venkyrenga
U19 12th Man
How would it be fair if I compulsorily included the first 1 or 2 years for current players when the guys we are ranking them against had the benefit of not having to include them?
Your methodology is fine - as a statistical exercise that involves some judgement calls - it will always be the case that some will disagree. Continue anyway - it's good work so far.How would it be fair if I compulsorily included the first 1 or 2 years for current players when the guys we are ranking them against had the benefit of not having to include them?
It's a simple concept. Team strong. Couldn't get in team. If team was weaker they could have got in. I think you're deliberately misunderstandingSo if they were so good, why they could not crack in to the team? The sentence itself is a contradiction. The players are not picked because the selectors believe they cannot replace the current players, despite being at the form of their life. If somebody was averaging 75+ in FCC, no matter how strong the team is, there is room for such players, unless they have glaring technical deficiencies / petty politics.
I don't think either way would be more fair than the other. It's just a choice that you made that favours some players over others, just like all the others like longevity factor and penalising not outs.How would it be fair if I compulsorily included the first 1 or 2 years for current players when the guys we are ranking them against had the benefit of not having to include them?
Nah. Also terrible example.I massively favour penalising not outs ?
50, 40 (average 45) is more valuable than 30, 20* ( average 50)
Which begs the question (I'm too lazy), what would Lara's average be if he had the same ratio of not outs as Sachin??I feel Lara would highly benefit from his methodology because of his RPI . His number of not outs were very low.
54-55.Which begs the question (I'm too lazy), what would Lara's average be if he had the same ratio of not outs as Sachin??
It's actually the opposite of that. Not penalizing not outs implies it's automatically a better innings if the batsman doesn't get out.Penalising Not Outs is about as bonkers as it gets with any stats mongering. It implies it's automatically a better innings if the batsman gets out.
Not penalizing doesn't imply anything. It's a simple fact of what happened.It's actually the opposite of that. Not penalizing not outs implies it's automatically a better innings if the batsman doesn't get out.
Kohli beats Dravid when it comes to facing raw pace on bouncy roads, otherwise the skill gap is massive when comparing the ability to play spin and lateral movement.In DoG's batsmen ranking, Kohli came up one spot above Dravid. Kohli has been quite average since so quite justified that this ranking puts him below Dravid
It implies because the higher average gets you a higher ranking.Not penalizing doesn't imply anything. It's a simple fact of what happened.
So what? When Mike Atherton batted 10 hours to save a Test in South Africa he should have got himself out to make the innings more worthy? So you knock a quarter of his runs off so he gets ranked lower. Super.It implies because the higher average gets you a higher ranking.