• Welcome to the Cricket Web forums, one of the biggest forums in the world dedicated to cricket.

    You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join the Cricket Web community today!

    If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

J Hobbs Vs Imran

J Hobbs Vs Imran


  • Total voters
    22
  • This poll will close: .

subshakerz

Hall of Fame Member
And you can adjust all the era you want to be but if Hobbs is head and shoulders above his competition, what good does era adjustment really do?
My point is that this era is so radically different that you can't do era adjustment. Nor was Hobbs that far ahead like Bradman to make a case of transcending eras.
 

smash84

The Tiger King
My point is that this era is so radically different that you can't do era adjustment. Nor was Hobbs that far ahead like Bradman to make a case of transcending eras.
Ok, how many of his contemporaries were nearly as good as him in batting? What were their averages? Their output? Give me something at least rather than just repeating things like certain posters and expecting people to accept that as Truth no matter how inconsistent the logic.
 

smash84

The Tiger King
I mean I understand his perspective of allotting a very high weightage to dominance in the primary skill. I do not necessarily agree with it
Yes, he has a very peculiar way of assigning high weightage to primary skill. You probably wouldn't want to know. Although I suspect you already do.
 

subshakerz

Hall of Fame Member
Ok, how many of his contemporaries were nearly as good as him in batting? What were their averages? Their output? Give me something at least rather than just repeating things like certain posters and expecting people to accept that as Truth no matter how inconsistent the logic.
I don't doubt that Hobbs was statistically ahead and proven on different wickets. But not to a Bradman level. He had Sutcliffe who averaged more than him.

I think it's of far lesser consequence that Hobbs was ahead them than the fact that cricket wasn't really a professional sport in his time with standards that have some broad compatability to today.

The same reason we look with suspicion at 19th century bowlers averaging in the teens and other anomalies, we must reserve all judgment on Hobbs numbers.

If someone is well above others in club standard cricket, does that mean they are going to be so in international cricket? Of course there is no guarantee. And we don't know if cricket that Hobbs played was on that level.
 

smash84

The Tiger King
I don't doubt that Hobbs was statistically ahead and proven on different wickets. But not to a Bradman level. He had Sutcliffe who averaged more than him.

I think it's of far lesser consequence that Hobbs was ahead them than the fact that cricket wasn't really a professional sport in his time with standards that have some broad compatability to today.

The same reason we look with suspicion at 19th century bowlers averaging in the teens and other anomalies, we must reserve all judgment on Hobbs numbers.

If someone is well above others in club standard cricket, does that mean they are going to be so in international cricket? Of course there is no guarantee. And we don't know if cricket that Hobbs played was on that level.
That's the thing though. The 19th century bowlers had low averages but there were a bunch of them going around like that.

In Hobbs case, there were very few. Just as you would expect in most eras. Which is why 2000s was also an anomaly.
 

OverratedSanity

Request Your Custom Title Now!
I don't doubt that Hobbs was statistically ahead and proven on different wickets. But not to a Bradman level. He had Sutcliffe who averaged more than him.
Look up the pre war period dummy, that's when run scoring was the lowest it's ever been and Hobbs was a long way ahead of the rest. Sutcliffe came later when pitches eased up.
 

shortpitched713

International Captain
Ok, how many of his contemporaries were nearly as good as him in batting? What were their averages? Their output? Give me something at least rather than just repeating things like certain posters and expecting people to accept that as Truth no matter how inconsistent the logic.
This presupposes that I have to consider any of him, and/or his contemporaries.

Sidney Barnes' bowling numbers are also off the charts. But any number of modern bowlers are considered to naturally be better than him, as a matter of course.

I think we should do the same with Hobbs, and leave him as a historically significant part of a long gone, statistically irrelevant, and yet esoterically interesting era. Rather like Barnes and Grace.
 

kyear2

International Coach
Not really, more like I can't stand your biasedness and agendas.
Strange, I can't stand your agendas and wilful blindness, so yeah, basically the same. Can't stand your biases and blatant agenda, can't even use plural.

Don't stalk you posts though.

The real funny thing is that we disagree on one cricketer. The rest of it is just you being petulant.
 

kyear2

International Coach
This presupposes that I have to consider any of him, and/or his contemporaries.

Sidney Barnes' bowling numbers are also off the charts. But any number of modern bowlers are considered to naturally be better than him, as a matter of course.

I think we should do the same with Hobbs, and leave him as a historically significant part of a long gone, statistically irrelevant, and yet esoterically interesting era. Rather like Barnes and Grace.
Not true, he averaged 21 vs Australia and bullied a minnow.

The equivalent would be if Murali only played England and his minnow of choice.
 

subshakerz

Hall of Fame Member
Not true, he averaged 21 vs Australia and bullied a minnow.

The equivalent would be if Murali only played England and his minnow of choice.
Kyear, we agree that Bradman's numbers would have to be massively adjusted in modern era, but doesn't that logic get us to discount other pre-war stats?
 

kyear2

International Coach
Kyear, we agree that Bradman's numbers would have to be massively adjusted in modern era, but doesn't that logic get us to discount other pre-war stats?
Never said massively. Hobbs deserve mention in the top tier of cricketers for what he accomplished in his career. Top 5 batsman, and top 10 cricketer.

That being said, he isn't in my AT team because there are doubts to how he would handle a modern attack compared to Hutton and Richards

I don't go nearly as far as you and some others though
 

subshakerz

Hall of Fame Member
Never said massively. Hobbs deserve mention in the top tier of cricketers for what he accomplished in his career. Top 5 batsman, and top 10 cricketer.

That being said, he isn't in my AT team because there are doubts to how he would handle a modern attack compared to Hutton and Richards

I don't go nearly as far as you and some others though
Actually I am not disagreeing with your stances here. I can't discard Hobbs but I can't fully embrace him either. I just now considering having Hobbs behind Smith too based on what has been mentioned.

Yours is a reasonable moderate position. Can't out Hobbs too high or not there either.
 
Last edited:

kyear2

International Coach
Actually I am not disagreeing with your stances here. I can't discard Hobbs but I can't fully embrace him either. I just now considering having Hobbs behind Smith too based on what has been mentioned.
Think he deserves top 5, but everyone in my top 10 was Uber talented.
 

Top