Swervy
International Captain
I dont like these 'who is better' debates really, but this is one that has started to take over the one regarding Sobers, and I thought it might be better to take it away from that thread.
The basic gist of it is, Richard is of the opinion that Nasser Hussain was a better batsman Hayden is. He has said that Haydos is a flat track bully and would get exposed on the pitches and vs the bowling Hussain had to face.
My arguement is that for about 50 tests each , both players careers overlapped, and during that over lap, Haydens performance way way way outstripped Hussains.
Here are the stats
From 1 jan 2000 (around when Hayden became a more regular test cricketer) to the end of Nassers career (24/5/2004), this is the comparison:
Hussain:
51 tests , 90 innings
2846 runs, 6 100s, 20 50s, average 34.70
Hayden:
47 tests, 80 inings
4547 runs, 17 100s, 15 50s, average 63.52
So in 10 less innings, Hayden scored in that time 1701 more runs, 11 more hundreds, and averaged not far off double.
Richard has said that is meaningless, given that someone playing this decade could conceivably average over 40 runs more than a batsman playing in the 1990s and still be a worse batsman.
I have questioned how massive a jump the domination of bat over the ball was in 2001 onwards, and supplied the following figures:
these figures are total runs scored divided by wickets taken by bowlers (so run outs not included)
1997: 34.0
1998: 31.2
1999: 32.9
2000: 30.9
2001: 35.2
2002: 33.5
2003: 37.5
2004: 36.7
2005: 34.4
2006: 36.0
2007: 30.1
So in the last 10 years , this year is the worst for batsmen!!!!
1997 through to 2000
32.2
2001 to now
35.4
So roughly, since the end of 2000, the amount the bat has got one over the ball has increased by 10%. Is that a massive amount? Not so sure myself.
So going by that, you average 60 now, that is roughly the equivalent of averaging 54 back in 1997.
For me, it doesnt stack up well for Hussain. Others may disagree!!!!
What do you guys think? Is the difference between the 1990s and now so great that an average performing batsman could be better than one of the most prolific batsmen of the present?
The basic gist of it is, Richard is of the opinion that Nasser Hussain was a better batsman Hayden is. He has said that Haydos is a flat track bully and would get exposed on the pitches and vs the bowling Hussain had to face.
My arguement is that for about 50 tests each , both players careers overlapped, and during that over lap, Haydens performance way way way outstripped Hussains.
Here are the stats
From 1 jan 2000 (around when Hayden became a more regular test cricketer) to the end of Nassers career (24/5/2004), this is the comparison:
Hussain:
51 tests , 90 innings
2846 runs, 6 100s, 20 50s, average 34.70
Hayden:
47 tests, 80 inings
4547 runs, 17 100s, 15 50s, average 63.52
So in 10 less innings, Hayden scored in that time 1701 more runs, 11 more hundreds, and averaged not far off double.
Richard has said that is meaningless, given that someone playing this decade could conceivably average over 40 runs more than a batsman playing in the 1990s and still be a worse batsman.
I have questioned how massive a jump the domination of bat over the ball was in 2001 onwards, and supplied the following figures:
these figures are total runs scored divided by wickets taken by bowlers (so run outs not included)
1997: 34.0
1998: 31.2
1999: 32.9
2000: 30.9
2001: 35.2
2002: 33.5
2003: 37.5
2004: 36.7
2005: 34.4
2006: 36.0
2007: 30.1
So in the last 10 years , this year is the worst for batsmen!!!!
1997 through to 2000
32.2
2001 to now
35.4
So roughly, since the end of 2000, the amount the bat has got one over the ball has increased by 10%. Is that a massive amount? Not so sure myself.
So going by that, you average 60 now, that is roughly the equivalent of averaging 54 back in 1997.
For me, it doesnt stack up well for Hussain. Others may disagree!!!!
What do you guys think? Is the difference between the 1990s and now so great that an average performing batsman could be better than one of the most prolific batsmen of the present?