Yeah also that he, Roberts, Lillee, Holding all clocked 152 to 160 ks in '75 and '76.Whether Jeff hit the sightscreen or not, he clocked 147.9 kmph at the fastest bowler competition, FACT.
Oh you did???!!!And I said all this very initially in the thread. So you are only repeating.
I'll concede I didn't know that piece of knowledge.Yeah also that he, Roberts, Lillee, Holding all clocked 152 to 160 ks in '75 and '76.
AND UNLIKE the speedguns of the 90s and this decade they were the AVERAGE of the ball over the 22 yards of the pitch. So we can safely add 12% to the speeds obtained in the 70s/80s.
FWIW, I follow tennis and I have heard people say similar things about the speed guns (used to measure service speeds) of previous generations compared to these days. It seems today's guns measure the speed much closer to the release point (bowler's arm or the tennis player's racquet) compared to previous generations. So it naturally results in bigger readings. I don't have a source, though.I'll concede I didn't know that piece of knowledge.
Source please?
Not to forget 50 vs 60 over matches, more variety of pitches, better spinners,more distractions ETC.............far more games played overall=less rest, games more scrutinized, more specialized ODI players, better bowlers, being opener, better fielders, more countries, inclusion of south africa...it can go both ways mate.
He was practised to do it, and any legendary batsman from todays era, if trained from childhood without the helmet will be able to do it.Viv faced Jeff Thomson without a helmet mate. I'm sure he could have dealt.
And keeps dead silent about much better spin attacks that SRT faced.I know you rate Richards > SRT and was not accusing you of anything. But one has to put some price on factors like the more difficult pitches, absence of restrictions on bowlers and fielders, lack of good protective gear, and more intimidatory fast bowling that were prevalent in the Richards era viz SRT's. Add to this the flat decks of the subcontinent, Sharjah, etc. And that this decade batting got still better.
Ha Ha! Did Thommo ever hit the side screen on full in India or Pakistan? DO you get my point? And Akthar is not the fastest that Tendulkar faced. There were one or two Pakistanis who were still quicker, and possibly the quickest bowlers in the history.Yeah that's what I said - Thommo sent down many deliveries in the 70s that thudded into the sight-screen on the full - while Akhtar's bounced only half a dozen times before gently rolling into the SS. Biased SRT-fans'
That 147.9km/h is the sum of vertical and horizontal components of the speed, over 22 yards. What is measured today is only the horizontal component. That's why yorkers from a bowler always record higher speeds than a bouncer. Adding 12% has no basis, unless you give us proven study on that.Yeah also that he, Roberts, Lillee, Holding all clocked 152 to 160 ks in '75 and '76.
AND UNLIKE the speedguns of the 90s and this decade they were the AVERAGE of the ball over the 22 yards of the pitch. So we can safely add 12% to the speeds obtained in the 70s/80s.
Bold are my answers. I agree Sir Viv beats Sachin--not by huge margin tho.Richards did average higher.--True
Richards did strike much better.--nope not much better. Just little better.
Richards did play on faster, bouncier, more difficult tracks (where even 200 was a good total).--True
Richards did that without even a helmet (unlike helmet + arm-guard + chest guard + abdomen guard etc)--So...
Richards did so without rules favoring batsmen---True
Richards did so against faster, better, more intimidatory bowling---Not true. Sachin faced better bowlers.
Richards did so with inferior equipment.---So did the bowlers of that time. So it evens out.
Richards did so on larger grounds with slower outfields.---True
That actually isn't true. The argument came up here before many times and Manan (silentstriker) e-mailed the scientist who ran the whole thing to clear it up once and for all. The speeds were measured on precisely the same trajectory and at precisely the same location as they are today.Yeah also that he, Roberts, Lillee, Holding all clocked 152 to 160 ks in '75 and '76.
AND UNLIKE the speedguns of the 90s and this decade they were the AVERAGE of the ball over the 22 yards of the pitch. So we can safely add 12% to the speeds obtained in the 70s/80s.
That's fascinating, I never knew that. Did he happen to say why all the bowlers were markedly slower in that study than they had been when clocked in an actual match?That actually isn't true. The argument came up here before many times and Manan (silentstriker) e-mailed the scientist who ran the whole thing to clear it up once and for all. The speeds were measured on precisely the same trajectory and at precisely the same location as they are today.
Dunno the details really, just know that they were clocked out of the hand (not at the batsman's end, as Jeff Thomson infamously claimed). Ask Manan.That's fascinating, I never knew that. Did he happen to say why all the bowlers were markedly slower in that study than they had been when clocked in an actual match?