Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
Yep. And that too with bats far, far lighter than those which most people have used for the past 20 or 30 years.It's obviously been said before but wow does he hit that ball cleanly
Yep. And that too with bats far, far lighter than those which most people have used for the past 20 or 30 years.It's obviously been said before but wow does he hit that ball cleanly
WoWee. I knew he was dominant, but not to that extent.A quick look at Grace's stats.....continued
So how did WG Grace fare against his contemporaries in the English first class seasons over the 20 year period of 1868-1887
- WG averaged 45.17 during this period.
- The average of all others who played in the first class game in those years put together is 16.00.
- This gives WG a multiplier of 2.82 over his contemporaries in these two decades.
- The average in the English season in the 21st centuries (2000-2007) has been 31.55
- Thus if there was someone who dominated English first class cricket today as WG did for those 20, he would have had to average 89.06 !!
An average of 89.06 for a period of 20 years !!
Not too different from Bradman's career first class average of 95.14 .
Of all players.WoWee. I knew he was dominant, but not to that extent.
Is this average of 16 that for those of front-line batsmen or all players?
I can understand the Sachin part of the mix but McCullum?? Bradman was notorious for hitting the ball along the ground and finding the gaps, McCullum just goes out there and smashes the daylights out of it!Kind of off topic, but does anyone know where to get Bradman film footage? I have a picture in my mind of how him batting would look. Something of a mix of Brendan McCullum and Sachin.
Thats quite amazing, puts WG into perspective; an average of 90 for 20 years...not bad going at all!Its even more amazing that in that 20 year period, every 7th first class century scored in England was scored by WG !!
People just don't seem to be able to appreciate the time span of these cricketers' careers. We just devalue their performances by looking at their averages, where as what we could do if we were willing to look more objectively is consider what would have happened had they NOT played that long.Thats quite amazing, puts WG into perspective; an average of 90 for 20 years...not bad going at all!
Fantastic post SJS, agree with nearly all of it. Just one point to note though, I am fairly certain Mr Grace visited Australia around 1873, which was the third English cricket tour of Australia.
A quick look at Grace's stats
WG Grace for his times was as great a cricketer as Bradman was in his. This alone makes him worthy of being placed at the very top of any shortlist of all time great cricketers. Unfortunately we tend to look at his stats and tell ourselves
- Come on he averaged just 32.3 in test matches.
- His first class average at 39.45 is no great shakes either (remember Bradman averaged in the nineties)
- If a fat fifty year old was playing active cricket the standards couldn't be that great could they?
and so on and so forth
What we need to understand is
- When test cricket started, it wasn't considered the ultimate to participate. The English domestic cricket was THE cricket. Many players did not take interest in it and opted out of an opportunity to play tests particularly if there was money to be made elsewhere.
- WG played his first test at 32, his second at 34, his 3rd at 36 !! By the time he played his 9th test he was 40.
- He did not go to Australia for ALL the first eight tours England made down under !! and he was by a zillion miles England's (and the world's premier batsman of the times).
- He was in his 44th year and well past his prime when he played his firsat test in Australia.
- The fact that he played till past fifty does not mean he was as good a player at fifty as he was when younger. He was well past his prime. Its just that he was still good enough to play first class cricket. Surelyy it affected his averages as it would affect any player's (including Bradman) if he continued playing competitive cricket well past his prime. Thats why instead of looking at Grace's figures in totality over the entire career, we need to first understand that he was at his prime in his twenties and early thirties and then declined as any cricketer would.
Here are WG's first class figures broken up by decades to show how he declined as he grew older.
WG was born in 1848, so I have taken him to be 20 years old in 1968, 40 years old in 1988 and so on. I have taken full calendar year records even though he was born in July because the records are available more easily on calendar year (English domestic season mainly) basis.
Code:[B] M's Inns NO Runs Ave 100 50 Ct St M/100 M/50plus[/B] [COLOR="DarkGreen"]Teens/20's 222 366 35 17927 54.2 58 65 300 3 3.8 1.8[/COLOR] [COLOR="Blue"]30's 223 385 30 13058 36.8 25 69 277 2 8.9 2.4 40's 279 485 25 15947 34.7 30 77 240 0 9.3 2.6[/COLOR] [COLOR="DarkRed"]50's onwards 146 242 14 7279 31.9 11 40 59 0 13.3 2.9[/COLOR] [B]OVERALL 870 1478 104 54211 39.5 124 251 876 5 7.0 2.3[/B]
- As a batsman, WG clearly has three distinct phases. He was at his peak till he gets to the age of thirty.
- He was not just younger till then he was not as fat as he was to become.
- From then for the next two decades he is clearly a lesser batsman though he did have a sudden lease of life from 1895 to 1898 (his 47th, 48th, 49th and 50th years) he scored 7526 runs at a very impressive 44.0) scoring 20 centuries and crossing 2000 runs in a season twice while crossing 1500 on the other two occasions.
- He declined very fast after this second wind and his 100's became much less frequent though he was not so bad with fifties. Clearly the body was very tired.
...to be continued
I was asked to interview him for a newspaper about 2 months ago but declined as Id never heard of him.The Belgian cyclist Eddy Merckx is the only sportsperson to match Bradman in my opinion.
Dire, I am appalled.I was asked to interview him for a newspaper about 2 months ago but declined as Id never heard of him.
This analysis ignores the fact that Bradman alone raised the overall batting average of his time by about 1.5 runs during his career. If one subtracts his performance from the overall figures, the resulting average is almost identical to that of Viv Richards time.Hi Funnygirl
Here is the dampener for all Bradman 'devotees'
The world batting averages haven't changed much since Bradman's era. If anything they are marginally lower. The lowest being during Richard's era at 30.21 as compared to 31.856 during Bradman's times. Thus Bradman's average during the times of these other greats - extrapolated on the basis of the world averages and Bradman's 'multiplier' works out as -
- Hammond's Era : 97.93
- Richard's Era : 94.97
- Gavaskar's Era : 95.50
- Lara's Era : 95.85
He played in the best era of them all. So the only chance Bradman had for keeping his three figure average intact was if he hadn't played that last test
Thats very correct.This analysis ignores the fact that Bradman alone raised the overall batting average of his time by about 1.5 runs during his career. If one subtracts his performance from the overall figures, the resulting average is almost identical to that of Viv Richards time.
[B]Player/Era ROW avg Don's avg[/B]
Richards 29.94 97.86
Gavaskar 30.08 98.34
Brian Lara 30.30 99.04
Wally Hammond 30.21 98.73
Don Bradman 30.58 99.94
Yeah, it would be way above that.I am pretty sure he'd be an excellent batsman - but averaging in the 90's? Heh, no chance. Not even close.
AWTA.The Belgian cyclist Eddy Merckx is the only sportsperson to match Bradman in my opinion.
Gretzky too. Four Stanley Cups, nine Hart Trophies (MVP), 10 Art Ross trophies (most goals in a season) and still the only player in hockey history to score 200 points in a season, which he did four times. So far apart from even Gordie Howe and Howe was a bonafide hockey genius.The Belgian cyclist Eddy Merckx is the only sportsperson to match Bradman in my opinion.
Tiger Woods if he goes on like this for another, say, ten years ??The only man who should be mentioned in the same breath as Bradman is Muhammad Ali. Although unlike The Don he's not unequivocally recognised as the greatest ever in his field (although many argue that he is), in terms of impact on the sport, and in particular global recognition, he outstrips everyone.