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Which aspects of test cricket have regressed in the current era?

Immenso

International Vice-Captain
Conversion rates from 50 to 100 has gotten worse in the last 20 years , definitely...
Joe Root struggled with it for a long time , De Villiers struggled with it , We've got players like Bavuma who have 1 test hundred in the entire career, I think Dickwella of Sri Lanka is closing in on Warne's record of most test runs without a test hundred ..I don't know if stats will back this up but it feels like more and more of the current batsmen get complacent in the 50-99 mark than ever before .
My instinct was that this would be statistically false. My instinct was that the faster pace of scoring, so less mental and physical fatigue, would offset the technical looseness.

But it appears to be true. Using the same space 10 years apart.
10 to 15 years ago the conversion rate was 50%, currently (last 6 and bit years) the conversion rate is 43%.

Mostly due to:
- on percentage: South Africa and Sri Lanka huge batting decline.
- on quantity: England's slightly less dramatic decline, but sheer volume, will affect the overall stats a fair amount.

(Only NZ and Bangladesh dramatic improvers)

1678223343183.png
 

Coronis

International Coach
My instinct was that this would be statistically false. My instinct was that the faster pace of scoring, so less mental and physical fatigue, would offset the technical looseness.

But it appears to be true. Using the same space 10 years apart.
10 to 15 years ago the conversion rate was 50%, currently (last 6 and bit years) the conversion rate is 43%.

Mostly due to:
- on percentage: South Africa and Sri Lanka huge batting decline.
- on quantity: England's slightly less dramatic decline, but sheer volume, will affect the overall stats a fair amount.

(Only NZ and Bangladesh dramatic improvers)

View attachment 34993
Apart from anything else, we simply had better batsmen playing then. There are a ridiculous number of ATGs/close to who were playing back then. NZ has of course been at its strongest in Test history, particularly in batting. Bangladesh still has Tamim and Shakib, and their other batsmen have improved markedly.
 

Raz0r6ack

U19 12th Man
In response to the question, "Which aspects of test cricket have regressed in the current era?...what parts of the game can we say have definitely become worse in the past 20 years?"

You said, "Nations like...England...just don't have the same quantity of quality of Test batsmen that they had 10-15 years ago."

I pointed out that England has one of its strongest batting line ups in the last 50 years, or words to that effect.

I was right, and you citing the poor quality of England batsmen as evidence of a decline in the standards of test cricket in the modern era was misguided, and in fact wrong.

The fact that you think that your statistic of a top 7 batting line up in 2011 having a combined career average of 343 is more impressive than my statistic of a current England top 7 having an average in the last 12 months of 387 is neither here nor there.
England don't have as many quality batsmen as they had 10-15 years ago. England had 7 batsmen averaging 40+ over an extended period back then. They currently have 1.

Whether you like it or not that is an example of a decline in the quantity of quality batsmen.

The only batsmen in England's current lineup that would get into England's 2011 side on batting alone is Joe Root. Stokes would probably replace Collingwood for his allround abilities.

You're the one who pushed the form average vs career averages stuff. Not me. Form is temporary. Class is permanent.
 

Brook's side

International Regular
England don't have as many quality batsmen as they had 10-15 years ago. England had 7 batsmen averaging 40+ over an extended period back then. They currently have 1.

Whether you like it or not that is an example of a decline in the quantity of quality batsmen.

The only batsmen in England's current lineup that would get into England's 2011 side on batting alone is Joe Root. Stokes would probably replace Collingwood for his allround abilities.

You're the one who pushed the form average vs career averages stuff. Not me. Form is temporary. Class is permanent.
No I haven't pushed form average v career average.

You posted career averages. Without having seen that post (and not responding to it) I posted averages over a 12 month period. You then endeavoured to reduce the discussion to a contest between those two sets of figures (albeit whilst introducing further irrelevant numbers such as the batting averages of the bowlers in the teams).

For what it's worth, I actually agree with you and if there was the choice, I'd be more likely to choose a combined career average of 343 over a 12 month average of 387.

I actually also agree that that 2011 line up was probably stronger than the current line up. I's also probably choose England's 2005 line up over the current one.

But those are probably the only 2 England batting line ups that I would pick over the one which England might pick this summer, over the last 50 years.

Whilst I recognise therefore that the my assertion that the current line up is the strongest in 15 years was probably technically incorrect, the essence of my point is completely valid, which is that your assertion that the current state of the England batting line up demonstrates a decline in the standard of test cricket in the current era, is a load of nonsense.
 

Line and Length

Cricketer Of The Year
Many countries have current batsmen (eg Root, Smith, Kohli, Williamson) that would figure in ATG team conversations. Similarly we have bowlers (eg Cummins, Bumrah, Rabada, Anderson, Jadeja, Ashwin) who would be considered. I see this as a positive sign that standards aren't declining as severely as some would suggest.
 

Brook's side

International Regular
You literally said the last 12 months so I got the stats for the last 12 months.

If you sort from June 1st 2022 and use the top 7 batters

Primary team Englandremove England from query
Start of match date greater than or equal to 1 Jun 2022remove greater than or equal to 1 Jun 2022 from query
Batting position between 1 and 7remove between 1 and 7 from query
Grouped by teamremove team from query

TeamPlayersMatInnsNORunsHSAveDescendingBFSR1005004s6s
England171215014586218643.10772675.8718261271976investigate this query


Primary team Englandremove England from query
Start of match date between 1 Sep 2010 and 1 Sep 2011remove between 1 Sep 2010 and 1 Sep 2011 from query
Batting position between 1 and 7remove between 1 and 7 from query
Grouped by teamremove team from query

TeamPlayersMatInnsNORunsHSAveDescendingBFSR1005004s6s
England101211512615029459.701087856.532127871714

It's virtually the same difference.

Sep 2010 to Sep 2011 Overall figures
PlayerMatInnsNORunsHSAveDescendingBFSR1005004s6s
IR Bell12164116423597.00183863.325511404
AN Cook12171150429494.00293151.316401621
KP Pietersen12161105522770.33163364.603511393
IJL Trott1015281020362.30161350.21331900
MJ Prior1215365312654.4177384.47332684
TT Bresnan5511939048.2533657.44020301
EJG Morgan710136210440.2261958.48132403
SCJ Broad98123974*34.1425494.09033322
AJ Strauss1217056311033.11124845.11142711
GP Swann129114736*18.3717982.12000161
CT Tremlett7634724*15.669847.9500050
PD Collingwood560834213.8317846.6200080
JM Anderson1110270278.7519136.64001100

Jun 1st 2022 to present Overall figures
PlayerMatInnsNORunsHSAveDescendingBFSR1005004s6s
HC Brook610080918680.9081998.7743110120
JM Bairstow611268116275.6670596.594118913
JE Root12214105917662.29140975.1544111610
BM Duckett510150810756.4453295.48141633
BT Foakes9143428113*38.9082651.81133460
OJ Pope1222180914538.52109274.08251956
BA Stokes1220265110336.1689272.981217319
Z Crawley1223156912225.8683368.30122930
AZ Lees71303276725.1559255.23020451
OE Robinson71011683918.6621877.06000211
SCJ Broad91201724214.3319190.05000234
MJ Leach1215769158.6218237.91003100
MJ Potts56230197.506446.8700131
JM Anderson101145097.148856.8100170
I'd previously not seen this post.
Noted. I acknowledge that these figures trump the ones which I cited for the current line up. And glorious they are to see too. But this comparison does not substantiate your assertion that the current england batting line up demonstrates a decline in the standards of test cricket.
 

Ali TT

International Vice-Captain
Scoring fast isn't that much of a virtue in itself. Alastair Cook could never do run-a-ball hundreds by just after lunch on Day 1 but like **** are you going to tell me that the likes of Crawley, Duckett and Pope are in the same league as he was as a Test batsman.

It's fun and great and all but there are other ways to win games of cricket.
In 12 tests including the 2010 Ashes through to the victory at home over India, England racked up scores of 517/1, 620/5, 513, 644, 496/5, 486, 474/8, 544, 710/7, 591/6.

As good as BazBall has been over the past year, it can't compete with that side for sheer weight of runs.
 

The_CricketUmpire

U19 Captain
How about spin bowling? Is there any team with a better spinner now than they had say 15-20 years ago?

The answer maybe India, but if you include Kumble then he'd be at least the match of Ashwin.
Collectively - Warne, MacGill, Murali, Kumble, Harbhajan Singh, Mushtaq Ahmed, Saqlain Mushtaq, Daniel Vettori.....was a strong era for spinners that 1990s - mid/late 2000s era. There isn't the quality nowdays with the spinners collectively.

But on that note, good to see spinners Swepson, Kuhnemann and Murphy get opportunities in recent times.
 

Raz0r6ack

U19 12th Man
I'd previously not seen this post.
Noted. I acknowledge that these figures trump the ones which I cited for the current line up. And glorious they are to see too. But this comparison does not substantiate your assertion that the current england batting line up demonstrates a decline in the standards of test cricket.
The thread was asking about the regression in the last 20 years. Not the last 100 or the last 50. My assertion was that the batting lineups of those teams I listed don't have the same number of quality of batsmen that they used to have. Hence a decline in the period of time listed.

The drop off between the top echolen of Test batters and the upper middle tier seems a lot greater then what it was 20 years. Lower order runs in recent times have often saved teams from the lack of performances from top and middle order batsmen.
 

Spark

Global Moderator
The drop off between the top echolen of Test batters and the upper middle tier seems a lot greater then what it was 20 years. Lower order runs in recent times have often saved teams from the lack of performances from top and middle order batsmen.
Part of this is the result of pitches being much more bowler friendly than they were in that late 00s era. You really didn't have to be all that great to average above 40 in Tests at that time by feasting on the plethora of absolutely dismal roads that were the norm; now a high 30s average takes some work to maintain.
 

Brook's side

International Regular
The thread was asking about the regression in the last 20 years. Not the last 100 or the last 50.
So your view is that test cricket gradually improved until around 10-20 years ago, when it peaked and has since declined?

That's not my take on the intention of the thread, which seems to be arguing that test cricket has always maintained a certain standard, which has suddenly fallen off in the last few years, rather than arguing that test cricket was at its performance zenith around 2010.
 

_00_deathscar

International Regular
In 12 tests including the 2010 Ashes through to the victory at home over India, England racked up scores of 517/1, 620/5, 513, 644, 496/5, 486, 474/8, 544, 710/7, 591/6.

As good as BazBall has been over the past year, it can't compete with that side for sheer weight of runs.
That’s cos they beat up on poor attacks (in some incidents) on flatter tracks.
 

Ali TT

International Vice-Captain
That’s cos they beat up on poor attacks (in some incidents) on flatter tracks.
That's one argument, although considering this thread's topic generally, I wonder more that today's attacks are just beating up poor lineups on favourable wickets
 

Raz0r6ack

U19 12th Man
So your view is that test cricket gradually improved until around 10-20 years ago, when it peaked and has since declined?

That's not my take on the intention of the thread, which seems to be arguing that test cricket has always maintained a certain standard, which has suddenly fallen off in the last few years, rather than arguing that test cricket was at its performance zenith around 2010.
I think there are ebbs are flows from generation to generation. Some generations will have higher quantity of quality players then others. I don't think the median/average standard remains linear no matter what.

There is also the influence of money in Twenty20 leagues which wasn't around 20 years ago, which does affect the mindset, technique and priorities of players.
 

Brook's side

International Regular
I think there are ebbs are flows from generation to generation. Some generations will have higher quantity of quality players then others. I don't think the median/average standard remains linear no matter what.

There is also the influence of money in Twenty20 leagues which wasn't around 20 years ago, which does affect the mindset, technique and priorities of players.
No doubt the game is changing.

My instinct is that opening batsmen of test standard are becoming fewer, but that middle order batsmen may be reaching standards which they previously didn't.

For example, I'm doubtful that Root would be the player that he is now (or pre-Bazball) had he played in the 80s, 90s or even 00s.
 

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