Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
That's just not fair and you know it. No-one is ever going to succeed if they're half-fit. It's completely pointless chastising Atherton for failing in Zimbabwe and in Australia in 1998\99. Those series mean nothing. That's totally different to weeding-out all series where he averaged less than such-and-such - it's acting after the event, whereas weeding-out series where he was injured is doing it before - the lack of fitness happened before the games were played, the scores were put into the book afterwards.see...exactly what i expected from you...are you sure he had even one bad series? of course no one can average 50+ in all the series he plays in but 30s and late 20s are really poor averages for a top order batsman and this guy has pretty low averages strewn all over the place, at the beginning, at the end, in the middle, every where you look....your excuses notwithstanding...and as for "unimportant" series, i'd included every series he played in there, you are making some really biased judgement calls as to what is important and what is unimportant, fine...while we are at it, let's just weed out all the series in which he failed and he will probably average in the 70s or 80s....
A series where you average 29, say, is not terribly bad if you've got 3 or 4 surrounding it where you're averaging 40 or 50. It's only once you play a full series and average in the low 20s where you've really done badly. No-one is ever going to average 40+ in every series, I'll say it again. To say someone hasn't achieved the consistency because they failed to do that is to miss the point. Virtually no batsmen in the 1990s ever managed such a thing. Atherton, when fully fit, between June 1990 and December 2000, was as consistent, IMO, as you could ask anyone bar someone from the very, very top drawer (Tendulkar, Lara, Stephen Waugh, Dravid, etc.) to be.
As I say - an overall career average, especially for someone who's played as many as 90 Tests, is no way to judge a player. It's far, far too simplistic and doesn't take account of any number of things that need to be taken account of.An average in the late 30s after 90 odd tests doesn't make anyone a world class player...sometimes there are players who are wasted talents, in Nasser's case, he actually overachieved for his average of 37.18....