harsh.ag
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
What PEWS is talking about is that there has been, for some time now, no option for the majority of Test cricketers but to try and be good ODI players as well. More than that, they all usually choose to want to play ODIs as well. Once that is established, as a young cricketer, you have to change your mindset a bit when developing your talents, and a reasonable view is that there might be spillover effects in to their test performances as a result of such changes, and thus ODI performances should be taken into account when judging the players. Whether this is true or not is not in evidence, though. Maybe the spillover effects are neutral, or positive even. Maybe higher SRs translate to a better average etc.
More than that, I think the point stands that this effect should be true for all players, and so i evens out. But then again, some players like Pollard and Gayle put more stock in their limited overs career, and so maybe there is an issue. I say that had there not been limited overs cricket, it might have been the most likely case that most of such players' test careers would have not panned out well anyway.
Lots of conjecture, and all interesting.
More than that, I think the point stands that this effect should be true for all players, and so i evens out. But then again, some players like Pollard and Gayle put more stock in their limited overs career, and so maybe there is an issue. I say that had there not been limited overs cricket, it might have been the most likely case that most of such players' test careers would have not panned out well anyway.
Lots of conjecture, and all interesting.