I do agree a good slip catcher is more valuable then a cover/point stopper in test cricket.
Well, as I already told Rob... no.
Just take a look at the simple math I did for Mark Waugh: if we put the contribution of a standard slip at 70% of his, that would mean roughly a wicket less every 3 matches (which translates to 6-7 runs per innings); and Redbacks calculation was not far away (5 and something runs). As good and impressive as it is, if you have some off-side fielder who can stop already 2-3 balls per innings which would have been missed by your average fielder, that's more; also, you have to put runouts into the equation.
How many times the batsmen didn't take the single because the ball went to Ponting? Quite a few every test match, I believe, and those are runs saved. Put there the strong arm, and the twos became ones. Not to mention the fact that the Tasmanian was above average also in both runouts and catches; so, I'm prone to give him more that those 6 runs of Waugh's.
Ok then, as I've seen that the topic of this thread doesn't enjoy much interest, I'll push the emergency button (please God forgive me for what I'm going to write, but it's for the best);
I really believe
Ponting is massively underrated as an ATG; the very fact that Tendulkar gets picked more often than him in the various XI is extremely unjust, because people are not taking FIELDING in the equations.
First of all, I want to make clear that Tendulkar is surely the best batsman of the last 25 years; his technique, his elegance and his astonishing numbers speaks for him. However, Ponting doesn't fall so much behind; avg is 53 to 56, and innings per 100 is 6,74 to 5,84.
Clearly Tendulkar has the edge, and I believe those 3 or 4 runs per innings of difference between the two to be a fair indicator.
BUT, and you saw this coming, I think that Ponting is massively screwed by the fact that there's no method to determine the runs one has saved in the field.
Sure, we know that the aussie boy has taken around 75 more catches in around 25 less matches, and if these were ODIs we'd have to take the Master Blaster's bowling into account (avg of 50 in tests doesn't help him), but the feeling is that the per-fielding-innings between the two is way higher than that 3-4 runs of difference in their batting average.
The problem being, we don't know how much it is. We don't know where Tendulkar ranks as a fielder. I admit to take this "can of worms" comparison just to shed some light on the problem, because, that's my feeling, great fielders are extremly mistreated whenever it comes down to players rankings, awards and even selections. So, is there any way to solve this problem? I would say that, while perfection is still above horizon, there's massive room for improvement, even only with new scorecards; just by beginning to record "
stops" and "drops"; even better if, along with "catches", we divide them for fielding positions. For past games it would be tough, to sit through hundred of test matches to record new data, but it could be done. Of course this should be the boards' job, but I'm wondering if they're
1- Already doing it
2- Happy for things to stay as they are
That's why I made this poll, and I found it amazing that very few people dared to take a punt in the number of runs a player's fielding means to his team (and those who did, were all on absolutely different positions). If nobody knows, can you blame them to avoid using it as a valid metre for measurement? Of course not.
Last thing, I'll give you one example from baseball (I can't stand to watch a game of that one-shot sport, but they know how to do their stats): Derek Jeter was considered, thanks to his diving catches and stops, to be the best fielder in MLB, winning five time the Golden Glove. Then, when they began to track stats, they discovered that he was, in fact, the WORST fielder in the whole league, costing his team quite a few runs every year. Eyes and highlights can be deceptive.