age_master said:
let me put this to you in simple terms, when a player is dropped he is not out, if he is caught he is out. simple as that, if you are dropped, so what, you continue with your innings, it doesn't change your skill and make you worse.
you batting skill remains the same wether you are caught first time, or dropped 3932809273 times an innings.
it doesn't matter how many chances you give, its the runs on the board that count
This is about the worst response I've ever seen.
You have proceeded to state the facts that runs count towards the scorebook, and reiterated that many people don't realise this:
Your batting skill is not
altered by runs you score, it's just summed-up by it.
Runs you have
against your name, however, don't neccesarily say a thing about it. If you have a 381 against your name, where you have been let-off 3932809273 times, it's clearly pretty meaningless. I would, beyond all question, score 381 and many more (if the innings lasted sufficiently) in such circumstances against the best attack ever.
You have failed, of course, as everyone has done before you, to answer the fact that
a batsman's ability is not altered by the lack of fieldsman's ability. Because you have again simply attempted to use the notion that missed chances make the batsman worse. No, you've got it the wrong way around. A batsman is judged as good because he scores runs - if he always needs dropped catches to get runs against his name, he won't get any runs against his name if there aren't any dropped catches.
Hence the judgement is made
after the innings - if no runs are earnt by the batsman, he hasn't played well.
And the old "it's the scorebook that counts" excuse for an argument I've disproven countless times; the scorebook is concerned with results; judgement of ability concerns far, far more important things.