HouHsiaoHsien
International Debutant
There is no bowling equivalent of Bradman.Marshall is rated behind none.
Now let that sink in.
There is no bowling equivalent of Bradman.Marshall is rated behind none.
Now let that sink in.
Mcgrath averaged 20.63 in his 11 year peak between 1995 and 2005.What about Tendy vs McGrath then? McGrath has the longevity.
Depends on who does the rating, he can be behind Barnes, Lillee or Wasim among the pundits and McGrath here.Marshall is rated behind none.
Now let that sink in.
McGrath's has over 110 tests on the trot of worldclass bowling performance. That is around 30 tests ahead of the next best pacer. It really is a milestone.Mcgrath averaged 20.63 in his 11 year peak between 1995 and 2005.
Tendulkar averaged 57.65 in his 15 year peak between 1996 and 2010. Even more impressively, he averaged around 59 in his 18 year peak between 1993 and 2010.
Hard to separate really.
Mcgrath has nothing much to show outside this peak. Tendulkar has some good performances as a teenager though, which might just be the tiebreaker.
Not even closeDepends on who does the rating, he can be behind Barnes, Lillee or Wasim among the pundits and McGrath here.
Why?@kyear2 world has shattered
Yeah so 1/3rd of CW feels McGrath is better.Not even close
I mean that's not a great argument. Tendulkar isn't in the argument for being the best because Bradman exists. If there was a bowling equivalent of Bradman, Marshall would be in the same spot as Tendulkar i.e. probably the one with the strongest argument for the #2 spot.Tendulkar is unarguably a top 5 batsman of all time.
Marshall is arguably the greatest bowler ever.
Tendulkar had greater longevity, in peaks I believe Marshall had greater impact. Tendulkar (as discussed with his Lara comp) didn't dominate series like Marshall did.
I think that bowlers are more important and have greater impact that batsmen.
Think they're both top 10 players and it's really close, I just think you get a slight advantage if you're objectively in the conversation as being the best ever.
If that is your reductive logic then your top 15/20 cricketers shouldn't have any batsmen aside from Bradman.I think that bowlers are more important and have greater impact that batsmen.
Think they're both top 10 players and it's really close, I just think you get a slight advantage if you're objectively in the conversation as being the best ever.
That's disingenuous and inaccurate because in the very next line I literally say that they are both top 10 players.If that is your reductive logic then your top 15/20 cricketers shouldn't have any batsmen aside from Bradman.
Tendulkar is a strong contender for the best bat after Bradman in a more crowded field than Marshall.
Marshall's claim for best ever pretty much is around his peak from 83 to 88. It's a relatively shaky basis to claim the best specialist cricketer ever after the Don.
Tendulkar, as mentioned, didn't just have one peak but a second peak too, as well as his boy wonder performances. And he played in a weaker team. Easily the most tested cricketer ever.
I know I am pointing the inconsistency. If ATG bowlers by default are more valuable then Donald should go ahead of Tendulkar too.That's disingenuous and inaccurate because in the very next line I literally say that they are both top 10 players.
Atherton most severely tested. Tendulkar most widely tested.Wouldn't remotely call him the most tested player, that's Mike Atherton and with regards to weaker teams....
Look at the team mates and batting support he had during his career.
Boohoo, poor Marshall bowling with riffraff like Ambrose, Bishop and Walsh, and that too demoted from being an opening bowler. Wonder how he did it.Then look at the performances, not the names, that Marshall had around him the end half of the 80's while still keeping the Windies as the best in the world.
Lloyd retired, Holding retired, Richards and Greenidge declined. The talent wasn't quite what people believe the second half of Marshall's career.
Tendulkar averaged 63 in his first peak 93 to 2002.Marshall 1983-1989 peak is greater than Tendulkar's peak of 1993-2002. Averaging 57 is quite common for a batsman during their peak days but for bowlers averaging 19 for straight7 years and striking at 44 with almost 6 wickets in a game is quite exceptional. Plus he got wickets everywhere against everyside.
In the best era for bowling(bowling quality wise), Tendulkar averaged north of 59, despite starting the decade as a boy. It's not like any batsmen's peak like Kallis. Except SA(which he would rectify by dominating an even superior SA attack), he dominated attacks everywhere that decade.Marshall 1983-1989 peak is greater than Tendulkar's peak of 1993-2002. Averaging 57 is quite common for a batsman during their peak days but for bowlers averaging 19 for straight7 years and striking at 44 with almost 6 wickets in a game is quite exceptional. Plus he got wickets everywhere against everyside.
Or PakistanIn the best era for bowling(bowling quality wise), Tendulkar averaged north of 59, despite starting the decade as a boy. It's not like any batsmen's peak like Kallis. Except SA(which he would rectify by dominating an even superior SA attack), he dominated attacks everywhere that decade.
Except a very marginal dip, Tendulkar nearly constantly averaged 60 for 19 years, with a perfect record across conditions.Tendulkar averaged 63 in his first peak 93 to 2002.
Then averaged 60 plus in his second peak 2007 to 2011
Marshall had one peak.
he toured Pak in 89, not the 90s. Plus he was barely 16, facing the two WW's. Cut him some slackOr Pakistan