Waqar was not "beginning" his downward slide in 99, he began it in about 94 or 95 when he suffered his major injuries. He was still a good bowler in the late 90s, but he was far from the great bowler he was in the early 90s. Wasim as I said was excellent in 99 and probably better than anyone in the England team, and Saqlain very good also, but Shoaib wasn't playing (Afridi was the 4th bowler) and we're rating the attacks as a whole. Hoggard/Harmison/Flintoff/Jones/Giles is certainly comparable to Wasim and Waqar circa 1999 and Saqlain and Afridi as the spinners.C_C said:Waqar in 99 was beginning his downward slide...he could replace anybody in the current English lineup - and i mean anyone, including Freddie - until 2001 or so when he really slipped up.
Wasim - same applies here. As good as Flintoff/Harmo and Jones are, they are nowhere close to Wasim and Waqar at their best and definately a ballpark behind even in 1999.
Saqlain is superior to any english spinner over the last 20 years by a light year and half.
Akhtar i would take any day of the week over Harmison too.
OZ whitewashed Pak, thanks to some extremely dodgy umpiring, Wasim and Waqar having a fallout ( Waqar played only one test and Wasim was the captain) along with their typical frail batting.
This is pakistan we are talking about - a team that can nuke itself right on the verge of world domination or launch a blitzkreig right at the face of extinction.
Waqar pre 95 was a bowler that Flintoff or Jones at their absolute best can only dream of so far.Waqar was not "beginning" his downward slide in 99, he began it in about 94 or 95 when he suffered his major injuries. He was still a good bowler in the late 90s, but he was far from the great bowler he was in the early 90s.
No they arnt. Wasim-Waqar-Saqqi all come ahead of any single England bowler of that lot. And that constitutes 75% of the bowling faced of superior quality.. Hoggard/Harmison/Flintoff/Jones/Giles is certainly comparable to Wasim and Waqar circa 1999 and Saqlain and Afridi as the spinners.
CC = Cavalier Carver eh? Nice article, particularly the parts about the match status index, which was a rubbish excuse of a mathematical stat by Wisden really.C_C said:LOL.
Nice to see the article i wrote for that nuthouse long time ago is still there.
I've read that article before, it doesn't compare them on Wisden's criteria because it doesn't have the formula they used. It just says that Sachin scored higher on most categories, but that means nothing if you don't know how the categories are weighted.Jono said:How on Earth does a mathematical formula take into account the situation?
Explain to me how Wisden can rate Tendulkar the second greatest test and ODI batsman (Behind Bradman and Viv respectively) yet not one of his innings can be ranked in the top 100 for tests? Its absurd and makes no sense at all.
There was an article here which went exactly by the Widen criteria, and compared Lara's 375 to Sachin's 136, and Sachin's 136 came out on top.
Yeah. I couldnt spell cavalier_carver and people there abbreviated my name to C_C anyways so i picked it.Jono said:CC = Cavalier Carver eh? Nice article, particularly the parts about the match status index, which was a rubbish excuse of a mathematical stat by Wisden really.
so the first is that Barbados test match?RoyForPM said:Vote for the second best test match of this decade. I will say The Laman/Dravid test match
so u didn't watch the 99 Frank Worrell Trophy?Autobahn said:I think Edgbastion just edges ahead of the other ones because it was also a recovery from a bad lords test, when everyone thought England where going to be crushed again.
Well, to put it simply, I entirely disagree. Waqar in 1999 was a good bowler but nothing particularly special. I'd rate Flintoff, Jones and Warne at least from that Edgbaston tests as better bowlers at the same point in time. Saqlain also wasn't any better than Flintoff or Jones, at least not in tests.C_C said:No they arnt. Wasim-Waqar-Saqqi all come ahead of any single England bowler of that lot. And that constitutes 75% of the bowling faced of superior quality.
Wtih all due respect to the Ashes game, The Barbados match beats it in every category, IMO.FaaipDeOiad said:Why is that? Edgbaston was a superb test even before the final day heroics from Lee and Warne.
First you had England scoring 400 in a day, then Flintoff bowled brilliantly and some excellent batting from Langer and Gilchrist got Australia within 100 or so. Then on the third morning, Lee took a handful of quick wickets and Warne got 4 to have England in deep trouble at 6/75 and then 9/131.
After that, Flintoff put in one of the great individual afternoons of all-round cricket, smashing the ball everywhere in a 50 run stand for the last wicket to set Australia 281 to win, and then bowling one of the best overs you'll ever see as his first in the fourth innings, taking two wickets in it and beating the bat several times, and all this with an injured shoulder that required an injection at tea. Flintoff's burst and some idiotic batting left Australia with a slim chance that seemed to be snuffed out by Harmison's slower ball to get Clarke and end the day.
Then from that, you had the incredible final day, when Warne, Lee and Kasprowicz played brilliantly and seemed to have the game won.
You can argue about the level of play if you like (and I'd personally say it's without question better than in the India/Pakistan game), but as far as the game being close and having incredible things happening in it, I don't know why you'd rate the others higher. I'd say I've seen better quality test matches than Edgbaston '05, but I've never seen one which was so incredible.
they considered "match winning" as a factor. As usual, one of the reasons why that list will never be completely proper.Jono said:I love them both. Both should be in the top 20 without a doubt, but its been acknowledged how disgraceful it was for the Wisden top 100 test innings not to include that one.
I watched it LIVE.adharcric said:Yeah I should know about it, but my passion for and experience with cricket has been very unique and rather bizarre. I came from India as a 5-year old with minimal knowledge of cricket and was a huge fan of American sports for a while. Then something happened and I became absolutely obsessed with cricket after having been here for more than 5 years. Learnt the game on my own and played with some social adult clubs, started and captained a high school team with other ex-pat Indians/Pakistanis lacking in guidance and now I'm playing in a league.
The point is, my memories of pre-2000 cricket aren't too sharp, and my knowledge of pre-1997/8 cricket is mostly based on research, absorbing knowledge from other cricket enthusiasts (thank you CW) and trying to get a feel for what cricket was like before I fell in love with it.
Quite simply, cricket was written in my destiny. Rather unfortunate I had to pursue it without any guidance and struggle so much for my passion over here.
Now I really wish I had seen this Chennai match back then. I did see Azhar, Saqlain and that crop play once in a while when I went back to visit India over a few summers (96, 98), but none of these classics.
I think a fair argument for the Barbados match being better can be made as well. I was more responding to C_C claiming that the Edgbaston test is "nowhere near" any of the other three, which is pretty silly.honestbharani said:Wtih all due respect to the Ashes game, The Barbados match beats it in every category, IMO.
Well, I suppose, but when Tait and Lee are in the same attack dishing out hit mes, it does kinda take away the edge...FaaipDeOiad said:I think a fair argument for the Barbados match being better can be made as well. I was more responding to C_C claiming that the Edgbaston test is "nowhere near" any of the other three, which is pretty silly.
Point blank, if Sachin hadn't injured his back in that innings, and guided India to victory in that test, that innings would be on the list. There's simply no question about it. Its another case of Wisden putting far too much emphasis on 'winning' when judging an individual. Need I point to Hayden receiving test batsman of the decade from 96-2006, when a large part of the criteria involved test wins? Yet ironically, had Sachin not suffered from a back injury and guided India to win, the knock still would have been fantastic but equally less memorable. Why? Because when he received his back problems, as he always does, he began to play without care and hence played some absolutely magnificent knocks. He seems to always lift his game when he suffers an injury. WC 2003 vs. Pak is one example, VB Series 2004 vs. Aus at the Gabba is another. That's what made the knock memorable, and a reason why it should have made the list. I'm guessing "suffering from an injury and playing on" wasn't part of the criteria thoughFaaipDeOiad said:I've read that article before, it doesn't compare them on Wisden's criteria because it doesn't have the formula they used. It just says that Sachin scored higher on most categories, but that means nothing if you don't know how the categories are weighted.
Anyway, I don't work for Wisden so I can't really tell you why Tendulkar is rated the second best batsman but doesn't have an innings in the top 118 (they also released the top 10 Indian innings, the lowest of which was 118th, and Tendulkar made none of them), but I imagine it's because none of his innings scored high enough. I mean, Ricky Ponting is obviously a great batsman and has scored 30 test centuries, but none of them make the top 100 either. Doesn't really mean a great deal, except that none of his innings have qualified... though the 150 odd at Old Trafford might if the list were redone.
I just think it's silly to attack the list as if it's biased or something because X innings didn't make it. You can argue that the formula could have been better or something, but it's not as if Wisden sat down and said "alright, let's make a formula to rate all test innings, and do it in such a way that Tendulkar doesn't make the top 100".
edit: by the way, by "situation" I meant the score when they arrived at the crease, the innings and so on, which I think they did take into account
So you decided to equal his silliness by claiming the Ashes test was no question a better match in terms of quality compared to a match you didn't watch.FaaipDeOiad said:I think a fair argument for the Barbados match being better can be made as well. I was more responding to C_C claiming that the Edgbaston test is "nowhere near" any of the other three, which is pretty silly.
FaaipDeOiad said:Well, to put it simply, I entirely disagree. Waqar in 1999 was a good bowler but nothing particularly special. I'd rate Flintoff, Jones and Warne at least from that Edgbaston tests as better bowlers at the same point in time. Saqlain also wasn't any better than Flintoff or Jones, at least not in tests.
To say that Wasim, Waqar and Saqlain in 1999 were significantly better than the England attack in the 2005 Ashes is absurd, and makes me wonder how much of the series you actually bothered to watch.
What I was trying to say is that the standard was higher in the Ashes test because the teams were better, not that both teams played better cricket. It probably came across the wrong way. As I said, I haven't seen the 99 Chennai test (though I have seen each of the other three in question), so I can't really judge how well the teams played in that game.Jono said:So you decided to equal his silliness by claiming the Ashes test was no question a better match in terms of quality compared to a match you didn't watch.
Fighting silly comments with equally silly ones isn't strengthening your argument. And I'll tell you what, that Edgbaston test was a classic, but its so obviously being elevated above ones from 5-6 years ago because people simply haven't seen them. To claim Lee's 1-111 was of better quality than anything Prasad did in that Chennai test is silly. Lee will go down as the better bowler probably, but we're talking tests, and Lee was rubbish whilst Prasad was great in that specific match.
yeah, but Prasad was a spinner.Jono said:So you decided to equal his silliness by claiming the Ashes test was no question a better match in terms of quality compared to a match you didn't watch.
Fighting silly comments with equally silly ones isn't strengthening your argument. And I'll tell you what, that Edgbaston test was a classic, but its so obviously being elevated above ones from 5-6 years ago because people simply haven't seen them. To claim Lee's 1-111 was of better quality than anything Prasad did in that Chennai test is silly. Lee will go down as the better bowler probably, but we're talking one match, and Lee was rubbish whilst Prasad was great in that specific match.
The Pak side of 99 WOULD have defeated the current Aussie and English side in most conditions if only they knew the word "consistency". It was a side when playing to their potential was more than a match for anyone in the world and at Chennai, they did play to their potential.FaaipDeOiad said:What I was trying to say is that the standard was higher in the Ashes test because the teams were better, not that both teams played better cricket. It probably came across the wrong way. As I said, I haven't seen the 99 Chennai test (though I have seen each of the other three in question), so I can't really judge how well the teams played in that game.