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Do tailend runs affect your cricketer rating?

Do tailend runs matter in assessing bowlers as cricketers?


  • Total voters
    22

subshakerz

Hall of Fame Member
In judging bowlers around the same level, would the batting ability of those who are considered useful tailenders like Marshall/Warne be significant enough factors to be rated ahead of bowlers who are bunny's like McGrath/Murali?

Assuming a 10 batting point different over the course of a career, is that significant enough of team value to give an edge to a bowler at a close level with other bowlers?

Or are all tailend runs irrelevant in these assessments unless they reach AR level? And what is the level when it starts being a factor?
 

sledger

Spanish_Vicente
Having a bowler who can bat a bit is obviously useful, but it's not grounds for selection at all (unless they're genuine ARs) if they're not good enough to get in the team on their bowling alone imo.

It's a bit of an icing on the cake thing for me. No point having good icing if the cake itself is crap.
 

Qlder

International Debutant
To my knowledge Australia has always picked their best 4 bowlers regardless of how well they bat. Otherwise Gillespie would have never been dropped first test after his double hundred and Neser would have been locked into #8 for last 3 years

Edit: and we definitely would never have the tail we had in last years Ashes, probably the worst tail for a long time

8. Cummins
9. Lyon
10. Boland
11. Hazlewood
 

Red

The normal awards that everyone else has
To my knowledge Australia has always picked their best 4 bowlers regardless of how well they bat. Otherwise Gillespie would have never been dropped first test after his double hundred and Neser would have been locked into #8 for last 3 years

Edit: and we definitely would never have the tail we had in last years Ashes, probably the worst tail for a long time

8. Cummins
9. Lyon
10. Boland
11. Hazlewood
I think in living memory Australia has had guys batting at 8 and usually 9 who are at least handy with the bat. Going back to the 80s:

Cummins
Starc
Warne
Johnson
Pattinson
Lee
Gillespie
Fleming
Hughes
Reiffel
 

Qlder

International Debutant
I think in living memory Australia has had guys batting at 8 and usually 9 who are at least handy with the bat. Going back to the 80s:

Cummins
Starc
Warne
Johnson
Pattinson
Lee
Gillespie
Fleming
Hughes
Reiffel
Yes, but they didn't pick any of those bowlers because they could bat #8, it just worked out that 1 of the 4 best bowlers was always handy at #8
 

Red

The normal awards that everyone else has
Yes, but they didn't pick any of those bowlers because they could bat #8, it just worked out that 1 of the 4 best bowlers was always handy at #8
Yeh I was pretty much agreeing with you.

Wondering whether Greg Matthews, Tony Dodemaide and Simon O’Donnell might’ve been selected as bowlers ahead of better bowlers for batting ability.

Could be wrong. Think since then we’ve definitely selected the best bowlers.
 

Qlder

International Debutant
Yeah Greg Matthews was the one exception I was thinking of. He was picked as #1 spinner batting #8 but became so good at batting he moved up to #7 (Healy at #8) and ended up averaging 41 with bat while his bowling dropped off.

But then he was replaced by Warne as sole spinner to prove again they didn't care about his batting when selecting the 4 best bowlers

Edit: in his last 10 tests as 4th bowler Matthews averaged 50.10 batting #7. He was then dropped for Warne.
 
Last edited:

AndrewB

International Vice-Captain
Yeah Greg Matthews was the one exception I was thinking of. He was picked as #1 spinner batting #8 but became so good at batting he moved up to #7 (Healy at #8) and ended up averaging 41 with bat while his bowling dropped off.

But then he was replaced by Warne as sole spinner to prove again they didn't care about his batting when selecting the 4 best bowlers

Edit: in his last 10 tests as 4th bowler Matthews averaged 50.10 batting #7. He was then dropped for Warne. Pity our batting was stacked as he could have possibly become a great allrounder batting #6 in any other era?
His bowling average in his last 10 Tests was 61, so they'd have been picking him as a batter who could bowl a bit.
 

capt_Luffy

Cricketer Of The Year
Yeah Greg Matthews was the one exception I was thinking of. He was picked as #1 spinner batting #8 but became so good at batting he moved up to #7 (Healy at #8) and ended up averaging 41 with bat while his bowling dropped off.

But then he was replaced by Warne as sole spinner to prove again they didn't care about his batting when selecting the 4 best bowlers

Edit: in his last 10 tests as 4th bowler Matthews averaged 50.10 batting #7. He was then dropped for Warne.
Lol, I didn't knew much of Greg Mathews and looking at stats guru had thought he was a batting allrounder, kinda like Cowper but better bowler.......
 

Red_Ink_Squid

Global Moderator
Quality of bowling is obviously more important in assessing bowlers than their batting.

But also obviously, if two player are ~equal on bowling but one bats much better then that would make them the better cricketer.

So: yes, tailend runs matter (a bit).
 

Nintendo

Cricketer Of The Year
If your asking me to pick between hadlee and a similar bowler who's a #10 averaging ~12 w/ the bat I'm gonna pick hadlee. Otherwise not that big a deal. Fielding for tailenders is more important.
 

Coronis

International Coach
I don’t really like doing overall “cricketer” ratings, or even allrounder ratings, as comparing between batting and bowling gets extremely subjective. If you’re asking if say Warne is a better cricketer than Murali despite me considering Murali a (less than a paper sheet) better bowler than Warne, then the answer is yes, but it will only factor in when there is almost no gap between the bowlers (in my mind)
 

kyear2

International Coach
Yeah Greg Matthews was the one exception I was thinking of. He was picked as #1 spinner batting #8 but became so good at batting he moved up to #7 (Healy at #8) and ended up averaging 41 with bat while his bowling dropped off.

But then he was replaced by Warne as sole spinner to prove again they didn't care about his batting when selecting the 4 best bowlers

Edit: in his last 10 tests as 4th bowler Matthews averaged 50.10 batting #7. He was then dropped for Warne.

Exactly, that's how the great teams prioritize it.

Wonder how that turned out.
Quality of bowling is obviously more important in assessing bowlers than their batting.

But also obviously, if two player are ~equal on bowling but one bats much better then that would make them the better cricketer.

So: yes, tailend runs matter (a bit).
And that's fair as well
 

kyear2

International Coach
I don’t really like doing overall “cricketer” ratings, or even allrounder ratings, as comparing between batting and bowling gets extremely subjective. If you’re asking if say Warne is a better cricketer than Murali despite me considering Murali a (less than a paper sheet) better bowler than Warne, then the answer is yes, but it will only factor in when there is almost no gap between the bowlers (in my mind)
Reasonable
 

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