MM is spot on, must have been some pretty bizarre ranking system if that's true. It's not like they weren't playing regularly either.2002 sounds plausible, even with the bowling issues, because everyone else had even bigger issues. Before that, no, even by splitting the players. Aus actually lost the no 1 ranking briefly in 99, 2000, and 2001, and before that a number of teams were very competitive.
the reasons you've put up here are why i think if rather than doing Aus A and Aus B you split the players and went for 1a and 1b, evenly balancing the two, it'd make it a lot easier to make the argument they'd be the top two teams in the world at a given time. obvious argument the other way is by splitting the game breakers like warne and gilly you're overextending compared to a side with all their aces but i'd say there was enough quality to mitigate thatMy recollection of late 90s was that SA were very close to australia, only they seemed to bottle the head to heads. The time frame for australia to field 2 no 1 teams would have to be from 99 to just before 04, when England put together a great pace attack.
In that era, aus 2nd 11 would be in the reckoning for 2nd best, but probably gall just short.
Its easy to name a lot of great players, but how would the pace work without mcgrath? They'd be much more susceptible to ups and downs.
How would the batsmen fare if the pressure was on them to hold it all together, instead of being cream on the cake?
But, yeah, **** it. Aus would have been 1,2 and all the other numbers if they could be bothered, because 'Strayla!'
Three years is an absolutely tiny window of time though.Nope. In 96 - 98 period they could not even put out the best XI even. It was either SL XI or SAF XI. A combined SAF + SL XI of late 90s would be better than any side that Australia managed to field.
Openers:
Jayasuriya clearly better than all four Aussie openers.
Middle order:
De Silva and Ranatunga were hot in middle order
Spinners:
No contest. Murali way better than Warne in ODIs
Fast bowlers:
Only Mac Grath and Lee could boast the quality over Vaas in ODIs.
Keepers:
Healy was a better keeper. Kaluwitharana was a better Keeper batsman.
So yes, looking at overall records you may form a best XI, but not two best XIs when you have a WC winning side who were beating sides left right and center in late 90s. But if you consider performances of late 90s, SL XI was extremely hot, and it is a joke to suggest Aussies had a better 22 players but repeatedly their arses being handed over to them in encounters.
Sure signs that a raw nerve is being pinched.I heard the average Sri Lankan club under-13 B-grade player in the 90s was better than Bradman at his best, can confirm?
South Africa hardly played SL at home. That would have dented that ratio big time during that period. SAF were woeful against spin and SL had a solid spin bowling department then. I could say the same about 1999 WC, if it was in sub continent, either Pakistan or Sri Lanka would have won that.Three years is an absolutely tiny window of time though.
Sri Lanka won the world cup at home in 96 it's true. But it wasn't a sustained run of form or anything. It just happened that Sri Lanka's best batsmen were at their peaks for the tournament and it was at home. Even using your criteria of 96-98 they had nowhere near the best record (it was South Africa by the way who had a win/loss ratio of roughly 4:1, while Sri Lanka were sitting at 3:2 - and that included a home world cup). In that time period they were dominant in Asia (win/loss of 19:2 in Sri Lanka and 7:2 in India) but went 5:7 in the UAE, 3:5 in Australia (2:3 vs Aus and 1:2 vs WI) and 2:4 in South Africa. Basically they were excellent in Asia and competitive elsewhere. South Africa were far more dominant with positive win rates everywhere during that same time period. It's pretty crazy they didn't win the world cup (except that it's South Africa lol).
Expanding the window of time to between 1994 and 1999, when most of those same guys you mention were playing, Sri Lanka's win/loss is only just over 50% (78:70) which placed them firmly in 4th place overall.
I'm not taking anything away from them when I say that Sri Lanka were very lucky that their home world cup happened to coincide with their players peaking (a bit like Australia in 2015). Saying they were definitively the best at the time though is nonsense. They had a better side for the 2007 world cup and were unfortunate to run into the best world cup side ever assembled and then had some terrible luck in the final on top of that.
South Africa were by far the strongest ODI side of the second half of the 90s and it wasn't even close. They just bottled their biggest and best shot at grabbing a world cup. If the 96 world cup were held in England, Australia or the West Indies, I'm sure that South Africa would have run away with it.
I feel this isn't really true, he played 48 tests for SA in the '90s, only 4 players played more for them in that decade (Cronje, Donald, Kirsten, Cullinan)Yep he could not get into the side for tests for a lot of the 90s.
South Africa played 66 tests in the 1990s, so Rhodes played in 73% of them.I feel this isn't really true, he played 48 tests for SA in the '90s, only 4 players played more for them in that decade (Cronje, Donald, Kirsten, Cullinan)
Cronje played 64 over the decade and I assume this was basically every single test, so 48/64 for Rhodes isn't a bad showing
https://stats.espncricinfo.com/ci/e...al1=span;team=3;template=results;type=batting
He may have been dropped once or twice but he was still more or less a staple IMO
he wasn't out for several years at a time or anything like that, there wasn't a single year that passed where he didn't at least play a couple of tests