ( 8 with Sri Lanka in the early 80s ), and the numbers aren't that crazy.I mean this is actually a salient point worth discussing – and in general I think we do take it into account though perhaps not as much as we should (and I would be one guilty of that too); tally up inter-war greats and 70s/80s greats and compare – but those are dumbly exagerrated numbers.
Are modern greats better? Yes. But the number of nations who take test cricket seriously or are good at test cricket will go down. We are kind of in a (very) slow, downward spiral right now. Not sure if it's the "BIG 3" thing or something else, but teams outside top 5 are not looking that competitive any more.This is regarding greats in the modern period, basically mid-70s onwards, and how they compare with the pre-modern post War era. Was there an added competitive spirit and professionalism brought by the Aussies and the Packer revolution that took the quality of cricket in this era beyond the skill level of what was before? How should we compare their records and achievements then?
SA beat India at home recentlyAre modern greats better? Yes. But the number of nations who take test cricket seriously or are good at test cricket will go down. We are kind of in a (very) slow, downward spiral right now. Not sure if it's the "BIG 3" thing or something else, but teams outside top 5 are not looking that competitive any more.
Plus T20s are money, so whether the players accept it or not, more and more youngsters will focus more on how to slog the ball and bowl defensively.
Aren't SA in top 5?SA beat India at home recently
Windies beat England at home
Bangladesh drew with NZ away
And a few other similar incidents...while I agree on the whole, I'm not sure the results are all that different from previous generations.
SENA v Asian teams is generally so home-conditions reliant though, don't think this is the best exampleSA beat India at home recently
Windies beat England at home
Bangladesh drew with NZ away
And a few other similar incidents...while I agree on the whole, I'm not sure the results are all that different from previous generations.
Starc some times don't know where his deliveries pitch or where they are heading. God save batsmen when that reaches them at 90mph. Premeditated batting fails more often against wild bowlers.How are 70s bats with their tuk-tuk techniques better in test cricket than modern batters? In a match b/w a decent 70s team & current Eng team, 70s team would tuk-tuk its way to 400 while Eng would hack its way to 400.
We have seen how badly Cummins (70s era accurate line & length pacer) was treated in Ashes. Scoops, ramps & reverse-scoops etc messed up his 4th stump line bowling style. Starc (a modern day pacer) outperformed him.
Instead of saying modern cricketers are better than 70s cricketers, it would be better if we say skillset required is changed. Hitting is being preferred over defence & having bowling variations with accuracy is being preferred over channel bowling.
70s cricketers would struggle in current era & vice versa.
Some times Wasim himself did not know which way it swung, how much it dipped or when it started ot stopped swinging in the path towards the batsman. At Wasim's peak that thing comes at you 145k+. Now try to adjust to that.Yes. Bazball would make Wasim look like a discount Starc.