So who are the cornerstones must have on your team, that no matter the changes they will always be included. Your must haves, the premier players?This week...
Hutton
Gavaskar
Bradman
Hammond
Miller
Sobers
Gilchrist
Wasim
Warne
Lillee
Murali
Hutton, Bradman, Sobers are my locks.So who are the cornerstones must have on your team, that no matter the changes they will always be included. Your must haves, the premier players?
For me - Bradman, Sobers, Gilchrist and Hobbs are not up for negotiation. The rest of the answer changes a bit for me depending on exactly what the question is. Imran was IMO the best Test cricketer of all time but I don't think he was one the best four bowlers of all time so his place would somewhat come down to balance when it came to picking a side to play a game/series/series-of-series against a team of equivalent standard. Grace would make my top three cricketers of all time but often the question is phrased specifically relating to Test cricket, where he wasn't as strong relatively as many other openers.So who are the cornerstones must have on your team, that no matter the changes they will always be included. Your must haves, the premier players?
I remember you saying this before, that you consider Imran the greatest Test cricketer. Why is that so? Seems a bit odd that anyone would consider him as the greatest.For me - Bradman, Sobers, Gilchrist and Hobbs are not up for negotiation. The rest of the answer changes a bit for me depending on exactly what the question is. Imran was IMO the best Test cricketer of all time but I don't think he was one the best four bowlers of all time so his place would somewhat come down to balance when it came to picking a side to play a game/series/series-of-series against a team of equivalent standard. Grace would make my top three cricketers of all time but often the question is phrased specifically relating to Test cricket, where he wasn't as strong relatively as many other openers.
The rest of the variance comes from exactly how the whole thing would theoretically work. Do you get each player at their absolute best? Or do you get them at a completely random point of their careers, meaning you're taking a punt of sorts? Or - my favourite way of looking at it - are you not only playing one series but in fact many series across a 15 or 20 year period, therefore taking into account all the highs and lows of a player's career and the longevity or lack thereof he demonstrated? The longer a period of performance we're taking into account, the more likely I am to pick someone like Tendulkar and the less likely I am to pick someone like Viv Richards.
Why would balance determine if Marshall is selected?A players peak is not merely one match, one series, one season, or even one year. When a peak is determined ALL of the players Test career prior to the peak is taken into consideration ('number crunched'). In other other words, a peak is not an 'isolated incident'.
That being the case, I think that picking a player at his peak, even though he may have completed only half his career in hindsight, is the best and farest stance to take. Especially if the player has a lengthy career.
Exceptions will need to made with players like WG Grace, Barry Richards, and Mike Procter of course. Picking these players will always require a 'leap of faith' because they can only ever be selected according to their FC/WSC career and skill/talent.
And as for 'locking players in' - Bradman and Sobers are the only non-negotiables for me. Perhaps Marshall, but even he depends on the balance that I am trying to achieve with the attack according to the conditions.
Obviously anyone can have any non-negotiables they like because no one should be the thought police.Non-negotiables for me are Bradman, Sobers, Gilchrist, Hobbs and Marshall.
I find it extremely easy to argue against personally.However, there is a principle which says, 'The best wicketkeeper should always be picked'. Because this principle is difficult to argue against this
OK. Money where your mouth is then.I find it extremely easy to argue against personally.
It's ideological rubbish. Picking any player for a cricket side is or at least should be about be maximising its chances of winning and/or minimising its chances of losing, and not satisfying ideological, sentimental or superstitious ideals.OK. Money where your mouth is then.
.. is a fatally flawed theory. No skill that a player offers should be completely ignored in selection as long as that skill actually applies to cricket and could be of theoretical use to the team on the field at any juncture. The selection of any player in any role is a balancing act, requiring you to consider everything they add and then prioritise each skill accordingly to the role they are selected in.'The best wicketkeeper should always be picked'
I agree with you regarding Hobbs, Gilchrist though is quite clearly the best wicket keeper batsman the world has seen and a quite under rated keeper as well.Obviously anyone can have any non-negotiables they like because no one should be the thought police.
However, there is a principle which says, 'The best wicketkeeper should always be picked'. Because this principle is difficult to argue against it means that Gilchrist should not be an automatic pick. I'm not saying that Gilchrist wasn't an excellent keeper because he was. However, Kirmani, Knott, Evans, Tallon, and Oldfield receive universal acclaim for very good reasons. It is far more likely they are the best wicketkeepers.
It can be argued that Hutton and Gavaskar both faced significantly better attacks than what Hobbs did. Therefore the runs that they scored hold more value. I don't think that Hobbs is a non-negotiable either.
Principles exist because smart people have first thought about an issue in depth. The fact that we don't understand their reasoning doesn't always mean that the original reasoning was illogical.It's ideological rubbish. Picking any player for a cricket side is or at least should be about be maximising its chances of winning and/or minimising its chances of losing, and not satisfying ideological, sentimental or superstitious ideals............
Yes but I wasn't arguing against that at all.People who chose Alan Knott over Gilchrist (for example) rightly or wrongly assume that the runs 'Scored + Prevented' by Knott will total more than the runs 'Scored + Prevented' by Gilchrist.
Admittedly, it's not an iron clad assumption but it's not an illogical one. Therefore, there is enough doubt to negate the claim that Gilchrist is a 'non-negotiable' for any ATG XI.
Then we basically agree.Yes but I wasn't arguing against that at all.
Oh, I just can't envisage a situation where I'd ever choose not to select him. I'm happy for people to disagree with that; it's just a simple clash of opinions. What I'm not happy for them to do is supply logical fallacies to support their argument.Then we basically agree.
So why exactly is Gilchrist a 'non-negotiable' if keeping and batting skills are essentially a balancing act?