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So you're saying you can't?It seems only person that can understand proper English and write it too is the guy above the poster above me.
So you're saying you can't?It seems only person that can understand proper English and write it too is the guy above the poster above me.
Really, you must be running your stats factory then.Disagree to be honest. Warne averaged 25 and struck at 50.8! in the 00s - he was striking as fast as McGrath which is quite incredible. Without B/Z Murali averaged 25 @ 59.6 in the 00s.
So you're saying you can't?
If I could I would have written it long back.So you're saying you can't?
Thin. Very, very thin. Especially since Murali's average goes up by slightly more without a bloke he played a similar amount of cricket without, Chaminda Vaas.Competion or not, Statistically, Warne is the one who has benefitted from the Presence of some great fast bowlers in his team. Warne's average goes down to 26.83 in the matches without Mcgrath. Goes down to 28.70 in matches without Mcgrath/Gillespie.
In other words, when Warne didn't have competition from Mcgrath/Gillespies, he does worse. His average and strike rate both are worse.
But I am sure we will hear excuses after excuses and another set of twisting tales of statistical manipulations to prove all that wrong.
First of all whole premise of this argument has been that Warne has suffered because of the presence of world class bowlers because he has had to share the wickets with them whereas Murali has benefitted from the lack of it. In other words(in Warne Vs. Murali argument) the likes of Vaas aren't considered worthy of anything. They are just there to wipe the shine of the ball so that Murali can come and bowl 90 overs every inning.Thin. Very, very thin. Especially since Murali's average goes up by slightly more without a bloke he played a similar amount of cricket without, Chaminda Vaas.
Warne's average without McG is 26.83, a difference of 1.4 runs per wicket. Off the bat (so to speak), arguable as to whether that's a significant difference anyway.
Murali's average without Vaas? 24.57, a difference of 1.8 runs per wicket (arguable, significance, etc.)
Then on top of the questions of significance above, is the difference between those differences significant? Without testing, can't say but I'm guessing it won't be. So do we assume that Vaas played a larger role in Murali's wicket-taking because without him his career average difference is higher than Warne's? Or do we assume that because we're talking relatively small numbers of matches in which McG/Vaas didn't participate, they're more subject to fluctuations in form/pitches/conditions (each measurement in cricket would, if modelled, have massive confidence intervals, tbh)?
No wasn't missing anything. Pls read the posts in the last page and the post which I was replying to.Clearly missing the point. Why would you ignore his record in Australia?
Frankly, it's a non-starter numerically and I don't know why you're even bothering with it. Your attempts to debunk it are doomed from the start because they're both using the same (poor) measures.First of all whole premise of this argument has been that Warne has suffered because of the presence of world class bowlers because he has had to share the wickets with them whereas Murali has benefitted from the lack of it. In other words(in Warne Vs. Murali argument) the likes of Vaas aren't considered worthy of anything. They are just there to wipe the shine of the ball so that Murali can come and bowl 90 overs every inning.
so you don't read ikki's postsI don't even bother with trying to correct peoples' stats arguments on this site for that reason alone but geez, some of the assumptions people make on here are, to put it lightly, stretching the bounds of good sense. Not worth the stress man!
LOL....good oneWait if you can't, then how did you know that he could?
Ok ok I'll stop teasing you
Akilana didn't miss the point,you are.Ikki is happily making excuses for Punter's 14 test sample in India yet he wants to take murali's stats in aus-a far smaller sample-at facevalue.Clearly missing the point. Why would you ignore his record in Australia?
Ikki's argument for the removal of BG/Zim is because they were far and away the weakest test teams and Murali played them a lot, skewing his overall average and strike rate heavily in his favour, an opportunity Warne himself did not get.
I personally wouldn't completely remove them, but ZIM/BG do make a significant difference in the debate between the two players
btw. we have a PM not president
Didn't Ikki say that you shouldn't dismiss Pontings overseas record just because of his failures in India? I don't keep track of everything, so I just replied to a direct bitAkilana didn't miss the point,you are.Ikki is happily making excuses for Punter's 14 test sample in India yet he wants to take murali's stats in aus-a far smaller sample-at facevalue.
He also tried arguing that Murali's better average in England doesn't mean much because Warne played more matches yet he has no probs with using Warne's average in sl over 8 or whatever tests to compare it with Murali's in SL!!
No one is saying remove India for Ponting; it is an argument to look deeper into his oversees record.You surely can't discount the 14 Tests Ponting play in India. That is huge.
Apologies, you're right. I mistakenly used his all-career average without B/Z. Still, the point remains, without minnows Warne in 00s > Murali of 00s.Really, you must be running your stats factory then.
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You're on the point. Avada and co. keep missing it. Worse, they're pointing to something as if it's a "Gotcha moment", it really isn't.Didn't Ikki say that you shouldn't dismiss Pontings overseas record just because of his failures in India? I don't keep track of everything, so I just replied to a direct bit
Actually, IIRC, Warne actually has better stats taking from the time they became teammates - in which prior to that time it includes Warne's green period v India and SL. McGrath's stats suffered worse when Warne wasn't there. It goes to averaging 23 and striking at 61.5.Competion or not, Statistically, Warne is the one who has benefitted from the Presence of some great fast bowlers in his team. Warne's average goes down to 26.83 in the matches without Mcgrath. Goes down to 28.70 in matches without Mcgrath/Gillespie.
In other words, when Warne didn't have competition from Mcgrath/Gillespies, he does worse. His average and strike rate both are worse.
But I am sure we will hear excuses after excuses and another set of twisting tales of statistical manipulations to prove all that wrong.
No one compared Murali v Aus in SL to Warne vs SL in SL. It was Murali v all teams in SL v Warne against Pak/Sri in SL.It's not more worthless than comparing Murali vs Australia in SL and Warne vs SL in SL and arguing(assuming) Warne would have done better in SL against other teams.
What's worthless for me is using England and SA to compare the two.
Withot B/Z ('00s) Warne: 25.57Apologies, you're right. I mistakenly used his all-career average without B/Z. Still, the point remains, without minnows Warne in 00s > Murali of 00s.
You are missing some things. Namely, you left out WIndies and Sri Lanka for Warne. Also; their SRs. Warne strikes about as fast as McGrath in the 00s.
The Martin Crowe quote was before the Ws did face Tendulkar- apart from when he was 16- though. Wasim rated Tendulkar the finest of the modern era in a later interview(Admittedly was almost pushed to) and Waqar said he couldn't split Lara and Tendulkar.Waqar and Wasim didn't bowl too much against Sachin in their heydays which is also why they might not rate Sachin as highly. They just didn't play a lot of cricket against him when Sachin was at his peak and they were at theirs.
Also I recall Wasim mentioning Martin Crowe as really tough to bowl to. In fact he says it in his autobiography too but I don't recall that about Waqar. Waqar usually had a fantastic time against NZ.
The Martin Crowe quote was before the Ws did face Tendulkar- apart from when he was 16- though. Wasim rated Tendulkar the finest of the modern era in a later interview(Admittedly was almost pushed to) and Waqar said he couldn't split Lara and Tendulkar.
Well, you don't read more into that...you read more into what he said afterwards. After the point you touch on he summarises; watch from 0:27 onwards:He's saying Murali was harder to face initially but Warne was harder to feel comfortable against. There's no reason to read any further into it than that, really.