Indian fc averages mean absolutely nothing.FC average of 59 jesus. not bad
how dare you speak ill of triple centurion ravi jadejaIndian fc averages mean absolutely nothing.
Same competition where Jadeja has three triple tons and Pandya just took a five fer straight back from injuryFC average of 59 jesus. not bad
Axar Patel averages 45 which totally portrays his actual batting ability.how dare you speak ill of triple centurion ravi jadeja
To be fair I get the impression that Indian fc averages are generally very inflated. There's so many players averaging north of 50 compared to other FC set ups but many still end up exposed at the highest levelFC average of 59 jesus. not bad
It is worth saying though that this situation, like Australia in the 90s, does a far better job of consistently churning out Test quality batsmen who can reliably make big scores when set than the alternative, i.e. what England and Australia have had over the last decade. Even if the conditions aren't hard, having batsmen learn the art of constructing big innings is a big positive.To be fair I get the impression that Indian fc averages are generally very inflated. There's so many players averaging north of 50 compared to other FC set ups but many still end up exposed at the highest level
A good first class system does both. There are a few roads for batsmen to learn to go large on, there's turning tracks to learn spin on and there's fast, bouncy pitches too.It is worth saying though that this situation, like Australia in the 90s, does a far better job of consistently churning out Test quality batsmen who can reliably make big scores when set than the alternative, i.e. what England and Australia have had over the last decade. Even if the conditions aren't hard, having batsmen learn the art of constructing big innings is a big positive.
Yeah I think that shows up in conversion rate actually. Root's is a meme, but if you look further down the batting lineup there aren't many players with a conventionally good rate of conversion. Of course, simply having a similar number of tons to fifties doesn't necessarily mean your record is good (with the inverse also true) but players like Stokes, Bairstow and later-stage Cook have had pretty ordinary conversion rates as well which have never really been talked about. I wonder if its a team problem that is just most visible in our best batsmenIt is worth saying though that this situation, like Australia in the 90s, does a far better job of consistently churning out Test quality batsmen who can reliably make big scores when set than the alternative, i.e. what England and Australia have had over the last decade. Even if the conditions aren't hard, having batsmen learn the art of constructing big innings is a big positive.
FC averages are considered a joke because conditions vary massively from region to region, to the point where they overly favour a certain style of cricketer.Why are Indian FC average still considered a joke? I got that back in the day they were bowling minnows but they have one of the best bowling attacks in the world now
Do they fall off a cliff after the 5-6 quality quicks hovering around the national set up?