I totally agree with that.
If we were to stretch that argument to absurdity and discount all records in home gamesand thus only the visiting teams stats should count in the game. Assuming further that the home team falls in the category of tigers at home and useless in real terms as various teams from India, Sri Lanka and new Zealand have been termed down the years, we might as well discount the records of all teams who played these paper tigers since the opponents were no good player in real terms or,in effect, minnows.
If the sub continental tracks are batting heavens, as is often claimed to run down Indian(and Sri Lankan) batsmen. then we must conced that all those who have failed on them cant bat for nuts. I wont name the worthies.
If they are spinners dream wickets, as has also been shouted from roof tops with equal ferocity, then we must conced that the 'great' spinners who have been slaughtered on these wickets must ne having something else (magical, fishy, suspect, illegal what have you) to account for their success away from these made for them wickets. Again I wont name the legend
There is an alternative possibilty, if we put our biases and aside and shed our reluctance to concede a point, and that maybe, just maybe, that the sub continental batsmen have the technique, the game AND the inherent advantage of long experience of the conditions, to play well on these wickets which are neither good nor bad but just different from those, lets say, in England and Australia.
And, could it be, could it just be, that the Indian(and Sri Lankan and Pakistani) spinners are really good , much much better in the orthodox finger spin variety (we all know what that means please dont get into the semantics of "every spinner is a wrist spinner") in particular and most spin variety in general, that this superiority is best exploited at home where they are conditioned to play and use the correct line and length (which mind you varies not just from batsman to batsman but from playing surface to playing surface) and therefore show better results because they ACTUALLY bowl better under these conditions.
How come the world is screaming about sub continental pacers not being good enough to bowl on surface other than at home and fail to say the same of spinners coming from other countries ?
How come when we downplay the achievements of one of the greatest medium pace bowlers in the history of the game without pausing to consider that he bowled on these killing fields for fifty percent of his matches. Could it not be that he would have take many more wickets if he played only the one series every three years or so in India rather than half of them. Might he not have become the genuine fast bowler that he looked like he could be when just coming out of his teens than the medium pacer he had to settle down to be on these shirt front wickets where he bowled more overs than spinners do for other countries.
Come on guys, you cant have it both ways.