Interesting, again, I've just had a better look at Richards' career than ever before - until now I'd simply presumed he'd averaged 53 for most of his career (first 104 Tests) then tailed-off a bit to average 35 at the very end (last 17).
The truth is, Richards had two, short, periods where he was an utter phenomena. Between 23 January and 8 August '76, he scored 1664 runs in 10 Tests; in 15 between December '79 and March '81 he scored 1454 in 15.
In the other 79 games that form the vast bulk of his career that matters, he scored 4596 at an average of 41.
The Richards story is more myth than anything, IM (newly formed) O. I couldn't care less whether he had some of the ability to average 70 in Tests, I couldn't care less whether boredom was the main reason he didn't. Fact is, he didn't have the ability to average more than the early 40s for most of his career, though he had two periods where he was indeed a sensation perhaps only once otherwise seen in cricket's history, something I'm sure any number of others have. Equally, some others have probably convinced the unwary that they should have been the-second.
Two short periods, 25 Tests in total, though, do not make a career. Yes, indeed, anyone who rates Richards 2nd-best batsman after Bradman simply does not understand the game of cricket.
A photograph of a beetroot.A quarter of his career? Take the best fourth of most batsman away from their final figures and what do you get?
I would bet that most all time great batsman would average more than 41 even after taking out their top 25%.A quarter of his career? Take the best fourth of most batsman away from their final figures and what do you get?
97 in the first period, and 80.87 during the second.Cant be bothered working it out, but for the periods Richard wants to ignore, what was the total runs scored and at what average?
That's crazy, so he averages 41 when he wasn't doing so well, how many batsmen in that era averaged 41 ? Gundappa Vishwanath was one of the best Indian batsman of his time, he averaged 41.93 throughout his career. If Richards was as good as Vishy when he wasn't doing great, I guess that tells how good he really was.He averaged at 41 in 79 Tests excluding those two peaks.
Well do someoneI would bet that most all time great batsman would average more than 41 even after taking out their top 25%.
I'm not getting into this debate, I just wanted to point that out.
I'd be surprised if that's the case. Perhaps someone could work it out for some of them.I would bet that most all time great batsman would average more than 41 even after taking out their top 25%.
I'm not getting into this debate, I just wanted to point that out.
See, this is what is so frustrating - I've never remotely suggested to "ignore" these two parts of Richards' career. I just want people to understand that the time Richards was a phenomenon who genuinely was truly out-of-the-ordinary was much, much, much, much shorter than most seem to realise.Cant be bothered working it out, but for the periods Richard wants to ignore, what was the total runs scored and at what average?
I don't think that's fair at all, but as I said - some consider the past-best times more important than I do. If a batsman can be brilliant for 150-odd innings, I don't really care that there are 40 or so more where they can't.The more fairer thing would be to take out the same proportion of, instead just 2 peaks. For Sachin that is 2 peaks (25 matches) out of 141 tests and counting, whilst for Richards it is 2 peaks (also 25 matches) out of 121 tests.
For mine, scoring runs more regularly and changing more games makes one a better batsman than scoring the runs you do score in a destructive manner and changing the lesser number of games you change that way.Also, it is quite plausible that Tendulkar will average more than Richards, but the fact is that they both had 2 approaches to batting. Whilst Richards' may not have been as run-conducive as Sachin's, it was certainly more desctructive and game-changing. But when you factor that their averages are still within a small distance of each other, that is what makes Richard so great as a batsman. Because in order to be the Richards' type batsman, you will put yourself at much greater risk and your successes will, bar a super-human talent, be in great balance with your failures. Yet Richards still manages to have such a high average.
It is fairer, you can't make a statistical comparison and not make it proportional to make it more equal.I don't think that's fair at all, but as I said - some consider the past-best times more important than I do. If a batsman can be brilliant for 150-odd innings, I don't really care that there are 40 or so more where they can't.
But that's the whole point of people who rate Richards greatly. He managed to change a great deal of games batting that way and also sports an average that the best batsmen who're 'consistent' have obtained.For mine, scoring runs more regularly and changing more games makes one a better batsman than scoring the runs you do score in a destructive manner and changing the lesser number of games you change that way.
For others, obviously, it's different.
You're entitled to your opinion, but like most of your other opinions you'll be very lonely with it.One thing's for sure, though - as I said, I'll now be looking upon Richards' career differently to how I previously did. Because for most of his career, his average was unexceptional. Only briefly was it truly remarkable.
Nah, I wouldn't say that. Nor would I consider your argument factual.Perhaps because relatively few actually seem aware of the facts, dwarfed instead by the legend. Heck, I myself was until yesterday.
I don't mean 'factual' in the sense that an argument consists of facts, but the usual meaning where 'good' facts apply, so to say.What I say is factual - it's just whether you place any value on those facts. You, clearly, don't. I just wonder how many are genuinely aware of them. Not that I'd imagine many people would change their mind even if they hadn't been and were then made aware of - some people (IMO) place too little value on stats.