Yeah but the only venue with lights in the early 80s was Sydney. Then Melbourne got them. Perth, Brisbane and Adelaide all a fair bit later iircMaybe. There were plenty of DN series in Australia in the eighties but not so much elsewhere. Definitely changed in the nineties.
Maybe it happened because you've been typing "moist" and "stroke" a lot on other sites, deliberately.I'm sure Freud would love to analyze Swype and it's autocorrect crappiness.
Fair enough. Just over half of ABs matches came in the 2010s and most of Kohlis. This decade has seen the fastest shift in favour of batting. Viv would probably still end up ahead on stats if you did a straight era adjustment to their playing careers, just not by as much.2010s.
Peak Waugh was him being stodgy in tests. He isn't someone like ponting who was at his best going after the bowling. I reckon Waugh was a better test bat than Ponting, but to avoid controversy, let's say that they were comparable. In odis there is daylight between them though.Also, Waugh had a better stroke rate than Kirsten during the 90s.
Rhodes and Cronje struck at 78 and 77 respectively, which is 3 and 2 runs per hundred balls higher than Waugh, who struck at 75 in the decade.
Waugh being stodgy is a bit of a myth. He struck at the same rate as moist other bats in the decade.
No. He wouldn't have made it to a world ODI XI during the nineties.Was he thought of as a very good ODI bat?
Would love to see a table of this across some key players.Even since the 90s, batsmen average 12% more and strike 18% faster. Meaning Bevan's adjusted strike rate and average is 60@87.6, which is an average fractionally higher than Kohli's at a strike rate fractionally lower.
Even at the time S.Waugh wasn't considered a particularly special ODI bat. He'd probably have had much better stats if he batted 3 or even 4 but he pretty much never moved above 5.Was he thought of as a very good ODI bat? I can't remember. If he was it was it was probably because he had one or two massive WC innings and because he was a top test bat, and people tend to conflate the formats. See Jayawardene.
Statistically he was a bog-standard specialist bat.
wow no. Bevan finished in 2003 (might have played a few games in 2004). Kohli started in 2008. That 5 year period probably saw the biggest change in ODI batting conditions. Equating them because "in the 2000s" is heavy-handed.Bevan played nearly half of his career in the 2000s, and Kohli played 10 or 15% in the 2000s as well. Your adjustment is a bit heavy handed.
That's actually a very interesting POV.This isn't necessarily a factor that affects ODI batsmanship, but Chappelli believes modern batting helmets are affecting the way modern batsmen play.
“I think helmets have had a much bigger impact on batting than we realise. The weight of those helmets makes a big difference to your centre of gravity and balance. The weight is forcing batsmen to stand more upright, which reduces their balance at the crease and, in turn, their footwork."
Greg Chappell: What is to blame for batters’ swing struggles
I think that helmets have had an effect on batting, but not for those reasons. Firstly are modern helmet designs 'that' much heavier? I'm not too sure. The first helmets used in WSC by Greig and a couple of others were based off motorcycle helmets (heavier then than now) and actually reinforced and no-one suggested that effect, and although modern designs rapidly evolved I'm sure there were probably various ones going around with excessively thick shells in the eighties. I think that the main effect of helmets has been that batsmen, no langer fearing being hit on the head, are forward a lot more making them vulnerable to nicks (but less to bowled, which is much rarer in the modern game) and since there is little movement or variable bounce in modern pitches or with Kookaburra balls the need to play with soft hands has disappeared. Hence when such unfamiliar conditions arise everyone's like a fish out of water. You can't practice to be good in certain conditions if you never encounter them.This isn't necessarily a factor that affects ODI batsmanship, but Chappelli believes modern batting helmets are affecting the way modern batsmen play.
“I think helmets have had a much bigger impact on batting than we realise. The weight of those helmets makes a big difference to your centre of gravity and balance. The weight is forcing batsmen to stand more upright, which reduces their balance at the crease and, in turn, their footwork."
Greg Chappell: What is to blame for batters’ swing struggles
87 WCish - behind Jones, Boon, Marsh, Border and probably Veletta (in the team for his bowling)As for Steve Waugh, he was consistently the third best batsman in the Australian ODI team. That makes him a "very good batsmen". I'm not saying he's an ATG ODI bat, but he's a good case of showing how times have changed. There's no way someone with his stats would be picked in a modern ODI side.
Was just about to say this. I don't think S.Waugh was really the 3rd best in the team often. In the last few years of his career I got the impression he only really held his spot because he was captain and guys like Lehmann were unlucky to be missing out.87 WCish - behind Jones, Boon, Marsh, Border and probably Veletta (in the team for his bowling)
92 - behind Jones, Boon, Marsh
mid to late 90s - behind Bevan, M Waugh, Ponting, Gilchrist, Lehmann
early 2000s - behind Ponting, Bevan, Gilchrist, Symonds, M Waugh, Hayden, Martin,