zaremba
Cricketer Of The Year
He doesn't belong in this thread. Discussion on him is limited to threads entitled Steven Smith. He is his own category and it is debatable as to whether it belongs in cricket chat.
He doesn't belong in this thread. Discussion on him is limited to threads entitled Steven Smith. He is his own category and it is debatable as to whether it belongs in cricket chat.
Was about to cry foul on Capel's behalf but thankfully thought to check out his Test record first, which I have to concede is truly horrible. That said all I can recall of him are his doughty contributions to the famous victory in Jamaica in the first Test in 1990, and what should have been an equally famous victory in the third Test, so for me he is forgivenDavid Capel takes the prize in my mind for least useful in either discipline, with 15 tests and nothing to show for it.
Fair point well made - this perhaps goes some way towards explaining why England were top-heavy with this kind of player from the late 1980s onwards. They never had six batsmen and four bowlers who were consistently of good international class and then there was the whole 'new Botham' obsession which seemed to throw ill-equipped players into situations they were never cut out for.A "reverse all-rounder" is basically a bits and pieces player. Actually I think such a player can be justified in an average team if there is no alternative.
Hypothetically if you have player A who averages 20 with the bat and 37 with the ball and player B who averages 10 with the bat and 33 with the ball I would take player A particularly if he offers something extra in the field as well. Or in the case of Sammy if he offers something as captain.
I am particularly against the idea of picking players who are very average in one area and who offer nothing else. In the Indian context I would rather have Irfan Pathan ahead of RP Singh or Unadkat.
Looking at it from another perspective, think of an average test team which has to pick a 6th batsman or a fifth bowler. Chances are the sixth best batsman or the fifth best bowler in this country are going to be barely international class. Also chances are, being an average team, they are going to struggle with just 5 batsmen and also with just 4 bowlers. In this situation a bits and pieces player is likely to be better than a specialist.
Dwayne Bravo is someone to consider, promised much but delivered little.
Cue WW to tell us it was due to the cold and he couldn't release the ball etc...
Quit laughing or i'll mention Azhar Mahmood. Same sort of player.
Dwayne was just too cool to contribute towards any discipline.
Azhar does have one of the greatest innings of all time (Durban 98) on his résumé, though...Quit laughing or i'll mention Azhar Mahmood. Same sort of player.
Had one of the best months any player has ever had then did naff all after that.Azhar does have one of the greatest innings of all time (Durban 98) on his résumé, though...
Matthew Fleming absolute LEGEND.England have an embarassment of riches here of course.
Off the top of my head:
Darren Maddy
John Stephenson
Chris Cowdrey (c)
Adam Hollioake
Ronnie Irani
Ian Greig
Geraint Jones (w)
Gavin Hamilton
Chris Schofield
Chris Lewis
Derek Pringle
Honourable mentions to:
David Capel
Ashley Giles
Ben Hollioake
Dermot Reeve
Dougie Brown
Richard Blakey (w)
Phil Newport
Matthew Fleming
Ian Austin
Ealham and Craig White weren't that bad in fact
tbf to Harry in 4-day and 5-day cricket he was essentially a specialist batsman. In fact, he was probably the best specialist long form batsman in NZ domestic cricket during the 1990s, sort of like a slightly earlier version of Mathew Sinclair.TBF to Pringle, for a very brief while in the early 90s he did a passable impression of a test seamer, in English conditions anyway.
In tests at least, I'd say the archetypal "non-rounder" is CZ Harris. Whilst a doughty and stout hearted ODI performer, test averages of 20.44 for batting and 73.12 for bowling from 23 tests tell their own story.