Ford_GTHO351 said:
Going by what you said, I could just as easily for example say that Justin Langer is not in the Australian One Day Team because he is not a good enough batsman, doesn't that tell you something about the standard of play in a 5 day test as compared to that in a One Day International?
Thankfully I see that Justin Langer is an excellent batsman whilst he may not be a part of the Australian ODI side.
See how wrong it is to say that the standards of ODI games are lower then Tests. They both have equal standards as not only both forms of the game require different skills, but both forms of the game require hard work to succeed.
JohnnyA has explained the Justin Langer case very clearly in the previous post....anyway here are my two bits on the topic...
One day cricket can at best be called the superficial part of cricket in that it has very little depth, very little subtleties and basically pointed towards mass entertainment. The rules like field restrictions in the first 15 overs, restriction of bouncers etc skew the game clearly in favour of the batsmen and they are encouraged to put on a spectacular show of power hitting for the entertainment of the attending masses.
One day cricket has done a lot for cricket in that it brought huge popularity and rejuvenated a game which was on the decline or atleast stagnating, improved the general standards of fitness and fielding, but this version can never capture the all the subtle nuances and magic of its 5 day brother basically because of its skewed rules and the simple fact that there is just no time.
The general mass of people who can't/won’t appreciate the finer nuances of this game swear by this slam-bang variety while deriding the traditional version(let me stress here that tradition is not what attracts me about 5 day tests), but when you say one dayers are better than tests or even equal, how do you justify or prove that? What does a one dayer have that the tests don’t have except of course for the lopsided rules?
Mindless slogging might happen very rarely, but quick scoring, exceptional running between the wickets, agile fielding, exciting chases, restrictive bowling etc are very much there in the longer version.
However, a lot of other things that make cricket special like technical finesse, temperamental excellence, attacking bowling, attacking fielding, back-to-the-wall, gritty match saving innings….there are so many things that could be listed out that are either pretty rare(even from the classy players who are exceptional in both versions) or patently absent in the one day variety.