PlayerComparisons
International Vice-Captain
Two very good batsmen
It’s definitely a close comparison IMOThere's no comparison.
One batted down the order (220 of 280 innings) accumulating red ink (39 not outs) too boost his average. When batting at 3 or 4 where he was more likely to face the new ball he averaged just 34.2
On the other hand, May led from the front with 95 of his 106 knocks being at 3 or 4 producing an average of 49.7
On top of that, May was regarded as one of the more elegant batsmen to grace the game.
I think Chanderpaul's style was quite lovable.Elegance is overrated. Shivs ugly crabby style was gun.
He deserves a vote only for that.Chanders had a lower SR but he also has a 69 ball hundred so I don’t know.
That just proves he could have, just didn't want to, was all about his average Even worse passed it in to his son.Chanders had a lower SR but he also has a 69 ball hundred so I don’t know.
So you are completely going to ignore the lollapses that WI had? He was doing damage control more often than not.That just proves he could have, just didn't want to, was all about his average Even worse passed it in to his son.
I saw his entire career, the only damage control he prioritized was that of his average. I've seen him take singles early in overs while batting with the tail, I've observed him refusing to bat higher up the order when we had no good alternatives. He just wasn't a team man. I've even seen him put himself in the slips when he knew he couldn't catch a cold.So you are completely going to ignore the lollapses that WI had? He was doing damage control more often than not.
Was that just him calling the shots or some of it was also what the team wanted? Pretty sure the batting up the order thing was suggested by a few people, but was he pushed to do it by the management? Also, really don't see anything wrong with him being more comfortable with a certain position. He was a key wicket in a struggling batting line-up at one point and he could maximise his scoring at number 5 while others would've been **** at any number.I saw his entire career, the only damage control he prioritized was that of his average. I've seen him take singles early in overs while batting with the tail, I've observed him refusing to bat higher up the order when we had no good alternatives. He just wasn't a team man. I've even seen him put himself in the slips when he knew he couldn't catch a cold.
I'm pretty sure the board wanted him to bat higher up the order, he refused. Also when your team is **** and you refuse to move out of your comfort zone you're selfish. Come in earlier, bat with the youngsters, nurture or guide them.Was that just him calling the shots or some of it was also what the team wanted? Pretty sure the batting up the order thing was suggested by a few people, but was he pushed to do it by the management? Also, really don't see anything wrong with him being more comfortable with a certain position. He was a key wicket in a struggling batting line-up at one point and he could maximise his scoring at number 5 while others would've been **** at any number.
Source?I'm pretty sure the board wanted him to bat higher up the order, he refused. Also when your team is **** and you refuse to move out of your comfort zone you're selfish. Come in earlier, bat with the youngsters, nurture or guide them.
He was not a good fielder.I saw his entire career, the only damage control he prioritized was that of his average. I've seen him take singles early in overs while batting with the tail, I've observed him refusing to bat higher up the order when we had no good alternatives. He just wasn't a team man. I've even seen him put himself in the slips when he knew he couldn't catch a cold.
For a player that regularly took a single early in an over when batting with the tail, I would suggest "shielding" was a concept outside his thinking.Source?
Also, some of those batters were just not quality. What was the point of him shielding them?