one of the things about cricket which makes it unique is that, unlike the majority of sports, stats actually have some sort of meaning.
and a lot of people like to put down Hayden as nothing more than a slogger who gets lucky, the facts are has an average which only two openers in the history of the test cricket (with reasonble qualifications) have bettered - Graeme Smith and Herb Sutcliffe.
And Hayden has now scored more runs than Sutcliffe (i think - at worst hes not far of him), so he has a right to be deemed as one of the champions of the game.
People will try to put technical flaws in his batting, the standard of bowling isn't as good as it was, the tracks are flat etc,. etc,.
the technical flaws has a valid point. His not the most gracious batsmen, but it isn't always the most gracious batsmen who make the runs. His technique is sound, without being great, but there are few guys in the world who hit the ball harder, if any.
And likewise, no really knows whether guys like Sutcliffe, Hobbs, Barrington, Rantijinshi, Ponsford, Armstrong, Hill etc,. had solid techniques. All you can really do to ascertain that is read books, and that is someones opinion which may differ from your own.
Say there was no TV today, 100 years from now people could be reading baout Matty Hayden and what a fantastic striker of the ball he was, and how he very rarely played false strikes. They wouldn't know whether it was true or not, but you read it enough times you have to believe it.
Same situation with guys we've never seen play, even if it is very dodgy old video tape - it's still hard on those things to pick out stuff.
and no one can really say how good or not the standard of bowling is - i reckon cricket is about as strong as it's ever been. Probably not the strongest, but it's closer to being the strongest than it is to being the weakest.
pitches are better now than ever, but not to the extent some would like to think. Can't be bothered to check but i'd say the average runs per wicket is not alll that much higher than what it was in other eras (aside from pre WWI when the average per wicket was about 18 runs).
but on Hayden's side is the pressures of proffesoinal cricket. Cricketers have never come under the scrutiny and constant pressure that the guys in other eras have faced. Nor has their ever been such an intense workload put on the players.
BTW, this isn't a Hayden v Lara argument from me, cause i rate Lara the better batsmen over his career. At the moment though I'd take Hayden.
This is more just an argument that Hayden does have his place amongst cricket's elite batsmen, as do quite a few others of today's era aside from just Tendulkar and Lara. Dravid too has a case similar to Hayden's, while Ponting and Gilchrist are well on their way, and Smith is making big headlines early in his career.