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*Official* Warne vs Murali Discussion

Migara

International Coach
Not really.

We may not know what Warne would have averaged batting against Australia in Australia, but averaging in the 70s? Let's get real. And the point was this: Murali has bowled to many inferior teams (in terms of playing spin) at home, even if he did face Australia and India that record is still benefitted by the many teams that usually don't have a chance against him in those conditions; but Warne faced the hardest team in that same home (Sri Lanka) and succeeded more than Murali did. That shows that when the two bowled in those bowler friendly conditions they both had large success. It's a point of reference you can use to gauge just how well Warne may have done in Sri Lanka. Whereas Murali was a complete failure in Australia. Dare I say; most spinners (not even in the same hemisphere as Murali) did better than him there. What makes you think he'd have been as good as Warne had they swapped homes?

I am not talking about growing up in that environment and learning to play there, etc. I am talking about what their records as they stand suggest.
Ha! Ha! going around circles to cover up your double standards.

Standardisation was done to just counter that argument. With that the number of balls (actually percentage) was adjusted to that of Warne, so it no longer gives Murali and advantage. Because of your SL is easiy for spin bowlers than AUS rant, we have only looked at away stats against same set of batsmen. But you kept on insisting that Warne's record in SL and Murali's record in AUS should be added, even when I pointed out that conditions and set of batsmen differ. If you can consider Warne's stats in SL to Murali's in AUS, you could very well compare Warne's home stats vs IND to Murali's home stats vs IND. Disregarding the fact when the standardisation was done and now brnging it up to support your argument shows nothing but double standards.
 

Furball

Evil Scotsman
If Warne is being praised for having similar record despite bowling in non-spin friendly conditions for the most part, how come Vaas is not allowed the same when he was compared to Lee?Or Wasim Akram vis a vis Lilleee....some people just can't stop praising their own players...if their batsman averages 20 in a country,no problem,if their "great" bowler averages 100+ in SC,no problem....anyway all this spin friendly argument is just not correct..if India is so spin friendly,why does Warne average 45 there?
Because people tailor their game to suit their home conditions, if you're going to use Wasim's home record as some sort of evidence that because he could bowl well on the subcontinent, it makes him a better bowler than Lillee, I'll point out that he has a fairly average record away from the subcontinent in theoretically much friendlier bowling conditions.
 

Ikki

Hall of Fame Member
Lillee bowled 90 mph outswing in his early days though mate. Later he relied more on seam than swing. A better reaons would be that Akram and Lillee bowled in different eras completely, or one had the advantage (or disadvantage) of being left arm. Anyways, really don't want to go there.

As for the other matter, IMO Vaas >> Lee in any event, and quite comfortably tbh.
I don't think that addresses the argument that was being brought forth - the flat tracks. The reason subcontinental pacemen - the successful ones - can't be given such a benefit in terms of away records is...

Because people tailor their game to suit their home conditions, if you're going to use Wasim's home record as some sort of evidence that because he could bowl well on the subcontinent, it makes him a better bowler than Lillee, I'll point out that he has a fairly average record away from the subcontinent in theoretically much friendlier bowling conditions.
and that doesn't have much to do with Warne and Murali. Warne didn't tailor himself to bowl better at home in those conditions than away. He actually bowled better away because his home pitches were more often than not the least spin-friendly pitches around. I don't even think there is a comparable spin weapon to pace's swing. Drift?

The sub-continental players can't be said to be disadvantaged since their weapon was different to begin with. That is explained by their discrepancies with regards to home and away records. If they had a similar weapon that was affected negatively by their own pitches, with respect to their performances on other pitches, then that would be something. Because then it would be relative (hard and harder). Then you could say "see, his home pitches are harder to bowl on; just look at how he did on the easier away pitches"; when in fact that is not what happened for many of the aforementioned bowlers as GingerFurball exemplifies.

Ha! Ha! going around circles to cover up your double standards.

Standardisation was done to just counter that argument. With that the number of balls (actually percentage) was adjusted to that of Warne, so it no longer gives Murali and advantage. Because of your SL is easiy for spin bowlers than AUS rant, we have only looked at away stats against same set of batsmen. But you kept on insisting that Warne's record in SL and Murali's record in AUS should be added, even when I pointed out that conditions and set of batsmen differ. If you can consider Warne's stats in SL to Murali's in AUS, you could very well compare Warne's home stats vs IND to Murali's home stats vs IND. Disregarding the fact when the standardisation was done and now brnging it up to support your argument shows nothing but double standards.
You didn't get what I was saying. Warne did awesome against the best possible batsmen that could have been bowled to in Sri Lanka - the Sri Lankan batsmen themselves who are not only great players of spin, but grew up on those pitches. So what if he didn't bowl against NZ in Sri Lanka? Should we pretend like Warne wouldn't succeed there based on that? FTR, Warne also decimated Pakistan in those neutral tests in Sri Lanka.

You're pretending as if it's some novel experience Murali had there that Warne didn't hence we should discount his failures in Australia. And since Warne succeeded in Sri Lanka and Murali didn't face his team, we should discount them also. Double-whammy. Removing one of Warne's best, removing Murali's worst.

The reality is, Murali was a failure; by his standard and even the standard of the mediocre (in comparison to him of course) spinners like Harbhajan and Vettori. He got shellacked, and pretending as if it's a mystery how Warne would have done - hence removing the tests in Australia - is disingenuous and looks like a pathetic attempt to make Murali's away record look better than it is.
 
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Migara

International Coach
You didn't get what I was saying. Warne did awesome against the best possible batsmen that could have been bowled to in Sri Lanka - the Sri Lankan batsmen themselves who are not only great players of spin, but grew up on those pitches. So what if he didn't bowl against NZ in Sri Lanka? Should we pretend like Warne wouldn't succeed there based on that? FTR, Warne also decimated Pakistan in those neutral tests in Sri Lanka.
But the fact is you tend to forget the reverse logic of it. Murali bowled on least helpful decks in world in Aus against one of the best plalyers of spin. Warne never bowled to such good players of spin on his home turf. And when he did, against IND, his stats looked very much similar to Murali's, considering it was home for Warne. If there is anything that Warne has come close to what Murali faced in AUS, its India in AUS. And the stats tell the story. And FTR, Warne bowled to PAK A team which had batting like minnows in that series. If minnows are discounted, those batting lineup should be discounted.

You're pretending as if it's some novel experience Murali had there that Warne didn't hence we should discount his failures in Australia. And since Warne succeeded in Sri Lanka and Murali didn't face his team, we should discount them also. Double-whammy. Removing one of Warne's best, removing Murali's worst.
On the same argumnt then each others home tests against other nations can be considered. If you can add Warne's away stats against SL batsman, which Murali is untested, you can add Warne's home stats against other nations on conditions where Murali was untested, and vice versa. If you consider one set of data that differ in it's parameters then it's stats picking. Either you should consider all stats where the conditions are different or should consider none. Going on first method, all home stats has to be taken in to account. According to the second only the common oppositions and conditions should be taken in to account. The definition of same condition is very clear. During same era, similar set of grounds, by same bowler to similar set of batsmen. Anything other than this is intellectual dishonesty.

The reality is, Murali was a failure; by his standard and even the standard of the mediocre (in comparison to him of course) spinners like Harbhajan and Vettori. He got shellacked, and pretending as if it's a mystery how Warne would have done - hence removing the tests in Australia - is disingenuous and looks like a pathetic attempt to make Murali's away record look better than it is.
The reality is Warne in AUS was as similar or a bigger failure than Murali against people who could play spin well. He averaged 36 in FCC against lesser Aussie batsmen, and 65+ against Indian batsmen who were equal to Aussies in playing spin. And pretending as if it's a mystery how Warne would have done - hence removing home tests of both - is disingenuous and looks like a pathetic attempt to make Warne's overall record look better than it is.

Either you should go for same conditions. That is away games against BAN, ENG, IND, PAK, NZ, ZIM, WI & SAF and consider performances against same set of batsmen. Comparing Murali's performance on less helpful Aussie pitches against AUS batsmen to Warne's performance in SL on helpful tracks in intellectual dishonesty
Or otherwise don't give a **** about conditions and consider whole record.
 

JBH001

International Regular
Good points Migara, could not agree more.

Far too much is made of Murali in Australia (similar perhaps to Lillee in the sub-continent) and of the supposed travails of Warne on Australia soil - as I've pointed out before, the so-called difficult conditions have done little to stop producing some great to good slow bowlers from that part of the world.
 

Furball

Evil Scotsman
and that doesn't have much to do with Warne and Murali. Warne didn't tailor himself to bowl better at home in those conditions than away. He actually bowled better away because his home pitches were more often than not the least spin-friendly pitches around. I don't even think there is a comparable spin weapon to pace's swing. Drift?
Bounce. Warne would have tailored his game to extract as much bounce as possible on Australian surfaces, which as a rule tend to be bouncier than most around the world.
 

Uppercut

Request Your Custom Title Now!
Bounce. Warne would have tailored his game to extract as much bounce as possible on Australian surfaces, which as a rule tend to be bouncier than most around the world.
Warne's bounce was monstrous. Apart from the obvious benefits of good bounce, it gave Warne an entirely new dimension because it enabled him to use the around-the-wicket angle to right-handers as an attacking option. It's quite unique amongst leg-spinners that he was able to do that.
 

Sir Alex

Banned
Warne's bounce was monstrous. Apart from the obvious benefits of good bounce, it gave Warne an entirely new dimension because it enabled him to use the around-the-wicket angle to right-handers as an attacking option. It's quite unique amongst leg-spinners that he was able to do that.
Anil Kumble will disagree.
 

Ikki

Hall of Fame Member
Bounce. Warne would have tailored his game to extract as much bounce as possible on Australian surfaces, which as a rule tend to be bouncier than most around the world.
True, he did rely on bounce and Murali later admitted himself he learned how potent a weapon it can be from Warne. Regardless, what he did to make himself effective doesn't compare to how effective he could have been in a place like Sri Lanka. If it was not bounce, it'd be something else. But as I said to Burgey, it's all relative - hard and harder, or easy and easier.

But the fact is you tend to forget the reverse logic of it. Murali bowled on least helpful decks in world in Aus against one of the best plalyers of spin. Warne never bowled to such good players of spin on his home turf. And when he did, against IND, his stats looked very much similar to Murali's, considering it was home for Warne. If there is anything that Warne has come close to what Murali faced in AUS, its India in AUS. And the stats tell the story. And FTR, Warne bowled to PAK A team which had batting like minnows in that series. If minnows are discounted, those batting lineup should be discounted.
No, I didn't forget that. I actually addressed it several times. You want to conveniently discard the two records altogether whereas you don't have to, you can use some common sense. Murali may have faced some of the best players of spin on unhelpful pitches, but that doesn't go near explaining how bad he was. As I said, even mediocre spinners did better than he did there. So it's not an excuse you can simply write off or suggest that Warne may have done similarly because you can, knowing it's not provable either way.

Whereas Warne DID succeed in Sri Lanka, very much so, and no other visiting spinner gets close to his success so again it illustrates just how much above the competition Warne was and how much more his record may have been helped had he Sri Lanka as home.

On the same argumnt then each others home tests against other nations can be considered. If you can add Warne's away stats against SL batsman, which Murali is untested, you can add Warne's home stats against other nations on conditions where Murali was untested, and vice versa. If you consider one set of data that differ in it's parameters then it's stats picking. Either you should consider all stats where the conditions are different or should consider none. Going on first method, all home stats has to be taken in to account. According to the second only the common oppositions and conditions should be taken in to account. The definition of same condition is very clear. During same era, similar set of grounds, by same bowler to similar set of batsmen. Anything other than this is intellectual dishonesty.
No one said you can or cannot add them. The point re India or Sri Lanka is that you cannot say Murali faced the same proposition against the same two sides at home because they're bowling on completely different pitches.From the evidence, it doesn't appear that Murali would have done well since India is comfortably as good, and probably better than Australia is. Combine that with Australia's unhelpful pitches and Murali is probably still going to continue his poor record against them on pitches not suited for him. Whereas Warne DID succeed in Sri Lanka, against the toughest opponents you can face in Sri Lanka (Sri Lanka herself) so what's going against saying he'd do as well as Murali did in Murali's home against those two sides?

I don't wish to make out as if it's a given and Warne would succeed against India in Sri Lanka; but there is much more stock in that than Murali doing better than Warne against India in Australia - using India as an example.

The reality is Warne in AUS was as similar or a bigger failure than Murali against people who could play spin well. He averaged 36 in FCC against lesser Aussie batsmen, and 65+ against Indian batsmen who were equal to Aussies in playing spin. And pretending as if it's a mystery how Warne would have done - hence removing home tests of both - is disingenuous and looks like a pathetic attempt to make Warne's overall record look better than it is.
Again, he averaged in the 30s against Australian batsmen who were good players of spin at home on the worst pitches for spin (and to be frank it was a competition he played sporadically in). When Murali has even something near comparable with that, it'd make sense to put down Warne for it.

Warne cannot play India in Sri Lanka and Murali cannot play India in Australia; but both have played India in India and they failed a similar extent. That's where the comparison stops. How can you even begin to critique Warne for his performances in Australia against great players of spin when Murali has done even poorer against Australia in Australia? Imagine what would have happened if it was India.

Either you should go for same conditions. That is away games against BAN, ENG, IND, PAK, NZ, ZIM, WI & SAF and consider performances against same set of batsmen. Comparing Murali's performance on less helpful Aussie pitches against AUS batsmen to Warne's performance in SL on helpful tracks in intellectual dishonesty
Or otherwise don't give a **** about conditions and consider whole record.
No, intellectual dishonesty is this: looking at the toughest places for visiting bowlers to bowl spin; and remove the worst figures for your own favourite bowler and the best figures for the bowler you do not favour and then pretend it gives a clear picture.
 
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Migara

International Coach
You are not getting the point after so much of explanation decase of your intellecutal dishonesty and double satndards. This is not the first time you've shown it as well.

Some points still stands.

#1. Warne failed against good players of spin on non helpful track, and so was Murali. Both bowled well on helpful tracks.

#2. Comparing Muralis stats in AUS to Warne's stats in SL is wrong, becaus the conditions differ

#3.
Warne cannot play India in Sri Lanka and Murali cannot play India in Australia; but both have played India in India and they failed a similar extent. That's where the comparison stops. How can you even begin to critique Warne for his performances in Australia against great players of spin when Murali has done even poorer against Australia in Australia? Imagine what would have happened if it was India.
Exactly the point. But you only consider Murali's stats on non-helpful tracks while you discard those of Warne's. That is[ double standards/B] .

4#
No, intellectual dishonesty is this: looking at the toughest places for visiting bowlers to bowl spin; and remove the worst figures for your own favourite bowler and the best figures for the bowler you do not favour and then pretend it gives a clear picture.
Intellectual dishonesty is actually considering part of the record which only Warne benefits. Sorry, you have shown multiple times that you practice double standards. I have no time to waste on hypocrites.
 

Migara

International Coach
Warne's bounce was monstrous. Apart from the obvious benefits of good bounce, it gave Warne an entirely new dimension because it enabled him to use the around-the-wicket angle to right-handers as an attacking option. It's quite unique amongst leg-spinners that he was able to do that.
More than that it was 6' 4"+ right arm seamers that Aussies had. Seamers few inches shorter would have created rough more closer to batsman hence useless.
 

Ikki

Hall of Fame Member
#1. Warne failed against good players of spin on non helpful track, and so was Murali. Both bowled well on helpful tracks.
That was my point. Amen. My response was not anything other than that. It was when it was starting to be mentioned that "both failed in India, but Murali succeeded at home" that I took exception to. Warne did not have Murali's home conditions.

#2. Comparing Muralis stats in AUS to Warne's stats in SL is wrong, becaus the conditions differ
It's actually more expansive than that. It's comparing Murali's stats in Aus, to everybody else's stats in Aus showing how hard it is to bowl in Aus, in an attempt to show why there is such a discrepancy between Warne's away form and him at home.

Then looking at the same thing but with Warne in SL, with everybody else in SL, showing how good Warne still was even against a team at home like SL that thrashes visiting spinners. But, there is a difference, home spinners in SL + Warne have done exceptionally well and the tracks are much more in favour of spinners.

From these two points you can reasonably conclude that had Warne bowled in SL his home form would be much better, and had Murali bowled in Aus it would have been worse. It's not even/shouldn't be controversial.

#3.

Exactly the point. But you only consider Murali's stats on non-helpful tracks while you discard those of Warne's. That is[ double standards/B] .


No, I didn't discard them. In fact, my whole point was look: Warne didn't do well against the best players of spin on unhelpful tracks, and Murali did the same. Not that one failed and the other didn't.

4# Intellectual dishonesty is actually considering part of the record which only Warne benefits. Sorry, you have shown multiple times that you practice double standards. I have no time to waste on hypocrites.
That's rich, I remember all the fuss we went over with the standardisation and you practically rigged the percentages. Good one.
 
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DingDong

State Captain
so who do u think was better lionel messi? i'd like to know his opinion before i finally make my mind up
 
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Migara

International Coach
You'll have to explain to me how this works...
It's simple. It's the second step after the bowling stride that creates "useful" rough for a spinner. The stride length is about 40% of the height of bowler. But because of the jump, the amount is even bigger depending on the bowler. The average difference of height difference between SL and AUS fast men is about 30cm. That will come down to 25cm difference (two successive steps). When considering the jump the difference might become as big as 30cm.

And the AUS bowlers will be on average 25kg heavier than a SL bowler (if a BMI of 22 is considered), and that will cause more damage to the pitch as well.

That difference of 25 - 30cm is extremely vital for a spinner, because rough has to be in a suitable distance from the bat to take advantage of.
 

Debris

International 12th Man
It's simple. It's the second step after the bowling stride that creates "useful" rough for a spinner. The stride length is about 40% of the height of bowler. But because of the jump, the amount is even bigger depending on the bowler. The average difference of height difference between SL and AUS fast men is about 30cm. That will come down to 25cm difference (two successive steps). When considering the jump the difference might become as big as 30cm.

And the AUS bowlers will be on average 25kg heavier than a SL bowler (if a BMI of 22 is considered), and that will cause more damage to the pitch as well.

That difference of 25 - 30cm is extremely vital for a spinner, because rough has to be in a suitable distance from the bat to take advantage of.
But surely this theory only works if all batsmen are the same size? You have to vary your length depending on the size of the batsman, I would have thought.
 

honestbharani

Whatever it takes!!!
But surely this theory only works if all batsmen are the same size? You have to vary your length depending on the size of the batsman, I would have thought.
And how many 6 foot batsmen Warne would have had to encounter... seriously? Aren't most batsmen around the world on the shorter side?
 

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