Burgey
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Harper was brilliant anywhere when he was younger. On his last tour here though, he had slipped remarkably.I'd put Roger Harper and Chris Harris ahead of Ponting and Jonty.
Harper was brilliant anywhere when he was younger. On his last tour here though, he had slipped remarkably.I'd put Roger Harper and Chris Harris ahead of Ponting and Jonty.
IMO that was his best knock. He played on a different pitch to everyone else. It was an insane hundred on a last day deck against an excellent, mint-fuelled attack.we could have semantic debates about what exactly 'it's that simple' means or we could watch some videos
edit: that video doesn't come remotely close to doing justice to that innings btw
Mate, that 2005 England bowling attack was freakish. Individually when you look at them and their careers you wouldn't think so, but I watched that whole series and the way they bowled, the reverse swing especially was crazy. I dunno if it was the batch of balls or if the poms had some sneaky reverse swing tactics but it was awesome. The only other times I'd seen bowling that good would be when McGrath, Gillespie, Lee, Warne were at their best in the early 2000s.I know that the Ashes is prestigious, but as a challenge for Australian batsmen is it really up there? When Ponting faced England he never had to bat against any ATG bowlers (I know the 2005 'attack' was excellent), but who was England's last great bowler? Botham? Willis? Underwood? Snow? Trueman?????
Surely scoring runs against Pakistan or 287 against Steyn should rate higher than Ashes runs for Australia (obv Ashes runs would rate for Englishmen - Michael Vaughan in that series in Oz many moons ago was stunningly good?
Except when he wasn't facing Steyn he would have been facing Pollock and Donald, two other ATG bowlers...287 against Steyn? lol Steyn was hardly the bowler we know today at the time, lets be real please. Also isn't this Ponting v Sanga ODI's?
Well that's just silly. But then again you seem to rank batsmen based on "memorable" knocks against England so maybe not...I'd rank Kallis fairly decisively below the others ftr.
I used to argue with nothing but statsguru when I was younger in terms of player ratings. Then when you grow up and actually gain some perspective, you realize how stupid the whole thing is considering not every batsmen/bowler faces the same quality of opposition, conditions, and in LO cricket, rules.Slats celebrating more than a decade of ruining great moments
Yeah, no. neither Pollock nor Donald were playing. In fact Donald had been retired for like 5 years . . .Except when he wasn't facing Steyn he would have been facing Pollock and Donald, two other ATG bowlers...
Most Australian venues are easier to bat on than most SL venues, and I won't repeat the statistics that show Sanga still heads the pack in terms of averages when you discount the minnows.Waugh, Sangakarra, Kallis, Dravid are all greats too but you can't quite put them on the same level. If Ponting and Lara had played a dozen tests each against Bangladesh and Zimbabwe or half their games on roads like Sanga they could be averaging 70+.
Lol, try Nicky Boje, Ntini and Andre NelExcept when he wasn't facing Steyn he would have been facing Pollock and Donald, two other ATG bowlers...
Yeah Australia has had some of the flattest pitches in it's history in the last decade or so.Most Australian venues are easier to bat on than most SL venues, and I won't repeat the statistics that show Sanga still heads the pack in terms of averages when you discount the minnows.
Tendulkar has played 200 tests, hasn't he? (or are you conveniently forgetting his longevity and only comparing Lara's/Ponting's longevity with Sanga because it suits your argument?)Yeah Australia has had some of the flattest pitches in it's history in the last decade or so.
Regarding Sanga and minnows, the fact that he averages higher even without minnows is definitely awesome, and shows he's deservedly at their level as a batsman. However, it should be kept in mind that his non minnow average is 54 over something like 105 tests I think. While Ponting and Lara's non minnow (pretty much career) average is around 52 it's over a lot more tests, too. 30-40 tests more, which is pretty sizeable. So ,really 54 over 100 tests and 52 over 140 tests are pretty similar.
The only reason I keep pointing this out is not to bring Sanga down, but just that Sanga isn't "statistically better" like some people insist. His statistics seen in context are just as impressive as Lara, Ponting, Sachin. Only subjective preferences of style of play can truly decisively separate them imo.
Wtf are you talking about. I didn't even mention Sachin in my post because I was comparing Sanga with the two batsmen who didn't face minnows much.Tendulkar has played 200 tests, hasn't he? (or are you conveniently forgetting his longevity and only comparing Lara's/Ponting's longevity with Sanga because it suits your argument?)
Edit: As an aside - Had Tendulkar been an English cricketer, he could've played 300+ test matches in 24 years.
There's no need to get hyper. You are talking nonsense. You are claiming that your post had nothing to do with Sachin. Well then, read your own post again. If you still don't get the point then at least I know who the blind and deaf person is.Wtf are you talking about. I didn't even mention Sachin in my post because I was comparing Sanga with the two batsmen who didn't face minnows much.
And if it un-knots your panties, i think Tendulkar's the best of the bunch. Doesn't mean he didn't bash minnows. Got to feast on them a ton more than Lara and Ponting.
Seriously if viriya and weldone are going to repeatedly feign deafness and be stupid, I'm done.