centurymaker
Cricketer Of The Year
Don't quite agree with that.
I've picked long ago. Murali the goat.People have to makeup their minds on Sanga's home pitches.
If they were featherbeds, then Murali has a peak that will take him even surpassing Marshall.
If they were dustbowls, then even Sanga's home pitches were also pretty difficult ones, and puts him way higher than Ponting's peak.
Pick you sides chums.
Yes, it can be a dust bowl, and for the average fast bowler it would have been flat for Sanga.I've picked long ago. Murali the goat.
But pitches can be suitable to both in that no non Asian team has a spinner of any threat so Sanga gets lucky without having to road the **** out of it. When warne turned up in 04ish and the pitches weren't roads Sanga was weak...and Murali awesome.
General unbiased consensus of that greater period is that it was more on the flat side.People have to makeup their minds on Sanga's home pitches.
If they were featherbeds, then Murali has a peak that will take him even surpassing Marshall.
If they were dustbowls, then even Sanga's home pitches were also pretty difficult ones, and puts him way higher than Ponting's peak.
Pick you sides chums.
Murali was goat but sl pitches like indian pitches always have something for spinners except sscGeneral unbiased consensus of that greater period is that it was more on the flat side.
I think that Murali is farther above the greatest spinner peaks compared to Marshall I think being eclipsed for a seamer peak by Imran. Comparing Marshall to Murali directly is probably a bit of a fools errand.
It looks like you have used fraction of the grey matter to understand the comment. Murali was consistent, just like Marshall or Hadlee. He has a peak that is overlooked because of the argument he bowled on dustbowls. Now add the new argument that he achieved this insane peak bowling on absolute roads. Now that is pushing him to Marshall territory. No one compares Murali and Marshall directly for their peaks.General unbiased consensus of that greater period is that it was more on the flat side.
I think that Murali is farther above the greatest spinner peaks compared to Marshall I think being eclipsed for a seamer peak by Imran. Comparing Marshall to Murali directly is probably a bit of a fools errand.
No, I do actually think that already that Murali is in the same tier arguably better for peak period than Marshall (but this gets into what is valued and the advantages / disadvantages inherent to seamer vs spinner which I don't want to get into). It just isn't pushing the argument for Sanga that much, if both him and Murali played on roads, which I generally believe the tracks of the time were.It looks like you have used fraction of the grey matter to understand the comment. Murali was consistent, just like Marshall or Hadlee. He has a peak that is overlooked because of the argument he bowled on dustbowls. Now add the new argument that he achieved this insane peak bowling on absolute roads. Now that is pushing him to Marshall territory. No one compares Murali and Marshall directly for their peaks.
A big part of being a top player is confidence in your abilities. A lot of players will simply have the idea that they are that good.Ponting, in the recent test said that he never ever really thought about having a peak in test cricket.
I think that Murali's peak was comfortably better than Marshall's (or anyone else's).No, I do actually think that already that Murali is in the same tier arguably better for peak period than Marshall (but this gets into what is valued and the advantages / disadvantages inherent to seamer vs spinner which I don't want to get into). It just isn't pushing the argument for Sanga that much, if both him and Murali played on roads, which I generally believe the tracks of the time were.
Punter was of course also playing on absolute roads in Australia (arguably even a bit more roady).