honestbharani
Whatever it takes!!!
The problem with what you are saying is, you are looking at things AFTER they happened and then concluding whether an innings mattered or not. As I said, juz by looking at stats, Hussey's hunded at the Oval came after everything was lost and does not matter as much as a hundred that set up a win... But reality is, as long as he was there with a decent partner at the other end, they were always threatening to even win the game... You look at scorecards and say it is BECAUSE Kallis played slowly that games were drawn.. But I can make that argument for almost every other player on that scorecard, INCLUDING the opposition players...I don't think it is. Time was an issue in Sobers's era, he had to score quickly because with everyone else going at a snail's pace the chances of running out of time were pretty high. Time was no issue at all for Kallis most of the time, very few of the tests he played in were draws, relatively speaking. So he could score at whatever rate he wanted and it made no difference.
Relativity might matter to you, but it doesn't to me in this particular case. Scoring at a strike rate of 53 is scoring at a strike rate of 53, whether everyone else is scoring at a strike rate of 20 or a strike rate of 80. It's still the same achievement. It's everyone is averaging 40 and one player is averaging 60, then I'll take relativity into account, because it implies to me that scoring runs was exceptionally difficult in that era. I don't think the low strike rates in Sobers's era were because scoring quickly was especially more difficult. I think it was just how things were done.
You don't rate innings AFTER you know the result. You rate them in the context of when they were played. That is the problem with most people like you who just prefer to look at results and numbers in hindsight and draw conclusions from it...