Ikki
Hall of Fame Member
What a compelling reply, you sure are proving me wrong with them.Wow, What a compelling argument like the useless sheets of meaningless statistics.
What a compelling reply, you sure are proving me wrong with them.Wow, What a compelling argument like the useless sheets of meaningless statistics.
Longevity isn't enough to get to wickets or make runs, which you seem to be implying. If it was so, Imran would have scored a lot more.Waugh would have taken lot more wickets.
Why would I make such assumptions, It is you who is making the assumptions.But would you make the point that a young Waugh had scored less runs than Imran had made in his entire career and tout Imran?
No, But I would say that Waugh was a better allrounder than Mcgrath. And that is an indisputable fact of CRICKET HISTORY.Would you take the aggregate amount of wickets Waugh took and say before McGrath overtook him that because Waugh had taken more wickets than McGrath at that time he was decent?
Very Compelling Argument No. 2.You are again clutching straws.
I dont need to. You have to be proven right first to be proven wrong.What a compelling reply, you sure are proving me wrong with them.
So now Sobers become Crap.And it isn't. Arguing that Sobers was Harmison+Ponting is quite ridiculous actually.
You don't need to have seen someone bowl when they average 50 to know they are crap. Likewise you don't have to have seen someone average 99.94 with the bat to know they were good.
Averaging 40 in 63/93 tests is one of those things.
I agree. Sobers' longevity is a talking point. However, to the extent that his bowling should earn him the undisputed title of the greatest all-rounder? I do not agree.Longevity isn't enough to get to wickets or make runs, which you seem to be implying. If it was so, Imran would have scored a lot more.Waugh would have taken lot more wickets.
I didn't make such an assumption, I presented a scenario.Why would I make such assumptions, It is you who is making the assumptions.
Yes, but what does that have to do with this?No, But I would say that Waugh was a better allrounder than Mcgrath. And that is an indisputable fact of CRICKET HISTORY.
For 63 of his 93 Tests as a bowler he was undeniably crap - whatever the reason.So now Sobers become Crap.
The points I brought forth were facts; they are innately correct/right.I dont need to. You have to be proven right first to be proven wrong.
No he took more wickets than Miller who want to pick ahead of Sobers. He scored 5000 runs more than Miller. If Miller decided to go to the war, it was his decision to go, why should I assume that he was going to be as successful as Sobers.I agree. Sobers' longevity is a talking point. However, to the extent that his bowling should earn him the undisputed title of the greatest all-rounder? I do not agree.
May be it was just not easy being a bowler. So you see longevity isn't enough to get you wickets, you have to be good at it to be asked to bowl.Waugh did not bowl much, or to the extent that Sobers did, so he is not comparable in many ways.
So,in your own words, Apart from being one of the greatest all time batsman of all time, Sobers, in one career, had the career of Three Bowlers, who could not, despite being better, have accumulated as many wickets as him.It was said that because Sobers was the leading wicket taker in periods throughout his career that this proved his efficacy as a bowler. I disputed this, more due to the extent to how effective it actually was. Because Sobers played over 20 years, he had in 1 career the career of maybe 3 bowlers. Those 3 bowlers could have all been better than him but not have accumulated as many wickets. It did not make Sobers better simply because he had more wickets than them. It was simply a byproduct of having played much longer.
Statsguru fact. Here is another Statsguru fact Andy Ganteaume is a better batsman than Bradman.The points I brought forth were facts; they are innately correct/right.
So Was Imran for 67 of his test matches.For 63 of his 93 Tests as a bowler he was undeniably crap - whatever the reason.
Fair enough. But, afaik, all those writers exclude Hutton and Hammond from the list as pre-war batsman, while May was a post war batsman. Benaud, iirc, did rate Hutton at the very top as well (he almost went for Hutton and Miller as his opening bats in his all time XI) but placed May as the best English bat of the post war generation. I dont know where he would put Compton in that group as, iirc, his career too began pre-war but I certainly do think he ranked May ahead of Barrington, if not ahead of Hammond and Hutton (and perhaps Compton). I think Cowdrey held a similar opinion too (although for him Hutton was indubitably the best English batsman he had ever seen).Suffice to say the notion of May being better than Hammond and Hutton, and Compton himself, is sufficiently ludicrous for me to dismiss it.
May is a batsman I've always held in high regard, but have never quite realised how high he tends to be held by so many fellow cricketers. I guess I'll have to try and work-out exactly why this should be. Right now, it strikes me as almost Trumper-esque.
Hmm... bad stats.So Was Imran for 67 of his test matches.
http://stats.cricinfo.com/statsguru...iew=innings;wicketsmax1=2;wicketsval1=wickets
Compton stated that he would put May a shade in front of Hutton "because he was equally happy against all types of bowling and because he was the most brilliant player off the back foot I have ever seen, not excluding Sir Don Bradman." Worrell stated that May combined aggression and defence better than any other player he knew. Graveney described May as "The greatest of all post-war English batsmen", adding that "He was a superb yet disciplined stroke player who had what I call 'the big innings temperament'."Out of interest do you know why they considered him better?
Sobers was not near as good as Harmison is/was. That comparison isn't even apt.
Yes and his off side play, particularly his driving, looked less aesthetically pleasing (to those inclined to orthodoxy of technique) since the swing of the bat and follow through were severely hampered and hence altered due to his injury.He was also well known for his on-side play, which is also probably indicated by his stance iirc.
Edit/ Those comments about May vs Hutton by Compton are interesting though. Would not have picked that. But, iirc, Hutton had a bad accident as a PT instructor during the war years, and (again iirc) subsequent surgery lessened the length of his left arm relative to his right arm. Post war he was not the batsman he had been pre-war. He was still defensively immaculate, but he was much less willing to attack and dominate the bowlers as he once had been.
Compton and Hutton were none too fondCompton stated that he would put May a shade in front of Hutton "because he was equally happy against all types of bowling and because he was the most brilliant player off the back foot I have ever seen, not excluding Sir Don Bradman." Worrell stated that May combined aggression and defence better than any other player he knew. Graveney described May as "The greatest of all post-war English batsmen", adding that "He was a superb yet disciplined stroke player who had what I call 'the big innings temperament'."
Just a few quotes from some of May's distinguished admirers.
True, but they certainly knew and respected each other's abilities. Compton generally believed that Hutton did not dominate bowling as consistently as a player of his talents should have done.Compton and Hutton were none too fond
Bad or Good - They are statsguru facts.Hmm... bad stats.
Your filter includes matches such as this where most people would say he performed well with the ball.
http://stats.cricinfo.com/statsguru...;view=match;wicketsmax1=2;wicketsval1=wickets
this is a much more accurate depiction of which matches were "poor". A good 20 or so...but not the "67" you suggest.
I think that we have reached the point of diminishing returns in this exchange. You insist - contrary to the views of every views of virtually everyone who actually saw him - that Sobers was a mediocre bowler, and reject all arguments to the contrary in favor of an exclusive focus on bowling averages.A 4 year period in a 20 year career. Very good and well, but Sobers was still only average in this period.
Yes, because Sobers played with 2-3 generations of bowlers.
Sobers in said period bowled 25 overs a match - compare this to Miller's 31 overs per match. Still, anything but an occasional bowler. Occasional bowler is someone like Steve Waugh.
His figures for this period:
His figures are so bad that occasional bowler or not, he was terrible.
His claim to fame is what he did against England, I've acknowledged that. Not that he took well against a weak Indian batting line-up in said period. This is his best period, it is only 23 matches long. Again, this is my whole point with Sobers. He had a very short peak and was average-to-awful for the rest of his career.
Actually, it isn't much different. He has a good peak but average career in whole. Anyway, the less said about those rankings the better. Those rankings put Harmison almost on par with Lillee. And you say my evaluation is flawed.
I agree with that statement. There is only so much data I can put in front of you. You can call it worthless, bad, corrupt, yet not show why, and still stick to your own opinion. That's fine. But, as I said, someone like me and those who haven't seen Sobers will start to increasingly ask questions you cannot deny or brush off.