Precambrian
Banned
Saurav Ganguly (Ind) Vs Micheal Vaughan (Eng)
Who was the better player?
Ganguly, "Prince of Kolkota", "Lord of the offside" to his admirers and "Lord Snooty" to his detractors. Made a sensational debut in England with 3 100s in a row. He couldnt maintain that momentum though. However ensured that his average never fell below 40 at any time in his career. Became captain in 2000, and led his team through the mires of incompetence and match-fixing to become a world power to reckon with, with benchmark series win in 2001 against Australia and later defending the trophy in Australia with a 1-1 result. However his form deserted him, and saw himself dropped in 2005. Just when everyone had written off him, came back into the side in late 2006, and cementing his spot with a glorious 200 against Pakistan in winter 2007. He announced retirement after home series against Australia and made a swansong 100.
Michael Vaughan was sophistication personified, in both manner as well as batting. He debuted in 1999 in a less glorious fashion. However his career-making performance came in the Ashes of 2002-03 in Australia, scoring 633 runs with 3 centuries. Took over captaincy in 2003, and led his team to a historic Ashes triumph at home in 2005. culminating one of the most successful series of victories by an English Team in the modern era. However personal form suffered post captaincy, and injuries took their toll making him miss the 2006-07 Ashes. Assumed captaincy back in 2007. However bad form and failure in home series against India and South Africa, led him to taking temporary absence from International cricket. He and countless English test cricket lovers expect a Ganguly-like comeback, though his poor form in the domestic circuit suggest otherwise fllowing his exclusion in the winter touring squad of 2008 to India.
Who was the better player?
Ganguly, "Prince of Kolkota", "Lord of the offside" to his admirers and "Lord Snooty" to his detractors. Made a sensational debut in England with 3 100s in a row. He couldnt maintain that momentum though. However ensured that his average never fell below 40 at any time in his career. Became captain in 2000, and led his team through the mires of incompetence and match-fixing to become a world power to reckon with, with benchmark series win in 2001 against Australia and later defending the trophy in Australia with a 1-1 result. However his form deserted him, and saw himself dropped in 2005. Just when everyone had written off him, came back into the side in late 2006, and cementing his spot with a glorious 200 against Pakistan in winter 2007. He announced retirement after home series against Australia and made a swansong 100.
Michael Vaughan was sophistication personified, in both manner as well as batting. He debuted in 1999 in a less glorious fashion. However his career-making performance came in the Ashes of 2002-03 in Australia, scoring 633 runs with 3 centuries. Took over captaincy in 2003, and led his team to a historic Ashes triumph at home in 2005. culminating one of the most successful series of victories by an English Team in the modern era. However personal form suffered post captaincy, and injuries took their toll making him miss the 2006-07 Ashes. Assumed captaincy back in 2007. However bad form and failure in home series against India and South Africa, led him to taking temporary absence from International cricket. He and countless English test cricket lovers expect a Ganguly-like comeback, though his poor form in the domestic circuit suggest otherwise fllowing his exclusion in the winter touring squad of 2008 to India.