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Viv Richards vs Sunil Gavaskar

Who is the better test batsman?


  • Total voters
    28

DrWolverine

U19 Debutant
and being the greatest player of fast bowling of all time.
Maybe he was. Maybe he wasn’t. But Viv’s peer acclaim and huge popularity is due to his style of play.

He was special because he was playing a style of batting at a time when no other specialist batsman could play.

If he was playing the same way today, he would still be a great batsman but not necessarily that unique.
 

Johan

State Vice-Captain
The following have been named by fellow players (and an umpire) as the best batsman they have seen. Since 1945 only. Additional names/nominators welcome.

Viv Richards: Botham, Robin Smith, Thorpe, Willis, Merv Hughes, Dujon, Hunte, Marshall, Richie Richardson, Roberts, Shastri, Vengsarkar, Saeed Anwar, Imran, Inzamam, Mohd Yousuf, Zaheer Abbas, Aravinda de Silva

Tendulkar: Harvey, Hayden, Warne, Donald, Hadlee, Kapil Dev, Hanif, Qadir, Muralitharan, Flower

Hutton: Appleyard, Cowdrey, John Edrich, Graveney, Trueman, Waite, Ramadhin

Barry Richards: Gooch, Bob Taylor, Dicky Bird, Lillee, Graham McKenzie, Graeme Pollock, Procter

Sobers: Illingworth, Underwood, Greg Chappell, Walters

Gavaskar: Hutton, Asif Iqbal, Mudassar Nazar

Lara: Alec Stewart, Herschelle Gibbs, Wasim Akram

Greg Chappell: Thomson

Harvey: Davidson

Weekes: Sobers
Michael Holding for Viv Richards


lots of conflicted opinions too.
 

Johan

State Vice-Captain
Maybe he was. Maybe he wasn’t. But Viv’s peer acclaim and huge popularity is due to his style of play.

He was special because he was playing a style of batting at a time when no other specialist batsman could play.

If he was playing the same way today, he would still be a great batsman but not necessarily that unique.
put any of the aggressive players of today back in 70s and 80s and they might not even have a career.

Viv's arguably the greatest visting Batsmen (post WW2) in both Australia and England, it's not because he played fast, simply because when it came to playing pace, I genuinely don't think there is an equal to Viv Richards bar Don Bradman, but Viv's ability to smash apart ATG pacers constantly is not something we've ever seen replicated and might never see replicated.
 

Patience and Accuracy+Gut

State Vice-Captain
I have actually started to rate Gavasker pretty highly lately. Would go with Viv but it’s really close.

Viv’s contemporary rating has got to be affected
with how he played the game compared to that of Gavasker.
 
Last edited:

Swamp Witch Hattie

School Boy/Girl Cricketer
[I actually wrote this months ago but did not post it as getting entangled in this forum (or forums in general) is a bit like getting sucked into a black hole!]

Richards has 63 wins in his 121 tests and I was curious about how much he had contributed to those wins batting-wise compared to his fellow WI greats Greenidge, Richardson and Lloyd.

I found out that just one of his 63 test wins did not involve any of the other three greats:

Viv wins with no G, L or R.JPG

As you can see, Richards scored 18 runs in that test match (a victory over England in 1988 by 10 wickets) for an average of 18.

Richards shared 56 of the other 62 test wins with Gordon Greenidge. In these shared wins, Greenidge scored 23.5% more runs than Richards, had a 10.1% higher average and scored more centuries (14 vs. 11):

Viv batting with Greenidge in wins.JPG
Greenidge batting with Viv in wins.JPG

Greenidge's runs were obviously extremely important as he was an opener, seeing off the new ball and laying the foundation for the innings.

Richards shared 31 of those other 62 test wins with Richie Richardson. In these shared wins, Richardson scored 29.0% more runs than Richards, had an 11.8% higher average and scored more centuries (9 vs. 6):

Viv batting with Richardson in wins.JPG
Richardson batting with Viv in wins.JPG

Richards shared 36 of those other 62 test wins with Clive Lloyd. In these shared wins, Lloyd scored 6.3% more runs than Richards, had a 10.9% higher average and scored more centuries (8 vs. 7):

Viv batting with Lloyd in wins.JPG
Lloyd batting with Viv in wins.JPG

Very approximately, Lloyd overlapped the first half of Richards' career, Richardson, the second half, and Greenidge, the entirety.

I was quite surprised by these results. According to various metrics (total runs, average, centuries), Richards appears to have played second (or third or fourth) fiddle in test wins to three other WI batsmen, and that's not counting the WI bowlers whose contributions to test wins could put him even further in the shade. Does this undermine Richards' reputation as a matchwinner in test cricket at all? I know he was an exciting batsmen who scored very quickly but does this make up for the other deficits? I mean, isn't output also very important? I don't have a stake in this emotionally as I worship only Hadlee.
 

capt_Luffy

Cricketer Of The Year
The following have been named by fellow players (and an umpire) as the best batsman they have seen. Since 1945 only. Additional names/nominators welcome.

Viv Richards: Botham, Robin Smith, Thorpe, Willis, Merv Hughes, Dujon, Hunte, Marshall, Richie Richardson, Roberts, Shastri, Vengsarkar, Saeed Anwar, Imran, Inzamam, Mohd Yousuf, Zaheer Abbas, Aravinda de Silva

Tendulkar: Harvey, Hayden, Warne, Donald, Hadlee, Kapil Dev, Hanif, Qadir, Muralitharan, Flower

Hutton: Appleyard, Cowdrey, John Edrich, Graveney, Trueman, Waite, Ramadhin

Barry Richards: Gooch, Bob Taylor, Dicky Bird, Lillee, Graham McKenzie, Graeme Pollock, Procter

Sobers: Illingworth, Underwood, Greg Chappell, Walters

Gavaskar: Hutton, Asif Iqbal, Mudassar Nazar

Lara: Alec Stewart, Herschelle Gibbs, Wasim Akram

Greg Chappell: Thomson

Harvey: Davidson

Weekes: Sobers
Probs Sobers and Akram for Gavaskar. Akram I am confident rated Crowe ahead of Lara and Tendulkar, and rated Gavaskar as the best he played against.
 

ma1978

International Debutant
put any of the aggressive players of today back in 70s and 80s and they might not even have a career.

Viv's arguably the greatest visting Batsmen (post WW2) in both Australia and England, it's not because he played fast, simply because when it came to playing pace, I genuinely don't think there is an equal to Viv Richards bar Don Bradman, but Viv's ability to smash apart ATG pacers constantly is not something we've ever seen replicated and might never see replicated.
lol. Cricket like any other sport only has increasing standards. Viv was a god but Steve Smith would have done just as well if not better
 

Johan

State Vice-Captain
lol. Cricket like any other sport only has increasing standards. Viv was a god but Steve Smith would have done just as well if not better
very similar players and of similar quality, think Viv gets the nod against pace though as he played with no protective Gear and has had a worse decline than Viv.
 

Johan

State Vice-Captain
Sunil Gavaskar was the difference between a loss and a draw. Viv never had to face the pressure because he played for the GOAT cricket team.

Imran once said if they can get Gavaskar out in the first session, India would lose within 3 days.
1. Viv has played plenty of high pressure quality knocks.

2. people like Viv thrive under presssure, they don't crumble to it, that's one of the merits of having an ego and a strong sense of self

3. Gavaskar himself was a part of a pretty good batting lineup for most of his career. Vengsarkar, Vishwanath, Amarnath being the big examples, at the end of his career also Mohammad Azharrudin and Ravi Shastri and ofcourse Kapil Dev, he wasn't supportless, its insulting to people like Veng and Amarnath to suggest he was.
 

DrWolverine

U19 Debutant
That’s why I said 1970s Gavaskar.

In 1970s he only had Vishwanath who was good but highly inconsistent. Similar to Lara having only Chanderpaul in the second half of his career.

Amarnath & Vengsarkar became regulars only from late 1970s. Kapil made his debut in 1977 or 1979.
 

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