Sorry, I honestly don't understand much of that. There were bowlers who were nearing the end of their career in 2001-2002 sort of time - are you agreeing or disagreeing with that? I'm saying precisely that their rep doesn't matter - "Donald & Pollock" instantly conjures a fearsome image, but the reality was nothing like that in 2001\02, in fact they were no real amount better than most that we've seen the last 6 years.
Well that's my whole point. Donald, Ambrose and Walsh, and alike, were at the end of their careers, so it's not like the bowling standards suddenly collapsed after they retired. Even the couple years prior they weren't their old selves and how can you judge Tendulkar batting against them with any special exception? The Pollock now is bowling as well as the Donald then.
And another question, these flat tracks, how much have they inflated the current bowlers' averages? And how much is that disguising their real efforts?
To bat worse is regardless of the era. I don't, as I say, myself hold much against Tendulkar for not being the force he once was. It doesn't impact on my judgement of him in the 1990-2002 time.
Ponting, however, is different - the 1996-2001 time does impact on my judgement of him in the 2001-2007 time, because as I say with one it's a change in the calibre of the player himself, with the other it's a change in the calibre of what he was facing.
Yes, but that's the point. Ponting was averaging VERY well in that era for someone in his first 50 tests and naturally, he'd get better. But you don't make that distinction. How much better did he get and how much worse did the bowling standards get?
As I asked before, 5 runs a wicket worse? Someone who was averaging about 50 until 2000 where he had to change his batting position from #6 to #3 can be forgiven but the fact that he was THAT good even
then sways that argument immensely, and his form prior is just as creditable as his form current.
Sure, at that time Tendulkar was the better batsmen and at another time in the same era I bet Lara was better. Top form for a player is anything but a science. As the americans say, sometimes players are just 'in the zone'.
I don't here, though, that's the point. In the Tendulkar case, I credit (or discredit, more accurately) the man - Tendulkar is clearly not the player he was previously. If it's more appropriate to make a distinction (whether crediting or discrediting) on the era, I do that.
That's only for Tendulkar, however. For Ponting it is a different case, and you do.
I don't see why one matters any more than the other.
Because we can judge our past as it has happened, something we can't with our future. And only when the future becomes our 'past' will we really get a better look at it. There is no definitive way about it, even now, and even now we can bring in statistics and facts to put doubt in this comparison.
As I say, for me he averaged 45 - that was his average at the combined five-six-seven in that time. Then he did a hell of a lot more when the quality of the bowling deteriorated, rapidly.
That's not simplistic, at all, as far as I'm concerned, it's perfectly plausible.
Yes, it is, and I'll show you why.
Dravid averaged about 52 in the same scrutinised period and averages 57 now. Yet Ponting averaged, taking your evaluation, 45 then and averages 59 now. If it was a simple shift because of the era, then the batsmen's rank amongst their peers and their averages would remain stable. Yet Ponting grows into his skin and becomes not only a better batsmen, in terms of himself, but in the world. So Ponting is not just cashing in because the era's run scoring is easier, but he's gone that extra yard more because he is a much better batsmen.
There are a lot of examples, from Inzamum to Kallis to Dravid to Tendulkar to Lara in which, some of the players, their averages improve after this era - and no one is doubting why - but yet they don't touch Ponting in how much better he got. Now, the spanner in the works is that Sachin actually got worse after this period - his average was 57 before and is 55 now.
So, I do think it's a
tad simplistic. And you're not giving enough credit here to Ponting.
A question: what is it that Ponting will have to do to, in your mind, reach Sachin?