The way I have explained it to myself is that he was - a) More hungry than anybody else and b) Studied the game to a very great extent w.r.t. to how the bowlers bowl and get their movement and spin etc (which comes across in his book The Art of Cricket)It is amazing that all the very best batsmen in almost 150 years of cricket have an average between 50 and 60. Bradman is just a friggin 100 and that to me is unexplainable. Perhaps, as fred put it. Bradman wasn't twice the batsman that viv was but over the length of his career he was twice as effective.
No one is debating your point Monk, although I'm not sure about the 80% figure.Statistically, he was twice the batsmen his peer's were.
Let's say, for argument's sake, you consider Tendulkar and Hutton as basically equals as batsmen (which I don't think is unreasonable). Bradman is at least 80% better than either of them, and possible twice the player both of them are based on output. In all seriousness, you can throw all the bull**** into the mix you want, but Bradman is so far ahead of anyone else it's ridiculous.
What more do people want than he has an average of double the very best batsmen?
You're asking if he'd maintain his stats over a larger number of tests right? Can't see Bradman's average going down even in that case. Case in point being his FC average of 95 which was achieved over 22 years and around 65 billion matches (actually it was around 220 matches iirc).No one is debating your point Monk, although I'm not sure about the 80% figure.
So here's the question. If Bradman and McCabe were to both play the exact same 200 Tests as Tendulkar, what do anticipate their respective averages would be? Would they go up, down, or stay the same? Obviously there is no concrete answer, but it's an interesting thought experiment just the same.
As I had said in an earlier post, Hutton was the first batsman who faced consistently strong bowling attacks. O'Reilly, Lindwall, Miller, Ramadin and Valentine. What he faced post war even though relatively close to same era as Bradman was considerably, considerably more difficult. England's post war attack was initially quite poor and the Indian attack was god awful. No way was Bradman 80% better than Hutton or Tendulkar or Sobers or Richards or Lara or back to Jassy point even Ponting.Statistically, he was twice the batsmen his peer's were.
Let's say, for argument's sake, you consider Tendulkar and Hutton as basically equals as batsmen (which I don't think is unreasonable). Bradman is at least 80% better than either of them, and possible twice the player both of them are based on output. In all seriousness, you can throw all the bull**** into the mix you want, but Bradman is so far ahead of anyone else it's ridiculous.
What more do people want than he has an average of double the very best batsmen?
What would you have to say about sobers's cashing in on the minnow indians? Isnt that where he really cashed in? Averaging something like 86?As I had said in an earlier post, Hutton was the first batsman who faced consistently strong bowling attacks. O'Reilly, Lindwall, Miller, Ramadin and Valentine. What he faced post war even though relatively close to same era as Bradman was considerably, considerably more difficult. England's post war attack was initially quite poor and the Indian attack was god awful. No way was Bradman 80% better than Hutton or Tendulkar or Sobers or Richards or Lara or back to Jassy point even Ponting.
The man bad a perfect storm and capitalized on it. The only players he was twice or 80% better that are the ones he played with on his same team over the length of his career.
Even Headley who shared the same era instead of playing India and South Africa played against only the top two teams in the era and both home and away and played in more countries in 20 Tests than Bradman.
I laugh when I hear Australians use the minnows argument vs Murali vs Warne debates because no one capitalized on Minnow attacks more than Bradman in those two series. And to be honest if there was one player who is the closest to Don if not his equal in statistical dominance and ridiculous records it's Murali.
Fair enough. But I do find your opinion counter-intuitive, especially if we consider all the ODIs Tendulkar had to play as well. But of course, there's no inherent reason why my intuition should be more reliable than your intuition.You're asking if he'd maintain his stats over a larger number of tests right? Can't see Bradman's average going down even in that case. Case in point being his FC average of 95 which was achieved over 22 years and around 65 billion matches (actually it was around 220 matches iirc).
Number Monk used.How's 80% come into the equation? Of course Bradman isn't 80% better than the other greats and there is nothing about his record which suggests he was.
Bowlers Sobers faced and scored at least half centuries against.What would you have to say about sobers's cashing in on the minnow indians? Isnt that where he really cashed in? Averaging something like 86?
Agree, it's what I find weird too. That no one has ever averaged in the 70s or 80s even.What I find weird is that there's no-one in between 99.94 and the next guy (whoever that would be depending on quals such as minimum Tests etc.) But that next guy (say he averages 60) would have plenty of batsmen right behind him, yet there's no-one averaging 70, 75, 80, 85, 90 or 95.
There have been 3 batsman who have averaged in the 70s over 52 Test matches;Agree, it's what I find weird too. That no one has ever averaged in the 70s or 80s even.
It's as if the pinnacle is somewhere around 55-60 for the very elite (and that's a rare few- 50 is outstanding). Then there's Bradman on 99. ****ing uncanny.