Pollock was ranked #1 for most of 1970 - for some reason the video never seems to give him his 1970 rating.I noticed Victor Trumper vs Clem Hill, Graeme Pollock bring denied #1 by isolation.
My only point about Warne and McGrath is that other than Murali they were the last of the 90s greats to retire.The video also showed that Warne spent almost no time ranked #1.
Often people like to say ‘Warne and McGrath’ as if they’re a single entity but there are measures by which McGrath made an impact and Warne didn’t. This is one.
Murali was first ranked ahead of Warne in 1999 and remained ranked ahead of him for the rest of both players' careers.
Take NZ away, against the two good sides of the time. 29 wickets @27.48 in Oz and 30 wickets @32.30 in Windies. If it was a modern bowler, we would be saying how he shouldn't be in the running for the best of the best, in the ATG first or second XI.An away average of 26 is hardly problematic.
This sounds like a straw man argument to me. Who said he was "in the running for the best of the best, in the ATG first or second XI"? No one as far as I can see. The debate was whether he was clearly the best fast bowler of his generation or at the same level as the likes of Lindwall, Davidson, Statham, Adc0ck and Fazal.Take NZ away, against the two good sides of the time. 29 wickets @27.48 in Oz and 30 wickets @32.30 in Windies. If it was a modern bowler, we would be saying how he shouldn't be in the running for the best of the best, in the ATG first or second XI.
I wasn't talking about the debate in this thread in my post. People frequently rank Trueman among the best of the best and he has been featured in many 2nd ATG XIs including the cricinfo one.This sounds like a straw man argument to me. Who said he was "in the running for the best of the best, in the ATG first or second XI"? No one as far as I can see. The debate was whether he was clearly the best fast bowler of his generation or at the same level as the likes of Lindwall, Davidson, Statham, Adc0ck and Fazal.
I would disagree, purely because I wouldn't consider this a measure that has an impact on anything that matters.Often people like to say ‘Warne and McGrath’ as if they’re a single entity but there are measures by which McGrath made an impact and Warne didn’t. This is one.
I don't think the rankings are that nuanced. McGrath ahead of Warne isn't surpsising, he had a comfortably better average and they would have played the same opposition in the same conditions so you can't really judge them seperately on those metrics.I reckon these rankings must place a decent premium on top order wickets/ quality of wickets? Ambrose's amount of time at the top is otherwise pretty surprising, as is the fact that mcgrath was so far ahead of warne- I would have expected their wpm and average to have evened out somewhat.
Yeah, did notice that lag issue. Was lazy to check if Pollock achieved #1. Given his peak rating of 900+ makes sense he would have.Pollock was ranked #1 for most of 1970 - for some reason the video never seems to give him his 1970 rating.
The video's also a bit misleading at other times because when a player's rating jumps from (say) 400 to 700, it insists on counting up the rating through the 300 points (even though ratings don't work like that), so there's a massive lag before they move to the right place (and the rating bars also move gradually - hence you have Hutton in 1940 apparently 12th in the list despite having the 4th highest ranking).
It annoys me that when the players' rating overtakes another players, the position on the graph still remains below sometimes. It makes the whole thing kinda pointless.For completeness, top 15 batsmen over time.
I noticed Victor Trumper vs Clem Hill, Graeme Pollock bring denied #1 by isolation.
Warne being injured/unfit against India in every series he played doesn't help his case. We were lucky that we were up against MacGill and not Warne in 2003-04 series.Ashwin and Jadeja spending more time at No. 1 than Warne is ITSTL.
Why wouldn't they be? If bored coders on here can account for those things in their rankings why wouldn't the official ICC rankings be more nuanced?I don't think the rankings are that nuanced. McGrath ahead of Warne isn't surpsising, he had a comfortably better average and they would have played the same opposition in the same conditions so you can't really judge them seperately on those metrics.