Fiery
Banned
There's a surpriseDisagree with everything in this post.
There's a surpriseDisagree with everything in this post.
Haha, would have said the same thing to anyone tbh. But reading over the post I may have come across as slightly condescending for which I apologise for.There's a surprise
I think 'where a player stands today respective to his contemporaries' is a flawed and meaningless point unless you happen to outshine your contemporaries by a few orders of magnitude like Bradman did. For eg, top 5 pacers in the 80s would've been Marshall, Imran, Hadlee,Holding,Garner probably. The top 5 pacers today are : McGrath, Pollock, Vaas, Ntini, Asif.think the emphasis is on where the player stands today, amongst his peers, in the world right at this moment or over a recent time period
I think you'll find Hadlee's batting was a lot better than you, or his stats, give him credit for. He averaged late 20's in tests at 8 and always scored his runs fast, (usually when we needed them) and a lot of times, to either get the team into a winning position, get the team out if ****, or in some cases, win the gameNot really.
If a alltime great batsman is a handy bowler (like say Steve Waugh) or a handy batsman (like say Hadlee,Wasim, Benaud,etc) i don't really consider them to be as good as true allrounders (like Botham/Kapil/Miller) who are/were excellent at both or players like Imran who went from a great bowler and handy bat to excellent bowler and quite decent bat.
Plus there are many tangiables to the equation. In any case, i don't wish to debate this further.
PS: Don't worry, i'd pick Hadlee 100 times out of 100 ahead of McGrath for my alltime team.
I didn't think it was condescending at all pasag ...just a bit surprisingly naive from someone as obviously intelligent as yourself wrt alcohol for a start. Yes, I know he tries his guts out on the field, it's off the field where he could improve a lotHaha, would have said the something to anyone tbh. But reading over the post I may have come across as slightly condescending for which I apologise for.
In many cases though, this thread seemingly included, we simply aren't discussing a player in relation to players in years gone by - we're simply discussing the role in which he has played/will played agaisnt the players he actually plays against. If you find that an irrelevant point, then don't post.I think 'where a player stands today respective to his contemporaries' is a flawed and meaningless point unless you happen to outshine your contemporaries by a few orders of magnitude like Bradman did. For eg, top 5 pacers in the 80s would've been Marshall, Imran, Hadlee,Holding,Garner probably. The top 5 pacers today are : McGrath, Pollock, Vaas, Ntini, Asif.
Without some sort of comparisons across the eras, its very hard to tell how good the current folks are empirically rather than relatively.
comparing only how a player is by where they stand today or with their contemporaries is basically assuming that the quality of cricket remains more or less constant over time. Which it clearly isn't so.
Cricket is played on the field though, not off the field.I didn't think it was condescending at all pasag ...just a bit surprisingly naive from someone as obviously intelligent as yourself wrt alcohol for a start. Yes, I know he tries his guts out on the field, it's off the field where he could improve a lot
OOTQ.
Out of the question - yeah...?
For a couple of years before his less-than-match-fit return in the 06-07 Ashes, Andrew Flintoff matched his dangerous-looking bowling with results.particular, people always rave about his bowling, which imo is a lot more about how dangerous he looks as a bowler, than how dangerous he actually is.
I bet someone would have asked...Haha, as if anyone would think you were referring to the "Out of the question - yeah...?" post .
If you've got your **** together off the field, you've got a much better chance of doing well on the field tho PrinceCricket is played on the field though, not off the field.
It depends. He's perfectly capable of stringing together 6 consecutive Test fifties. It's all about his mindset. I don't think anyone rates him as a great batsman, but he's certainly world class, IMO.He's rated perfectly as an ODI player. One of the best going around.
His batting in tests however, is highly overrated.
A lot of very good cricketers have been booze-addled and woman-crazy off the field.If you've got your **** together off the field, you've got a much better chance of doing well on the field tho Prince
Disagree really. As long as you keep training enough and have your mind on your job when you get out there, what you do with the rest of your time is of little concequence.If you've got your **** together off the field, you've got a much better chance of doing well on the field tho Prince