Starfighter
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Does anything else in his posting indicate he possesses that awareness?You do realise they weren’t giving out Man of the Match awards in the 50’s right? They didn’t start doing it til the mid 80’s
Does anything else in his posting indicate he possesses that awareness?You do realise they weren’t giving out Man of the Match awards in the 50’s right? They didn’t start doing it til the mid 80’s
It was earlier than that. I wrote:You do realise they weren’t giving out Man of the Match awards in the 50’s right? They didn’t start doing it til the mid 80’s
Root doesn't give you that much flexibility though? He's not good enough to be a 5th bowler anywhere except the SC unless be gets a bunch of left handers and some assistance from the deck, and even in the SC you don't want him to be the second spinner because bowling long ass spells ****s with his batting, as was clear in the in the first half of the ENG IND series recently.And that's more than good enough. And the flexibility he offers in terms of selection is invaluable.
So you make up your own man of the matches and then judge players based on their number of man of the matches. Makes sense.It was earlier than that. I wrote:
"
Note, player/man of the match awards only go back to late December 1980. For matches prior to this I had to go through the cards to identify whether I could assess a MOM performance. Players who played prior to the cut off point and for whom I had to do this (whether for some or all of their games) are highlighted in yellow in the raw info chart. Where I had to make an assessment, I didn’t look at the cards for every match, but did so where the player’s summary stats (as shown in the player’s Test Match List details on ESPN Cricinfo), indicated a strong performance. So typically I checked where the player had scored 100 or taken 6 or more wickets. If there were 2 or more seemingly equal candidates for MOM I didn’t award it.
"
I didn't judge them based on their MOM awards, it was a small factor in the calculation.So you make up your own man of the matches and then judge players based on their number of man of the matches. Makes sense.
OkI didn't judge them based on their MOM awards, it was a small factor in the calculation.
List looks more for great/quality allrounders rather than just an allrounder in general.He should be good enough to either impact a game with his secondary discipline or be able to contribute on a regular basis in that discipline.
I would have Kallis and Pollock as all rounders because their secondary discipline was just good enough to fit my criteria. Same goes for Stokes who for most part was good enough as all rounder although not a great one but his primary discipline wasn't that good.
Is Ashwin or Hadlee an all rounder? No.
Is Vettori an all rounder? Now that's extremely debatable because I see it as a borderline case. He has 6 hundreds but his ODI batting and even his test batting for most part seemed ineffective. I just don't not see him as all rounder in true sense.
I would have below names in my all rounder category starting since 60s:-
Gary Sobers
Tony Greig
Imran Khan
Ian Botham
Kapil Dev
Chris Cairns
Jacques Kallis
Shaun Pollock
Andrew Flintoff
Shakib Al Hasan
Ben Stokes
Ravindra Jadeja
Wrong.The talk of minimum statistical requirements is rubbish. Ian Blackwell averages 4 with the bat, infinity with the ball and was picked as an all rounder.
That's precisely why your system is next to useless for determining whether or not someone was an allrounder.Someone with figures like the ones you mentioned wouldn't be in the equation anyway, as they wouldn't score anything for batting or for bowling.
I think you could use a second opinion on that one.It just needs someone with brains like me
My system gives points for bowling and points for batting, but then disallows points (or a proportion of them) for the better scoring facet once it exceeds a threshold pro rata to the weaker facet.That's precisely why your system is next to useless for determining whether or not someone was an allrounder.
At best it measures how good an allrounder someone was; not whether they were one.
That's what this thread is about though. Jarquis probably wasn't even talking about your diversion of a post when he made his.It might be "next to useless" as identifying crickets who are all-rounders (or might not be, I haven't considered it), but I wasn't trying to do that and it would be a daft exercise.
Fair enough.That's what this thread is about though. Jarquis probably wasn't even talking about your diversion of a post when he made his.
Exactly.That's precisely why your system is next to useless for determining whether or not someone was an allrounder.
At best it measures how good an allrounder someone was; not whether they were one.
This is at least debatable. What degree and what circumstances.Then my personal response to the OP, would be respectfully that the question is a red herring.
I'd say that players are picked in particular teams in particular roles, so it's not possible to establish criteria from an overall career - certainly not on a uniform basis - which determines whether a player was or was not an allrounder.
It's a question of degree, and a question of particular circumstances.
That would be my first thought anyway.
That is the definition of a no-rounder.I think a functional allrounder - what the OP wants definition for - is someone who cannot be picked for one skill alone; but with a combination of his batting and bowling abilities, he becomes a more useful member of the playing XI.