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The ATG Teams General arguing/discussing thread

h_hurricane

International Vice-Captain
Zaheer
Brett Lee
Stuart Broad
Srinath
Harmison
Caddick

They all belong to a family

Mixing them with

Walsh
Gillespie
S Pollock
McDermott
Ntini
Akhthar


Is not right. IMHO
Pollock and Walsh are clearly a level of two above others they are bucketed with. It is amazing how under rated these two are.
 

Coronis

International Coach
Thought experiment here, 4 players, 2 batsmen 2 bowlers.

Batsman A averages 60 for his first 75 tests, and 40 for his second 75.
Batsman B averages 40 for his first 75 tests, and 60 for his second 75.

Bowler A averages 20 for his first 60 tests, and 30 for his second 60.
Bowler B averages 30 for his first 60 tests and 20 for his second 60.

Which players do you rate higher, and why?
 

Victor Ian

International Coach
Player A. Because in memory they were great for their whole career. With player B you only ever think of them as great as an afterthought when you correct your false initial impression.
 

h_hurricane

International Vice-Captain
Thought experiment here, 4 players, 2 batsmen 2 bowlers.

Batsman A averages 60 for his first 75 tests, and 40 for his second 75.
Batsman B averages 40 for his first 75 tests, and 60 for his second 75.

Bowler A averages 20 for his first 60 tests, and 30 for his second 60.
Bowler B averages 30 for his first 60 tests and 20 for his second 60.

Which players do you rate higher, and why?
I would rate both A and B the same. It does not matter when you peak and at what stage you hit a trough. A player should be judged based on his whole career, not parts.
 
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bagapath

International Captain
Batsman A averages 60 for his first 75 tests, and 40 for his second 75.
Neil Harvey

Averaged 62 in the first half of his career and 37 in the second half

Batsman B averages 40 for his first 75 tests, and 60 for his second 75.
Clive Lloyd

Averaged 38 in the first 34 tests and 60 in the last 30 odd tests

Bowler A averages 20 for his first 60 tests, and 30 for his second 60.
Shaun Pollock

Averaged 22 in the first 30 tests (19.something after 50) and averaged 30 in his last 30 tests

Bowler B averages 30 for his first 60 tests and 20 for his second 60.
Imran Khan. First 100 wickets at 30 (and averaging 30 after 30 tests) and last 100 wickets at 24.

All interchangeable. Equal class.
 

Dan

Hall of Fame Member
I would rate both A and B the same. It does not matter when you peak and at what stage you hit a trough. A player should be judged based on his whole career, not parts.
If Ricky Ponting had retired three years earlier than he did, would you rate him more highly?
 

h_hurricane

International Vice-Captain
If Ricky Ponting had retired three years earlier than he did, would you rate him more highly?
Yes, because in that case nobody would know whether he would have hit a trough later or not. If he had retired in 2007 averaging 60 with 9-10 K runs, how would any one know whether he would have ended up averaging 51 odd in 2012 ? He should have been rightly treated as a batsman with 60 avg.
 

Dan

Hall of Fame Member
Yeah this is a debate that's been had on here ad nauseum, but I still think it's ridiculous that apparently Ponting should have retired to 'protect his legacy' by maintaining a higher overall career average rather than continuing to play and score runs to help his team, albeit at a reduced rate.
 

h_hurricane

International Vice-Captain
Yeah this is a debate that's been had on here ad nauseum, but I still think it's ridiculous that apparently Ponting should have retired to 'protect his legacy' by maintaining a higher overall career average rather than continuing to play and score runs to help his team, albeit at a reduced rate.
Longevity definitely needs to be counted. What I meant was Ponting retiring with 9K @ 60 should have been rated better than 13K @ 52. Perhaps, if he hadn't declined as much and scored 13K @ 56-57, he would have been rated the same as 9K @60.

The issue is not that he declined, it is that he declined more than expected.
 
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Dan

Hall of Fame Member
But that 13k at 52 contains the 9k at 60!

He’s being punished for having a very good career (4k at 45ish) on top of an ATG one (9k at 60), because he didn’t retire at his precise peak (because he was, y’know, still a better batsman post-Roach than anyone else Australia could have replaced him with).
 

Coronis

International Coach
I would rate both A and B the same. It does not matter when you peak and at what stage you hit a trough. A player should be judged based on his whole career, not parts.
I agree, it shouldn’t but, it never seems to work out that way realistically.
 

h_hurricane

International Vice-Captain
He isn't punished there.That 40-45 average doesn't bring him down to the level of Mark Waugh or David Gower. What it means is that he was ATG*(more than ATG)+ATVG which makes him ATG not ATG*. I know everyone doesn't subscribe to this view but that is just me :)
 

ankitj

Hall of Fame Member
Thought experiment here, 4 players, 2 batsmen 2 bowlers.

Batsman A averages 60 for his first 75 tests, and 40 for his second 75.
Batsman B averages 40 for his first 75 tests, and 60 for his second 75.

Bowler A averages 20 for his first 60 tests, and 30 for his second 60.
Bowler B averages 30 for his first 60 tests and 20 for his second 60.

Which players do you rate higher, and why?
Intuitively A in both cases.
 

h_hurricane

International Vice-Captain
The main issue I have with rating 13K @ 52 equal to 9K@60 is that there might be another player who scored 9K@55 in part of his career and then ending up with 13K@54. How do we prove 13K@52 is greater than 13K@54 then ? My brain is obviously hurting..
 

Spark

Global Moderator
Yes, because in that case nobody would know whether he would have hit a trough later or not. If he had retired in 2007 averaging 60 with 9-10 K runs, how would any one know whether he would have ended up averaging 51 odd in 2012 ? He should have been rightly treated as a batsman with 60 avg.
Everybody knew he was declining and was hitting a trough. He stayed in the side because the team needed him, regardless of what damage it did to his statistics.

Ponting could absolutely have retired in, say, 2007 with a statistical record that places him in contention for second greatest batsman of all time. And Australia would have won fewer Test matches.
 
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Spark

Global Moderator
The main issue I have with rating 13K @ 52 equal to 9K@60 is that there might be another player who scored 9K@55 in part of his career and then ending up with 13K@54. How do we prove 13K@52 is greater than 13K@54 then ? My brain is obviously hurting..
The answer is that this is an entirely mathematical comparison with little actual relation to how player careers actually evolve and what the average replacement-level Test batsman in the last decade has produced.
 

OverratedSanity

Request Your Custom Title Now!
Ill always have a bit more respect for a player who plays on trying to to regain his form and extend his career over the hypothetical player who gets his average as high as possible and ****s off as soon as he realises he isn't at his peak.
 

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