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Why australian batsmen score more century at Home ??

silentstriker

The Wheel is Forever
I think it just shows that his record in India is a bit of an abberation. He has had great success in all other parts of Asia and overseas so...
It is quite possibly an aberration, but eight Tests are what you'd expect any player in any country, and passing 20 only once in 8 Tests is too dire to ignore. It's not like one series, where you could pass it off. This is three separate tours over eight years. I mean you could if you were talking about a good, even great player. Which Ponting clearly is. But what we're talking about is one of the best of all time, and in that, the standards are much higher.
 
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Ikki

Hall of Fame Member
It is quite possibly an aberration, but eight Tests are what you'd expect any player in any country, and passing 20 only once in 8 Tests is too dire to ignore. It's not like one series, where you could pass it off. This is three separate tours over eight years. I mean you could if you were talking about a good, even great player. Which Ponting clearly is. But what we're talking about is one of the best of all time, and in that, the standards are much higher.
I took it to mean that it is an aberration on his overall away form - don't think that's really disputable.
 

bond21

Banned
Symonds got a century against England if i recall....not that thats as good as getting a century against SA, NZ, WI, PAK, IND or BANG but its still pretty decent.
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
No he won't. If Symonds starts averaging 50+ over the next three or four years without getting dropped everytime he makes a decent score, then he'll be a good batsman.
It'd depend - if he needed let-offs to score most of his big scores, as he has done so far, then he'd not be that good at all.

Hopefully he won't get them.
 

99*

International Debutant
It'd depend - if he needed let-offs to score most of his big scores, as he has done so far, then he'd not be that good at all.

Hopefully he won't get them.
Why are we judging a player based on how bad his opposition played? The batsman just hit's the ball to score runs. It should not reflect on him if the fielder/bowler can't do their job.
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
The batsman's job is to score runs. If he requires the fielder's (or wicketkeeper's, or Umpire's, or whoever) help to score them, it's not through the calibre of his own play that the runs have come.
 

99*

International Debutant
The batsman's job is to score runs. If he requires the fielder's (or wicketkeeper's, or Umpire's, or whoever) help to score them, it's not through the calibre of his own play that the runs have come.
Wait, so your saying that once a batsman gets a chance they no longer 'earn' their runs? That doesn't seem fair at all.
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
Wait, so your saying that once a batsman gets a chance they no longer 'earn' their runs? That doesn't seem fair at all.
Any runs scored after a let-off are obviously different from those scored from the start of the innings without let-offs.

Not worthless, of course, but it pretty well goes without saying that runs scored after a let-off wouldn't have been scored under normal (ie, when you do something that should result in dismissal you get dismissal) circumstances.
 

slowfinger

International Debutant
Nah, you basically, well, not you but as a team deserve a no-ball run. Otherwise we would do no balls every ball :)
 

99*

International Debutant
Any runs scored after a let-off are obviously different from those scored from the start of the innings without let-offs.

Not worthless, of course, but it pretty well goes without saying that runs scored after a let-off wouldn't have been scored under normal (ie, when you do something that should result in dismissal you get dismissal) circumstances.
But that's based on an assumption that runs scored by a batsman given a let-off would not be scored by the next batsman. (e.g.- Say an opener gets a 'chance' on 20*, and goes to score 220. By your reasoning the batsman/team have been handed 200 runs. But then I could say, IF the 'chance' was taken what would stop the next batsman scoring that 200?)
 

aussie

Hall of Fame Member
It is quite possibly an aberration, but eight Tests are what you'd expect any player in any country, and passing 20 only once in 8 Tests is too dire to ignore. It's not like one series, where you could pass it off. This is three separate tours over eight years. I mean you could if you were talking about a good, even great player. Which Ponting clearly is. But what we're talking about is one of the best of all time, and in that, the standards are much higher.
Nah having seen Ponting bat in India in 98, 01 & 04 i definately do think his failing in India 2001 is really just an abberation. Not saying he is the greatest player of spin either but i don't think he is as bad as it has been made out over the years on CW.
 

Ikki

Hall of Fame Member
Nah having seen Ponting bat in India in 98, 01 & 04 i definately do think his failing in India 2001 is really just an abberation. Not saying he is the greatest player of spin either but i don't think he is as bad as it has been made out over the years on CW.
I would tend to agree. He has no problems with spin and absolutely no problems with Indian bowlers. It's just in India where for some reason he fails pretty badly.
 

biased indian

International Coach
I would tend to agree. He has no problems with spin and absolutely no problems with Indian bowlers. It's just in India where for some reason he fails pretty badly.
may be its then the fans i think ????

he is not used to such noise..he has failed in the 2 games in ipl and both where full house...is he a failure in ODI too..then it has to be indian fans :laugh:
 

Ikki

Hall of Fame Member
may be its then the fans i think ????

he is not used to such noise..he has failed in the 2 games in ipl and both where full house...is he a failure in ODI too..then it has to be indian fans :laugh:
Bad form of Ponting; good form of Indians; just bad luck (lot of 0s); maybe a combination of spin/Indian pitches; there can many reasons. But Ponting is strong against spin and more than strong against Indian bowlers away. So it's a weird thing that he fails so miserably in India because logically he has all the tools to succeed.
 
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Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
But that's based on an assumption that runs scored by a batsman given a let-off would not be scored by the next batsman. (e.g.- Say an opener gets a 'chance' on 20*, and goes to score 220. By your reasoning the batsman/team have been handed 200 runs. But then I could say, IF the 'chance' was taken what would stop the next batsman scoring that 200?)
1: yes, of course that could happen (unlikely, of course, but perfectly conceivable)
2: why on Earth does what one batsman does (or might do) matter when assessing another batsman?
 

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