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Greatness and Longevity

Black_Warrior

Cricketer Of The Year
I have been thinking about this for a while and then I came across this on Cricket Chat over the last couple of days in various topics.

Whether it was Ponting vs Tendulkar or Botham vs Dev or analysing Waqar as a great bowler, it always seems to come up - how long a player managed to be at his peak, how long a player managed to be great.

I am very interested in reading some perspectives on this from you guys. I don't want this to become a debate between any two players but more in general about how important longevity is according to the cricket fans on this forum.

Say someone like Andrew Flintoff, at his peak has great but his peak lasted for at best 2-3 years? Is that enough for Flintoff to be considered among the great all rounders of his time?

Waqar Younis - I know he has a lot of fans on this forum and his record is great especially during his early years, but he was just not a match winning bowler from 98 onwards. Is that an important factor when looking at his career?

There are players who reach great heights but do not manage to be at that level for too long. There are players who reach heights but manage to maintain it for longer. How do you assess them?
 

slowfinger

International Debutant
I have been thinking about this for a while and then I came across this on Cricket Chat over the last couple of days in various topics.

Whether it was Ponting vs Tendulkar or Botham vs Dev or analysing Waqar as a great bowler, it always seems to come up - how long a player managed to be at his peak, how long a player managed to be great.

I am very interested in reading some perspectives on this from you guys. I don't want this to become a debate between any two players but more in general about how important longevity is according to the cricket fans on this forum.

Say someone like Andrew Flintoff, at his peak has great but his peak lasted for at best 2-3 years? Is that enough for Flintoff to be considered among the great all rounders of his time?

Waqar Younis - I know he has a lot of fans on this forum and his record is great especially during his early years, but he was just not a match winning bowler from 98 onwards. Is that an important factor when looking at his career?

There are players who reach great heights but do not manage to be at that level for too long. There are players who reach heights but manage to maintain it for longer. How do you assess them?
Flintoff really didn't redefine how we see cricket today, for that reason, I'm out.
 

Satguru

Banned
Personally, its always bothered me when people refuse to give credit to cricketers who maintain their form and serve their country by playing quality cricket for a long time, and brush off longevity in favour of a few years of brilliance, which is why i dont agree when some people say Waqar is greater than Wasim/Imran.

I also dont care much when people use expressions like "he's the best in the world on his day" or "he' was the best cricketer ever in his prime" and ignore the rest of the cricketer's career when he was ****. Shouldnt the player be penalised for his poor performances? Why should his greatness be judged on just his successful years and not on his career as a whole? It's just people's mentality i guess, they love to ignore the bad phases in a cricketer's career and glorify the bright spots, which is completely unfair to another cricketer who has performed roughly at the same level but for far far longer.

Theres nothing worse than a spent, past his days, old warhorse being kept in the team based on long-past feats, knowing full well he's not going to repeat them. Not only does it affect the team's performance and morale, it keeps out a promising youngster from the side. On the other hand, if a cricketer is performing well even in his late 30s is kept in the team, it gives the youngsters a good mentor within the team, and encourages other upcoming players to raise their game even more to force their way into the side.

Cricket is a sport and every cricketer is supposed to be an athlete. Maintaining one's fitness is an overlooked aspect of being a great cricketer, and more often than not, it is unfortunately the player's fault when he gets injured. Thus i dont buy the other statement which people often make in defense of cricketers with short careers that "they werent the same after so- and-so injury" Well, hard luck, but you're no use to the side if you're not playing. If guys like Lillee, SRT and Lara can come back from career threatening injuries and do well, then why cant everyone?

So, personally, i admire those cricketers who work hard to rectify their failures and maintain their consistency for a good period than those who light the world on fire for a few years because of their raw talent and then fade away because they failed to evolve. A lengthy, consistent record is simply far more difficult to achieve than a 30 match wonder-run. It takes more hard work, and is therefore, for me, a far better record.
 

fredfertang

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
I think there has to be an element of durability in any discussion about who is or is not an all time great. That doesn't however mean that lesser players cannot touch greatness - Frank Tyson is a good example - just one series really but he bowled in that as well as any fast bowler ever has, Jeff Thomson is similar albeit he was at his peak a little longer - I don't think either is an all time great, but I do think Waqar did enough to earn that status
 

slowfinger

International Debutant
Also I think there has to be a sense of aura and personality about a person, which I just didn't find in Freddie. His only series was the Ashes, Pakistan and by the next ashes he slumped again.
 

Black_Warrior

Cricketer Of The Year
Personally, its always bothered me when people refuse to give credit to cricketers who maintain their form and serve their country by playing quality cricket for a long time, and brush off longevity in favour of a few years of brilliance, which is why i dont agree when some people say Waqar is greater than Wasim/Imran.

I also dont care much when people use expressions like "he's the best in the world on his day" or "he' was the best cricketer ever in his prime" and ignore the rest of the cricketer's career when he was ****. Shouldnt the player be penalised for his poor performances? Why should his greatness be judged on just his successful years and not on his career as a whole? It's just people's mentality i guess, they love to ignore the bad phases in a cricketer's career and glorify the bright spots, which is completely unfair to another cricketer who has performed roughly at the same level but for far far longer.

Theres nothing worse than a spent, past his days, old warhorse being kept in the team based on long-past feats, knowing full well he's not going to repeat them. Not only does it affect the team's performance and morale, it keeps out a promising youngster from the side. On the other hand, if a cricketer is performing well even in his late 30s is kept in the team, it gives the youngsters a good mentor within the team, and encourages other upcoming players to raise their game even more to force their way into the side.

Cricket is a sport and every cricketer is supposed to be an athlete. Maintaining one's fitness is an overlooked aspect of being a great cricketer, and more often than not, it is unfortunately the player's fault when he gets injured. Thus i dont buy the other statement which people often make in defense of cricketers with short careers that "they werent the same after so- and-so injury" Well, hard luck, but you're no use to the side if you're not playing. If guys like Lillee, SRT and Lara can come back from career threatening injuries and do well, then why cant everyone?

So, personally, i admire those cricketers who work hard to rectify their failures and maintain their consistency for a good period than those who light the world on fire for a few years because of their raw talent and then fade away because they failed to evolve. A lengthy, consistent record is simply far more difficult to achieve than a 30 match wonder-run. It takes more hard work, and is therefore, for me, a far better record.
Agree with you on most points... just on the bolded parts

The issue is, how do you know? :p

Say with players like Dravid or Ponting, how do you know if they will bounce back or not..This time last year, people on Cricket chat were debating whether to drop Dravid or not. The problem really is, that on most occasions, you just don't know. Ponting might/might not bounce back against India.
 

Black_Warrior

Cricketer Of The Year
Aura and personality were Flintoff's best two traits in my opinion.
Absolutely

Also I think there has to be a sense of aura and personality about a person, which I just didn't find in Freddie. His only series was the Ashes, Pakistan and by the next ashes he slumped again.
Not always Sir. For me Warne and McGrath did not have any sense of aura or personality (at least in my books) but they are all time great bowlers nonetheless.
 

Black_Warrior

Cricketer Of The Year
:oops:I knew that was going to get me into trouble. I did say my books. He always came across as pretty dumb off the field to me.
 
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The Sean

Cricketer Of The Year
I did say my books. He always came across as pretty dumb off the field to me.
Fair enough I guess if you were talking off-field. I thought you meant he didn't have any on-field aura or personality, which seemed extraordinary - few bowlers have ever had more IMO, whether you thought it was a positive thing or not. There was a mid-career period for Warney, from about 98-01, where he was trading pretty much exclusively on aura and personality and very little else.
 
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Satguru

Banned
Agree with you on most points... just on the bolded parts

The issue is, how do you know? :p

Say with players like Dravid or Ponting, how do you know if they will bounce back or not..This time last year, people on Cricket chat were debating whether to drop Dravid or not. The problem really is, that on most occasions, you just don't know. Ponting might/might not bounce back against India.
Yeah, its more difficult for bowlers to come back from big slumps. In fact i cant quite think of any really famous examples of bowlers coming back strongly after they'd been written off. There are a few im sure
For batsmen its probably a bit easier. But of course you can never be 100% sure either way about a player. More a case of probability really, that is, how likely a batsman is to make runs. Tendulkar and Dravid in this respect were written off by virtually everyone including me, oh how wonderful their renaissance has been. :wub:
Hoping for Ponting to follow suit
 

BoyBrumby

Englishman
Longevity obviously matters; the very fact Sachin is still one of the best (let's be conservative) dozen or so batsmen in the world over two decades from his debut is incredible.

However I personally hate the retrospective downgrading of a player's achievements because they went on after their peak. Ponting's current travails are the best current example, but the history of cricket is littered with other examples. After 82 tests and at 35 years of age Garry Sobers's average was still north of 60. George Headley's average before WW2 was 66.72, but he played two further tests in 1948 when he was nudging 40 and a final one in 1954 when well into his fifth decade and scored just 55 runs in the 5 bats he got, lowering his career mark to 60.83.

Does playing on past their peaks lessen their youthful genius? Not IMHO. Very few people downgrade (say) Muhammad Ali for being a washed up ghost of his former self in his last two bouts against Holmes & Berbick but because cricket is so stat orientated there's more of a tendancy to amongst some quarters.
 

Prince EWS

Global Moderator
Longevity obviously matters; the very fact Sachin is still one of the best (let's be conservative) dozen or so batsmen in the world over two decades from his debut is incredible.

However I personally hate the retrospective downgrading of a player's achievements because they went on after their peak. Ponting's current travails are the best current example, but the history of cricket is littered with other examples. After 82 tests and at 35 years of age Garry Sobers's average was still north of 60. George Headley's average before WW2 was 66.72, but he played two further tests in 1948 when he was nudging 40 and a final one in 1954 when well into his fifth decade and scored just 55 runs in the 5 bats he got, lowering his career mark to 60.83.

Does playing on past their peaks lessen their youthful genius? Not IMHO. Very few people downgrade (say) Muhammad Ali for being a washed up ghost of his former self in his last two bouts against Holmes & Berbick but because cricket is so stat orientated there's more of a tendancy to amongst some quarters.
The entire point of respecting longevity is exactly that, though. Ponting playing poorly now doesn't change what he did earlier and when assessing his career it shouldn't make people rate him any lower than if he'd retired two years ago. However, a Ponting from an alternate universe who continued to average 60 odd in 2009, 2010 and 2011 would've been of significantly more cricketing value than the Ponting we have or indeed a Ponting who just retired, so players who do manage to sustain their greatness for longer - or even those who play on past their prime but remain an asset to their side and command their places - should be rated higher.

Maintaining long-term success within a cricket side is not about finding players who can reach a mystically high level of skill for a couple of years and be a passenger either side of the peak, or even about finding players who come in, do their stuff and retire right at the top of their games in short careers; it's about finding players whose values remain high for long periods. The longer a player can maintain high standards or even just play better than the next best player left out the side, the more value he is, the more he'll help his side win/save games and the better he should be rated. The romanticist in us all naturally makes us look for and remember what players were like at their best, particularly when they're from the team we support, and there's nothing wrong with discussing players peaks and they're interesting, emotional and artful. These peaks and highs represent the part of cricket that makes us want to watch it and not just compile databases on it; but from a performance analysis perspective it means comparatively little to the length of time a player can positively contribute.
 
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smash84

The Tiger King
The entire point of respecting longevity is exactly that, though. Ponting playing poorly now doesn't change what he did earlier and when assessing his career it shouldn't make people rate him any lower than if he'd retired two years ago. However, a Ponting from an alternate universe who continued to average 60 odd in 2009, 2010 and 2011 would've been of significantly more cricketing value than the Ponting we have or indeed a Ponting who just retired, so players who do manage to sustain their greatness for longer - or even those who play on past their prime but remain an asset to their side and command their places - should be rated higher.

Maintaining long-term success within a cricket side is not about finding players who can reach a mystically high level of skill for a couple of years and be a passenger either side of the peak, or even about finding players who come in, do their stuff and retire right at the top of their games in short careers; it's about finding players whose values remain high for long periods. The longer a player can maintain high standards or even just play better than the next best player left out the side, the more value he is, the more he'll help his side win/save games and the better he should be rated. The romanticist in us all naturally makes us look for and remember what players were like at their best, particularly when they're from the team we support, and there's nothing wrong with discussing players peaks and they're interesting, emotional and artful. These peaks and highs represent the part of cricket that makes us want to watch it and not just compile databases on it; but from a performance analysis perspective it means comparatively little to the length of time a player can positively contribute.
:notworthy:

Ass Ankit mentioned that I love long posts :D
 

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