Mingster
State Regular
Doubt it.Craig said:Who is to say Richard hasnt been online much?
He watches all the cricket games in the world every day every year.
He averages 22 posts a day and I havent seen not post anything for a day.
Doubt it.Craig said:Who is to say Richard hasnt been online much?
Maybe because he has better things to do than spend days (and it would take days!!) working them out and I think I'm right in saying he works as well so maybe not enough time.Mingster said:Doubt it.
He watches all the cricket games in the world every day every year.
He averages 22 posts a day and I havent seen not post anything for a day.
Of course they would be at least vaguely interesting statistics. It ought to identify the nervous starters who take ages to get their eyes in at the beginning of an innings pretty accurately, if nothing else.PY said:I think they could have a little merit but not nearly as much as Richard does.
ok fair enough....Richard said:No, not at all, just spotted this thread for the first time.
I gave the example of Trescothick in another thread; I don't keep exact tabs, I have to work it out whenever anyone asks me. It's easy enough in series, takes a bit longer in careers if they're long.
It is a fair point that some people will dispute what is and isn't a let-off, but not very often. In fact, many people have made-up stuff like some of the things on this thread just to try and prove it's more subjective than it actually is.
Very rarely, I tell you, will you get disagreement on a let-off and not.
Incidentally, can anyone answer the question I have asked so many times; what is the difference, as far as the batsman's ability is concerned, between a let-off and a scorebook-dismissal?
I cannot see the point in construing any example averages as still no-one will accept their merit, arguing as they do that there is too much subjectivity involved.
The answer, of course, is simple; just make-up your own averages on your subjective definition of a chance. And I tell you, there won't be much difference between anyone who takes the thing seriously. Any refusal to do this is simply denying the basic truth that there is no difference between a let-off and a scorebook-dismissal as far as the batsman's ability is concerned.
Richard said:Of course there are chance averages for bowlers as well - it's called the "all-chance average" (ie it takes into account all chances, not just the ones taken).
But for me assessing a bowler isn't about how many wickets (or chances) he's got next to his name, it's about how many good deliveries he's bowled and how accurate he's been in the meantime.
There is a far better means of assesing batsmen as Mike suggests than worrying about first- and second-chance averages (that can get kinda complicated) - it's called the batting all-chance average. Very simple - runs in the book divided by number of chances given in the innings.
So for a 220 which needed 3 let-offs; 220 in runs, 4 in dismissals. For a 150* which needed 1 let-off; 150 runs, 1 dismissal.
That enables all good play to be counted and all things which should result in dismissal to be accounted for.
Some people much prefer this to the first-chance average and whenever I think about it it makes every bit as much sense.
No, he'd be slightly less useless than he is.age_master said:by your chance averages Brett Lee would be one of the best bowlers in the world, yet you still dont rate him, not even in OD cricket...
Some people I've talked about these *-chance averages to - a few examples: my Dad, Jeff Stanyer (my legendary club captain), Mike Browning (Neil's met him - he's just another old "fogey" at the club, but still a darn good bowler, far better than me), Mike that Sri Lankan guy on The ECF (sure Craig will remember him, and probably david too - the guy who always slagged Gilham off for his anacrastic attitude), and one or two other guys on The ECF.Swervy said:who are these 'some people'??????
You can get many reports of a day's play, even in Zimbabwe, and normally (along with any smidgen of pictures you can get hold of - ICC Cricket World is useful sometimes) it's possible to work-out what is and isn't a chance.Swervy said:ok fair enough....
however the only way i can see how anyone can keep a record of this is by using the commentary thing on cricinfo..so surely you arent getting to see whether the chance is what YOU would consider a chance (only the guy's opinion who is typing out the commentary, which sometimes does show an element of bias...which is funny by the way)...and also a number of those 'commentators' exist so you cant really get a truly consistant idea of what was a chance
I remember them.Richard said:Mike that Sri Lankan guy on The ECF (sure Craig will remember him, and probably david too - the guy who always slagged Gilham off for his anacrastic attitude), and one or two other guys on The ECF.
Richard said:You can get many reports of a day's play, even in Zimbabwe, and normally (along with any smidgen of pictures you can get hold of - ICC Cricket World is useful sometimes) it's possible to work-out what is and isn't a chance.
You learn very quickly who calls a "chance" something that touched a fielder's finger and who correctly calls a chance something that should have been caught.
Ive always seen both sides of the coin on your little '1st chance averages' theory.Richard said:Some people I've talked about these *-chance averages to - a few examples: my Dad, Jeff Stanyer (my legendary club captain), Mike Browning (Neil's met him - he's just another old "fogey" at the club, but still a darn good bowler, far better than me), Mike that Sri Lankan guy on The ECF (sure Craig will remember him, and probably david too - the guy who always slagged Gilham off for his anacrastic attitude), and one or two other guys on The ECF.
I haven't discussed it with a massive number of people, and generally there has been more thoughtless dismissal of *-chance averages, but some do immidiately accept the merit, some after thinking about it change their ridiculing to intregue.
Richard said:Just to point-out the flaws in this supposed flaw-spotting: if the fielder is there, the batsman knows it.