subshakerz
Hall of Fame Member
Um that is working against your argument.Now Shami's average is boosted by not outs. He gets punished for being a deserted tailender while the big boys go bash whack out and leave him on his own? Poor guy.
Um that is working against your argument.Now Shami's average is boosted by not outs. He gets punished for being a deserted tailender while the big boys go bash whack out and leave him on his own? Poor guy.
His best batting phase was in the early 2000s though. However, I can concede that the difference might not be as much as 2 points given playing more at home.Bro this is South Africa, and much of his career was in the 1990s. Furthermore, he played a disproportionate proportion of his games at home which negatively affected his average.
I give up on trying to explain that runs and outs are what impact average.Great we agree NOs make a difference then. Just saying it in different ways.
I don't read the data that way since average is still affected by NOs. What is that data for Hadlee and Ashwin? I'm assuming Pollock is better but just curious.
Again Pollock is batting at 8/9, that position doesn't allow for longer innings even if he is settled in the crease.
He isn't far ahead of Hadlee tbh. But then I don't mind saying he is a tad better than Hadlee but certainly in the same class of bat rather than say Kapil.I give up on trying to explain that runs and outs are what impact average.
Hadlee is
10-41
25-67
50-115
Ashwin
10-41
25-58
50-82
He is far ahead, but my intention of posting his averages wasn't to show that he was better than players like Hadlee and Ashwin. His career and away averages do that well enough.
You are jumping the gun frankly. The problem is you are making conclusions on data that is small to begin with. Pollock only crossed 50 18 times in his career for eg out of 156 innings.My intention was to show that he was often screwed out of a higher average by innings ending before got more runs and got out. As everyone typically is. You shouldnt be asking this question if you doubt the veracity of the data on account of NOs, because trends are clear, but if you do, run it yourself WRT bats with a negligible number of NOs. You will see the same trend. The more runs they have scored, the more runs you are expecting them to score before being dismissed.
Consider what your last paragraph means in the context of this conversation. If staying NO reduces your expected average in relation to batting until dismissal, coming in at 8 or 9 is going to more heavily impact your average than if you were coming in higher up.
So Pollock kept scoring in a flat 2000s era after scoring in a non-flat 1990s era.
Wow how humiliating for Pollock.
I already conceded above that the flat bat advantage should be minimal for Pollock.Pollock in the 90’s - 1404 @ 31.90
Pollock in the 00’s - 2377 @ 32.57
Higher RPI and rate of 50+ scores in the 90’s actually.
Im not interested in debating how far ahead of bats like Hadlee and Ashwin he was. I value the batting contribution of bats who were worse than them highly, and obviously rate the value of their batting.He isn't far ahead of Hadlee tbh. But then I don't mind saying he is a tad better than Hadlee but certainly in the same class of bat rather than say Kapil.
You are jumping the gun frankly. The problem is you are making conclusions on data that is small to begin with. Pollock only crossed 50 18 times in his career for eg out of 156 innings.
Bottomline is he was a lower order bat at 8/9 with a low run output. Yes we can suggest that some of NOs he may have converted to higher innings but the fact is we can't say with confidence how much higher the would have scored with Donald other tailenders to bat with and him needing to swing his bat too. I don't know why you can't see that when you admit earlier by eye test he didn't seem as good a bat too.
I suggest we just table this chat since seem to be talking oast each other. But I appreciate the respectful back and forth.
Well Hadlee also likely can reach 82 post-50, what does that tell us of the data then?Im not interested in debating how far ahead of bats like Hadlee and Ashwin he was. I value the batting contribution of bats who were worse than them highly, and obviously rate the value of their batting.
Im not jumping the gun on low sample sizes. i dont think Pollocks expected RPI after hitting 50 (if allowed to bat innings to completion) would have been 164. But I do think it would have been more than 82. And you do too, you just dont want to admitt it.
Your output is always going to be significantly lower than your average at 8 or 9, especially when you are a decent bat. You arent really expecting the pure tail enders to get out before that are you?
And note on eyetest: Rabada looks a better bat than Waugh to me. Eyetest often doesnt equate to results.
RPI of 24 is good in the Ashwin/Hadlee level.If you are batting 7 or lower. 24-25 runs per inning is a very good output. Expecting a lot more seems harsh.
To put it in context,
One of the best lower order batsman, Imran Khan, while batting 7 or lower - 27 runs per inning.
Some good points here.Is it worth exploring the unwritten assumption here that higher average = better batsman? As I'm not sure that necessarily holds when we're talking about batting in the lower order.
Obviously not getting out is a Good Thing and requires batting skill, and especially when there's a set batsman at the other end you want to stay in to support them. But also there may be times (say if you're left batting with a bunny whose neither likely to score runs nor survive very long) that what is optimal for the team is hitting out and adding as many runs to the scoreboard before the innings ends - even though this may come at a cost to their personal average due to less red ink.
The #9 with 22 RPI and a 24 avg might be more valuable (better?) than the #9 who adds 15 RPI but averages 28.
I think there's some talking past one other here as subs' terminology is slightly off but there may be something to his point that Pollock's average flatters his contribution to his team due to the NOs. (Terminology is off because what Pollock's average *doesn't* flatter is, well, his average. Indeed his average probably would be better if he'd batted slightly higher up the order and been stranded less.)
Well put.Is it worth exploring the unwritten assumption here that higher average = better batsman? As I'm not sure that necessarily holds when we're talking about batting in the lower order.
Obviously not getting out is a Good Thing and requires batting skill, and especially when there's a set batsman at the other end you want to stay in to support them. But also there may be times (say if you're left batting with a bunny whose neither likely to score runs nor survive very long) that what is optimal for the team is hitting out and adding as many runs to the scoreboard before the innings ends - even though this may come at a cost to their personal average due to less red ink.
The #9 with 22 RPI and a 24 avg might be more valuable (better?) than the #9 who adds 15 RPI but averages 28.
I think there's some talking past one other here as subs' terminology is slightly off but there may be something to his point that Pollock's average flatters his contribution to his team due to the NOs. (Terminology is off because what Pollock's average *doesn't* flatter is, well, his average. Indeed his average probably would be better if he'd batted slightly higher up the order and been stranded less.)
I didn't watch nearly enough Pollock to know how he batted with the tail and whether he should have adjusted his approach. From his stats he looks like a batsmen who may have been better suited to batting higher more often - in a team less overloaded with allrounders than that SA side he presumably would have.
Underutilized =/ overratedIs it worth exploring the unwritten assumption here that higher average = better batsman? As I'm not sure that necessarily holds when we're talking about batting in the lower order.
Obviously not getting out is a Good Thing and requires batting skill, and especially when there's a set batsman at the other end you want to stay in to support them. But also there may be times (say if you're left batting with a bunny whose neither likely to score runs nor survive very long) that what is optimal for the team is hitting out and adding as many runs to the scoreboard before the innings ends - even though this may come at a cost to their personal average due to less red ink.
The #9 with 22 RPI and a 24 avg might be more valuable (better?) than the #9 who adds 15 RPI but averages 28.
I think there's some talking past one other here as subs' terminology is slightly off but there may be something to his point that Pollock's average flatters his contribution to his team due to the NOs. (Terminology is off because what Pollock's average *doesn't* flatter is, well, his average. Indeed his average probably would be better if he'd batted slightly higher up the order and been stranded less.)
I didn't watch nearly enough Pollock to know how he batted with the tail and whether he should have adjusted his approach. From his stats he looks like a batsmen who may have been better suited to batting higher more often - in a team less overloaded with allrounders than that SA side he presumably would have.