Thank god we cleared that up.Since end of World Cup 2007,
their respective figures are as follows:
Sachin
31 matches, 2779 runs @ 59.12, 12 hundreds and 11 fifties
Excluding Bangladesh
27 matches, 2261 runs @ 52.58, 8 hundreds and 11 fifties
Ponting
32 matches, 2491 runs @ 45.29, 6 hundreds and 14 fifties.
Ponting averages 48, 38 and 41 against England, India and South Africa during this period while Tendulkar averages 64, 43 and 53 against Australia, England and South Africa.
Yes indeed! But don't think Ponting will be able to arrest this downslide unless he does a Tendulkar from now. At present rate, I see Punter ending up with a career average of around 52-53.after a long time, may be three or four years, ponting's average drops below sachin's for the first time. at the end his second innings knock against nz he averages fractionally less than sachin. he will most probably end up with a higher avg at the end of their careers. but the fact that sachin is still leading him after 14 years of international cricket together, and seven additional years before ponting started, is just amazing.
Actually it didn't.Uhh I don't want to get into this debate, but Ponting's average dropped below Tendulkar's during the Pakistan series, and then went above it, and is now below it again.
I am now running away from this thread.
Sachin's definitely in better form now, but the reality is that Sachin's average is higher due to his record against the minnows. He is actually a few points inferior to Ponting without them.after a long time, may be three or four years, ponting's average drops below sachin's for the first time. at the end his second innings knock against nz he averages fractionally less than sachin. he will most probably end up with a higher avg at the end of their careers. but the fact that sachin is still leading him after 14 years of international cricket together, and seven additional years before ponting started, is just amazing.
Probably not as high as that level yet.I guess they play backyard cricket vs. minnows.
I would give 2/3 of the credit rather then removing those stats all together.
Sachin's definitely in better form now, but the reality is that Sachin's average is higher due to his record against the minnows. He is actually a few points inferior to Ponting without them.
Without minnows:
Sachin: 52.27
Ricky: 54.44
Because in the 16 years they've been together on the International scene, Ponting has averaged more than Tendulkar for max 3-4 years??Probably not as high as that level yet.
Anyway, it's curious how their averages never became relevant until Tendulkar finally hit the lead again, at least including all teams.
Ok, if we also remove Sachin's record against the Windies and include the period where Zim were good...which would then make his record even worse.
Just as expected.
Care to remove Pakistan and Windies of late also then from Punter's record? Because at the moment they are worse than Zimbabwe of the 90s by a substantial margin.
Clever, exclude Windies post 2003...Ok, if we also remove Sachin's record against the Windies and include the period where Zim were good...which would then make his record even worse.
It's not really a talking point as it still doesn't make up the difference; Punter's average is higher than Tendulkar's taking that into consideration. Even if we were to keep all his Tests against Zimbabwe and only remove Bangladesh, it's still less.
We've had this debate before sunshine. In the 90s (as Ponting came in 95 and did play tough opponents in tough conditions at a young age) Ponting's record is actually very good - even better than Tendulkar's - against the best bowling line-ups. It's his record against the worst teams that pulled his average down.Clever, exclude Windies post 2003...
Yeah ignore the 7-8 years of cricket Tendulkar played against much tougher opponents at a much younger age on much difficult pitches as well?
Tendulkar has not been under punter's shadow for a decade. Punter has batted better than him from 2003 to 2007We've had this debate before sunshine. In the 90s (as Ponting came in 95 and did play tough opponents in tough conditions at a young age) Ponting's record is actually very good - even better than Tendulkar's - against the best bowling line-ups. It's his record against the worst teams that pulled his average down.
On the flip-side; Tendulkar has also had the "easier" opponents and had been chasing Ponting's shadow for a decade, so there is little excuse.
As I said, I find it curious how their averages suddenly became relevant, when it wasn't before.
Ponting never had to face his own bowlers who were the best among their eras, EVER.We've had this debate before sunshine. In the 90s (as Ponting came in 95 and did play tough opponents in tough conditions at a young age) Ponting's record is actually very good - even better than Tendulkar's - against the best bowling line-ups. It's his record against the worst teams that pulled his average down.
For a decade?? Ponting has had a better avg than Tendulkar only since 2005 end. So that makes it about 5 years.On the flip-side; Tendulkar has also had the "easier" opponents and had been chasing Ponting's shadow for a decade, so there is little excuse.
As I said, I find it curious how their averages suddenly became relevant, when it wasn't before.
I don't mean every year; I referring to the fact that in the 2000s, which is considered easier, Ponting is far and away superior to Tendulkar. So in the decade that was supposedly easy, Tendulkar had more than enough time to build on his average. The fact that in the 00s w/o minnows he averages 47 overturns any perception of easiness.Tendulkar has not been under punter's shadow for a decade. Punter has batted better than him from 2003 to 2007