Can you name the express fast bowlers?For spinners Lara, for express fast bowling there were none better than IVA and on any kind of wicket.
Lillee, Thompson, Snow, Imran, Procter, Willis.Can you name the express fast bowlers?
And I don't rate any of them that highly, no do I particularily rate Boycott or Chanderpaul.Lol @ kallis playing for himself. Dravid has similar SR but he is a teamplayer. A Cook scores at the same rate too.
lol. It does'nt matter to me how you rate players and where you rate Dravid and Kallis but my issue is that A Cook and Dravid have similar SR to Kallis but only Kallis is accused ofplaying for himself. I dare you won't say ACook and Dravid played for themselves.And I don't rate any of them that highly, no do I particularily rate Boycott or Chanderpaul.
1. Benaud wont make such a claim ( even if he do , that wud b a strange odd statement )I would definitely argue for Chappell being the best in his era. I'm sure many others would argue that too. If tomorrow, Richie Benaud claimed that Brett Lee was the best fast bowler he'd ever seen, would that mean we all suddenly start ranking him amongst our best players? These experts aren't completely right about everything. I'm sure there are some experts who would rate Chappell just as highly, or better, than Viv.
Funny, don't seem to remember a world cup in Sharjah.The best ton ever hit in a final is Sachin's 134 in Sharjah, 1998. Look it up.
can you remeber top scorer of 96 and 03 WCs with 500+ and 600+ runsFunny, don't seem to remember a world cup in Sharjah.
Ah.. Didn't know you were just including World Cup Finals as you just said that Ponting hit the best ton in a final. On that point, the best ton in a World Cup Final was Clive Lloyd's 85 ball 102 in 1975.Funny, don't seem to remember a world cup in Sharjah.
I agree, it is a debate for many other batsmen. Personally, though, I don't see where Tendulkar beats out Chappell apart from longevity and for me Tendulkar's case for playing longer doesn't aid his argument much. Chappell played for 14 years, has as complete record, home and away, and was also the best against the best. Unless you put stock in milestones like the most runs/centuries scored I don't see how this is much else of an argument, personally.Tendulkar has his own set of reasons why he should rightfully be crowned the best after the Don, so does Chappell, and so do about 15 others
Tendulkar averaged 37 in matches with McGrath. In matches with McGrath and Warne, he averages 42. Playing a second string and Warne aside, his record isn't impressive. At best, he has a par score.Stop manipulating things.
I'd get on to the statsguru immediately. There might be a flaw in their calculator somewhere.. Chappell played for 40 years
I am not sure McGrath is the 2nd best, but he is certainly there.Does Ikki have a low opinion of all non-Aussie cricketers? Just by reading his few posts in the different threads, I am pretty sure that he thinks
a) Lillee and McGrath are the two best fast bowlers of all time, in that order
b) Ponting is a better bat than Tendulkar
c) Miller is the greatest all-rounder ever
His sig makes his view on Warne pretty clear, of course.
man I'm tired.I'd get on to the statsguru immediately. There might be a flaw in their calculator somewhere.
I didn't call for equality, mate. But Tendulkar's skills as a batsman did surpass Ponting for mine (unless you put the pull shot on a much, much higher pedestal than others). As overall cricketers even, if you value Ponting's fielding very highly (as you should), Tendulkar's bowling was not slouchy at all, and if he wasn't playing in an Indian team with a ridiculous supply of good spinners, he would have definitely bowled more.I am not sure McGrath is the 2nd best, but he is certainly there.
Frankly, I am not sure on Tendulkar or Ponting at all. For me, Ponting's wild swings count against him in a sense. I feel Tendulkar's skills translated to a better, longer, career. Having said that, against the best, or in an important match with something on the line Tendulkar is behind several batsmen for me. Until Tendulkar's recent downturn in his career, I would have put him ahead. Right now, about even, really. As players, not just batsmen, I'd definitely have Ponting.
Miller is probably the greatest all-rounder. Most of my discussions around all-rounders revolve around the fact that I have disdain for the notion that Sobers is far and away the greatest when his bowling was so poor for so long.
Anyway, I have to wonder why it matters. Everyone is biased. It just so happens Australia has been ridiculously endowed with talent for a good century of cricket. If you disagree with the opinions, I'm more interested in the reasons than some call for faux equality.
Replace the word Tendulkar with the word Ponting and the word spinners with the word seamers and that sentence still applies.Tendulkar's bowling was not slouchy at all, and if he wasn't playing in an Indian team with a ridiculous supply of good spinners, he would have definitely bowled more.
In a world where Sobers never existed and you had Kallis at number 6, would you let him bowl?I disagree because conversely it makes you easier to stand out. Cricket, unlike other team sports, is a game of 1v1 duels. If Tendulkar was Australian, he would never have been debuted at 16 years old. If Murali was Australian, he'd might not get to bowl till he changed his action, let alone for 50-something overs per match. But cricket gives us a decent gauge in the ratios to compare them regardless of their team. Not perfect, but a good tool. I've even argued that bowling in a poor side, for an all-time great, is statistically even more advantageous.
As for your other points:
- I think Tendulkar's technique was more textbook and he relied far less than Ponting on his hand-eye coordination. On the other hand, Ponting's technique, where he'd rock back to pull or get forward and drive, may have been simple but extremely effective because of his hand-eye coordination. It did make his ageing in the game difficult though. And although I'd agree that Tendulkar would be a handy bowler, that's all he'd be. Ponting is arguably the greatest fielder the game has seen - definitely in the discussion. One of the most successful captains ever as well. For Australia, he was leader on several fronts; whereas I always got the impression that Tendulkar would rather just be responsible for himself.
- Sobers may have been picked for his bowling...but the truth is he sucked at it bar a decent period in the 60s. He is one of the greatest batsmen of all time - the best #6 - and also in the discussion as one of the greatest fielders ever, but I just don't have much time for the argument that he was far and away the best all-rounder. Surely one of them, but for me the period where he was lethal with both bat and ball considering the length of his career is just not enough. I've argued before that in an all-time side Sobers is my easy pick for #6, but I'd never let him bowl. I also think the game is better suited for bowling all-rounders - because all bowlers have to bat, but not vice-versa.