ReallyCrazy
Banned
for the last 2 years Lara but for their whole careers in total...then tendulkar
can you please explain why you feel that? for me, it's at least an arguable point...and i have seen some of the classiest knocks of all 3...SJS said:I personally feel Richards was clearly better than Lara and Tendulkar.
really?? wow!! but then you are the resident cw expert on tendulkar(probably on the others as well...)....so i would have to bow to your superior wisdom....tooextracool said:probably one billion reasons as to why......
LolAnil said:really?? wow!! but then you are the resident cw expert on tendulkar(probably on the others as well...)....so i would have to bow to your superior wisdom....
whether you're being sarcastic or not, all of that is the truth.Anil said:really?? wow!! but then you are the resident cw expert on tendulkar(probably on the others as well...)....so i would have to bow to your superior wisdom....
Well as I said,( I personally feel ), its a personal opinion. As to why?Anil said:can you please explain why you feel that? for me, it's at least an arguable point...and i have seen some of the classiest knocks of all 3...
I think the bowling standard overall in the 70s and 80s was better but that is largely due to the bowlers from the WI.Secondly, I personally rate the bowling in Richards' time to be better than today at least as far as the pace bowling is concerned. I know this will be argued but again its my opinion.
Well if you check the ratings(something i dont pay much attention to but is relevant in this case), you will see that Miandad had the upper hand on Richards from mid-late 80s onwards and Gavaskar/G.Chappell had the upper hand till early 80s or so.Thirdly, I think Richards dominated the world stage as THE leading batsman of his time. Lara and Tendulkar have shared this between themselves and at other times other batsmen have been ranked by some as the 'best'. We all know the batsmen I am talking off. Richards was peerless in his time.
sure, your personal opinion is what i asked for....SJS said:Well as I said,( I personally feel ), its a personal opinion. As to why?
Well let me see.
First of all, I think Richards dominated all bowling on all conditions and rarely had periods of self-doubt that seem to plague both Lara and Sachin.
Secondly, I personally rate the bowling in Richards' time to be better than today at least as far as the pace bowling is concerned. I know this will be argued but again its my opinion. And this is saying something for I am talking of pace bowlers outside the Windies in Australia, Pakistan, New Zealand etc.
Thirdly, I think Richards dominated the world stage as THE leading batsman of his time. Lara and Tendulkar have shared this between themselves and at other times other batsmen have been ranked by some as the 'best'. We all know the batsmen I am talking off. Richards was peerless in his time.
That should do I think.
Once again its my personal opinion and you or others can differ and I respect that.
Thirdly,
oh absolutely!!! didn't i just admit that?? after reading your pearls of wisdom on cw, how could anyone doubt that?tooextracool said:whether you're being sarcastic or not, all of that is the truth.
Yes agreed ......honestbharani said:I would put Lara ahead in tests and Sachin ahead in ODIs. I always have and the past year has only confirmed my feelings.
Without debating the actual content of your list (a significant amount of which I actually agree with), I'm curious about something. Quite a number of people on this board defend vigorously their use of statistics as the primary method of comparing players (as opposed to say written record), and yet whenever a list like this pops up it is inevitably bereft of Australians from the current side, with the occasional exception of S. Waugh.C_C said:Bradman
Tendulkar
Richards
Gavaskar
Lara
Sobers
Greg Chappell
Dravid
Allan Border
Ken Barrington
yes they have...and Akthar bowled a bouncer (cant remember where) to lara which hit him on the neck. He was bamboozed for some timeSehwag309 said:I want to see Aktar V/S Lara, have they faced each other yet
yes at this point in their careers, that looks accurate....that could change in the future...honestbharani said:I would put Lara ahead in tests and Sachin ahead in ODIs. I always have and the past year has only confirmed my feelings.
Hayden smashing the Nehras, Samis, Dillons, and other players from sub-standard attacks is much less of an accomplishment than Dravid, Sachin, Lara and co. scoring amazing tons against McGrath, Gillespie, Warne and co.FaaipDeOiad said:Without debating the actual content of your list (a significant amount of which I actually agree with), I'm curious about something. Quite a number of people on this board defend vigorously their use of statistics as the primary method of comparing players (as opposed to say written record), and yet whenever a list like this pops up it is inevitably bereft of Australians from the current side, with the occasional exception of S. Waugh.
As far as I can see, there can be little doubt that this Australian side has the strongest batting lineup of all time, if your primary standard of measurement is statistical. There have been two recent Australian sides that spring to mind that had five of the top seven batsmen in the lineup averaging over 50. These sides are the one which faced Zimbabwe in 2003, with Hayden, Ponting, S. Waugh, Lehmann and Gilchrist all averaging over 50 at the time, and Hayden and Gilchrist breaking 55, and the side which faced Pakistan a year later, which had Hayden, Ponting, Martyn, Clarke and Gilchrist in that group, with Hayden and Ponting averaging over 55. Considering only 32 players ever have completed their careers (or have them in progress currently) with an average over 50, and only 16 over 55, this is quite remarkable.
Meanwhile, players from the same era such as Dravid, or players from a similar era with inferior averages such as Lara tend to make these lists.
So, do you discount these batsmen because you think they have earned their averages plundering inferior bowling attacks, or do you rate them highly but simply not consider any of them part of the top 10, or perhaps you ignore them because their careers are not finished yet? I'm curious, since this would seem a fairly obvious contradiction to use of statistics as your primary method of measuring a player's worth. Surely at least, if you rely mostly on statistics, and your argument about the inferior quality of bowling that Richards faced compared to some players recently, you would have to consider Ponting a better batsman than him?
Jono said:Hayden smashing the Nehras, Samis, Dillons, and other players from sub-standard attacks is much less of an accomplishment than Dravid, Sachin, Lara and co. scoring amazing tons against McGrath, Gillespie, Warne and co.
That is why these players are so highly held.
And I don't think its fair holding Clarke's average of over 50 alongside other players' averages such as Lara. He's been playing test cricket since October, and though he has been absolutely spectacular, its still silly to compare it to a player that has played as long as Lara