PlayerComparisons
International Vice-Captain
Two top 20 batsmen
Yeah, when you look at the attacks that Border faced, there's absolutely no comparison.Hammond is overrated(and the only thing to his credit was he batted well on sticky wickets). Border has a far more complete record, dominance vs the great bowlers of his era(and a massive range of them), incredible longevity, and versatility in batting anywhere from 3-6.
Replace Border with most all time great batsmen post 1970sHammond is overrated(and the only thing to his credit was he batted well on sticky wickets). Border has a far more complete record, dominance vs the great bowlers of his era(and a massive range of them), incredible longevity, and versatility in batting anywhere from 3-6.
but with a lot of batsmen pre 70s who we rate higher such as Hobbs(I mean just the variety of crazy conditions plus the longevity), Hutton(domination of Lindwall and Co, Ramadhin and Valentine, and thriving in the 50s(a very tough era) despite his war injury with a near perfect record) and Sobers(again a very complete record and a crazy peak) we have reasons. Plus amongst the post 70s batsmen with a great all round record, Borde will be close to or at the very topReplace Border with most all time great batsmen post 1970s
Replace Hammond with the great batsmen before 1970s
And everything you said will be completely true and it’s hard to deny that
All of the yesteryear greats would have faced at maximum 2 good teams
The only exception could be Don Bradman whose exceptional record is impossible to ignore
but with a lot of batsmen pre 70s who we rate higher such as Hobbs(I mean just the variety of crazy conditions plus the longevity), Hutton(domination of Lindwall and Co, Ramadhin and Valentine, and thriving in the 50s(a very tough era) despite his war injury with a near perfect record) and Sobers(again a very complete record and a crazy peak) we have reasons. Plus amongst the post 70s batsmen with a great all round record, Borde will be close to or at the very top
Not really a war injury tbhbut with a lot of batsmen pre 70s who we rate higher such as Hobbs(I mean just the variety of crazy conditions plus the longevity), Hutton(domination of Lindwall and Co, Ramadhin and Valentine, and thriving in the 50s(a very tough era) despite his war injury with a near perfect record) and Sobers(again a very complete record and a crazy peak) we have reasons. Plus amongst the post 70s batsmen with a great all round record, Borde will be close to or at the very top
You can’t choose who you play. Hobbs, Hammond and others did magnificent against the teams and bowlers they were able to face.Hobbs faced two teams. One of them was a minnow.
Sobers faced five teams. The only good teams he faced were Australia and England.
I ain’t saying they aren’t great. Just saying most of the old legends did not really face that much competition.
Personally I don’t really count his post-war record, similar to Headley. He was 43 and hadn’t played tests for 7 years. Average went down 3 points in those extra 13 innings.Yea I mean Hammond averaged close to 60. That’s ATG level regardless of how hard/easy his era was.
TrueYou can’t choose who you play.
Finally someone surpassed the Master and then he had to live in Bradman’s shadow the rest of his career.
Held the test record for most runs for 33 years but nobody really seemed to care. Was second behind Bradman in tons until 1971, second behind Bradman in double tons until 2005. Still to this day second in FC double centuries (by a massive margin), has the second best ratio of tons to innings by batsmen who scored 100 FC centuries.Hammond played between 1927-1947.
Bradman played bwtween 1928-1948.
Hammond had a dream start to his career. In just his second year, he scored a record 905 runs in 5 Tests and 9 innings at an average of 113.
Just one year later Don arrived. He broke Hammond’s record. He scored 974 runs in just 7 innings with a world record score of 334.
In any other era, Hammond would have been the numero uno batsman. But due to playing in the same era as Bradman, he was second best.
Even post retirement, Hammond had to face financial struggles. The Don did not have to worry about money and was treated like a King
Yohan BlakeWas second behind Bradman in tons until 1971
second behind Bradman in double tons until 2005
Still to this day second in FC double centuries (by a massive margin)
has the second best ratio of tons to innings by batsmen who scored 100 FC centuries.