Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
Why not?
Yes Mark Waugh did not have a poor start to his career - instead, he had the luxury (which some misrecognised as a disadvantage) of coming into Test cricket at just the right age, being pitched into a successful side and basically having about all that could be said to encourage success-from-the-off; Boon on the other hand was pitched in too early because there was so little talent available and results were thus wretched. Boon and Mark Waugh both had a final year of extremely poor performance, though this dragged Boon's career average down a little more than it did Waugh's (it did so because Boon's was higher ITFP). The sort of bowling the two would routinely face was of similar quality (in fact there was a decent-length overlap between the two's careers) - Boon did very well against it (IIRR averaged something like 48), Mark Waugh did no more than pretty well (averaged 42).
Gilchrist being > Mark Waugh is to some extent fair enough because there's no way Waugh or indeed virtually anyone would or will ever come close to having 40-odd consecutive Tests averaging 60, but equally there's no way Mark Waugh ever had another 50-odd Tests of mostly averaging 26. I'd say it's an issue that can have no cut-and-dried.
Yes Mark Waugh did not have a poor start to his career - instead, he had the luxury (which some misrecognised as a disadvantage) of coming into Test cricket at just the right age, being pitched into a successful side and basically having about all that could be said to encourage success-from-the-off; Boon on the other hand was pitched in too early because there was so little talent available and results were thus wretched. Boon and Mark Waugh both had a final year of extremely poor performance, though this dragged Boon's career average down a little more than it did Waugh's (it did so because Boon's was higher ITFP). The sort of bowling the two would routinely face was of similar quality (in fact there was a decent-length overlap between the two's careers) - Boon did very well against it (IIRR averaged something like 48), Mark Waugh did no more than pretty well (averaged 42).
Gilchrist being > Mark Waugh is to some extent fair enough because there's no way Waugh or indeed virtually anyone would or will ever come close to having 40-odd consecutive Tests averaging 60, but equally there's no way Mark Waugh ever had another 50-odd Tests of mostly averaging 26. I'd say it's an issue that can have no cut-and-dried.