weldone
Hall of Fame Member
I'm with SK here. Tendulkar is the best cricketer of the 90s for me too. Between '93 and '99, he performed against top attacks almost in every series everywhere. IIRC, during this period Tendulkar scored almost 5000 runs at an average of close to 65, with centuries in almost every series of decent length. This was a period of top-class bowling everywhere, except England (and India). As a whole, Tendulkar of the noughties isn't comparable to the Tendulkar before tennis elbow IMO. While in noughties you had every Tom, Dick and Harry averaging 50, there were only 3 batsmen who played for a large part of the 90s and averaged over 50 - Tendulkar, Lara and S. Waugh. That's why I rate all 3 of them very highly, especially Tendulkar.
India was almost unbeatable at home. And Tendulkar was supreme in away conditions. It didn't help that none of India's 90s bowlers were decent in away conditions, including Srinath and Kumble - who matured later to become somewhat decent away bowlers later on in the 00s.
Blocky's logic is flawed IMO. For example, Lara didn't bat single-handedly to keep WI competitive. Even if we conveniently forget all about Richie Richardson, Hooper, Chanderpaul, Adams, Simmons (comparable with Sachin's support batsmen for most of the 90s to say the least), we can't forget that Lara had a pace attack of Ambrose and Walsh while Sachin had Srinath and Prasad.
India was almost unbeatable at home. And Tendulkar was supreme in away conditions. It didn't help that none of India's 90s bowlers were decent in away conditions, including Srinath and Kumble - who matured later to become somewhat decent away bowlers later on in the 00s.
Blocky's logic is flawed IMO. For example, Lara didn't bat single-handedly to keep WI competitive. Even if we conveniently forget all about Richie Richardson, Hooper, Chanderpaul, Adams, Simmons (comparable with Sachin's support batsmen for most of the 90s to say the least), we can't forget that Lara had a pace attack of Ambrose and Walsh while Sachin had Srinath and Prasad.