I hope I'm less dogmatic, but after a discussion with my brother on the subject, I'm not so sure. Anyway, I hope they do allow me to write the piece for them, I think that'd be pretty useful and there are a lot of different opinions expressed so far. Interestingly, everyone seems to think that what they are saying is the common-sense, obvious view and yet there is a fair bit of divergence between people.Haha yeah, I thought of Richard as soon as I saw this thread.
Posts like this are awesome because it is something I'd totally overlooked.I feel that a selection strategy that fails more often than not but is nimble enough to weed out the failures and every now and then selects players good enough to play for 10 years+ is a good strategy. Even if the ratio of hits to misses is rather low, if the hits are huge then IMO it is a strategy that works.
Tbf he's averaged 29.00 since the end of the 2010/2011 ashes -- this is more worrying than his start tbh.What range does everyone think is appropriate when it comes to selection? For example, a lot of people don't rate Anderson despite him being gun for the last few years because his overall average is high. As a result he wouldn't make a few people's team. So what range of stats should be considered; 2-3 years, 3-4 years, 5 years, etc?
Do would go as far to say that a consistent domestic player who is picked but fails places no fault on the selectors? Suppose there are possible problems with his technique (ooh, he doesn't get very far forward, etc) but nothing obvious like he's scared of pace, cannot play mystery spin, etc. Sorry if I'm just asking questions but if they give me an opportunity to write this article (which is very unlikely), I would like to have everything considered.In general
Consistency policy is the king, there is a lot more hard work and experience involved in being the best than just pure talent.
You're going to get players who don't kick on. I don't see that as a problem.Do would go as far to say that a consistent domestic player who is picked but fails places no fault on the selectors? Suppose there are possible problems with his technique (ooh, he doesn't get very far forward, etc) but nothing obvious like he's scared of pace, cannot play mystery spin, etc. Sorry if I'm just asking questions but if they give me an opportunity to write this article (which is very unlikely), I would like to have everything considered.
That is my view of selections. It should be very very rare that selectors go with the gut (as in no where near as often as they have with Australian spinners since Warne for instance). The game is smarter than the selectors will ever be and so the best performers over a significant period at the level below should be the first picked to step up in almost every instance. The safe pick on results might fail, or the gut pick might succeed, but the inverse is far more likely to be the result over the longer term.This is the crux of the debate I'm trying to encourage. Perhaps hindsight is irrelevant. Perhaps outcomes are products of chance and the correct selection is not the one that works but the one with the largest chance of working.
Great post. Like you and manee, I'd also encourage more probabilistic thinking about past selections. Everything seems deterministic in retrospect but it's not.That is my view of selections. It should be very very rare that selectors go with the gut (as in no where near as often as they have with Australian spinners since Warne for instance). The game is smarter than the selectors will ever be and so the best performers over a significant period at the level below should be the first picked to step up in almost every instance. The safe pick on results might fail, or the gut pick might succeed, but the inverse is far more likely to be the result over the longer term.
Too often selectors point to rare occasions where a left field pick (say Warne's initial selection) work out and never balance that against all of times picking a player without a real record of success has failed miserably (hello Xavier Doherty, Steve Smith (as a front line spinner), Cam White (as a front line spinner), Michael Beer, and Ashton Agar amongst other). Even Warne's selection can be argued as being premature. He was so good he would have had the numbers to justify his selection soon enough but would have escaped going for 1/200 on debut. The game sorts the wheat from the chaff. Selectors delude themselves when they think they have some special insight to see why a player with a strong record won't make the step up, but another player with limited success will suddenly become a champion if given a chance and then cherry pick a small number of successes from a much larger number of abject failures for this sort of selection.
Yeah great that Jono, thanks for bringing it to our attentionThis reminds me of Richard but in the reverse - arguing a selection that succeeds can still be the wrong selection.
It depends. For New Zealand someone like Tim Southee was given a lot of chances when he really failed to take them. I thought there was definitely better bowlers in New Zealand at that time. However, now he has come good. The question is would he bowling as well now had he played a few seasons of Plunket Shield to develop his bowling? Maybe Southee needed a couple of years of average bowling at test level to become the player he is today? If that is the case then it was a good selection. However, if it was the case that Southee could have developed just as well outside of test cricket then the initial decision to select him was poor and we sacrificed short term performance for nothing.Even over the long-term? Someone selected with seemingly little due cause goes on to have an all-time great career was still a wrong selection?