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The ATG Teams General arguing/discussing thread

watson

Banned
XI I would most like to watch
  1. Barry Richards
  2. Archie Jackson
  3. Charles Macartney
  4. Stan McCabe
  5. Victor Trumper
  6. Keith Miller *
  7. George Hirst
  8. Godfrey Evans +
  9. Ray Lindwall
  10. Harold Larwood
  11. Jim Laker
I wouldn't argue about any of those players. It's a shame that we can't fit Sobers or Woolley in though.
 

Red

The normal awards that everyone else has
For a World XI I'd like to watch play my Aust XI (best to watch)....

1. Jack Hobbs
2. Sunil Gavaskar
3. Ranji
4. Brian Lara
5. David Gower
6. VVS Laxman
7. Imran Khan
8. Godfrey Evans
9. Harold Larwood
10. Michael Holding
11. Curtly Ambrose
 

archie mac

International Coach
Australian XI Worth Watching - Artists & Entertainers

1. Archie Jackson
2. Arthur Morris
3. Victor Trumper
4. Greg Chappell
5. Mark Waugh
6. Allan Kippax
7. Adam Gilchrist
8. Keith Miller
9. Shane Warne
10. Dennis Lillee
11. Ted McDonald
Good team that. Mr O'Neil and Mr McCabe were apparently both worth a butcher's hook.
 

archie mac

International Coach
We do have the world's leading authority on Clem Hill, archie mac, within our midst - sadly we see him all too rarely on the forums these days but I shall email him and ask him to check into this thread and give you his opinion
Good to see Clem mentioned in this thread. He was a great left handed batsman and played one of the greatest tons in Test cricket history in 1897-98.

It can be argued he was the best Australian batsman before the Great War, which is usually considered to be Trumper.

His average is almost the same as that of Trumper and it can be argued his best innings were played when most needed by his country.

The final word on who was the better should go to Clem, who was in no doubt when he said:

'as a batsman, I'm not fit to lick Vic's boots'
 

watson

Banned
Poetry in motion

....The Elegant XI is also the Poetry-in-Motion XI, as evidenced by the bowlers. Jim Laker once wrote that his idea of heaven was to have Ray Lindwall bowling from one end and Bishan Bedi from the other, so this could just as easily be the Heaven XI, for it contains both Lindwall and Bedi.

To leave out Archie Jackson, Alan Kippax, Roy Dias, Zaheer Abbas, Tom Graveney, Greg Chappell, Martin Crowe, Mark Waugh, VVS Laxman and Saeed Anwar is a wrench, and I am not sure if Jim Laker was a more elegant bowler than S Venkataraghavan. Grainy film footage of him bowling in the 1950s is inconclusive, so even in an XI where records and averages do not matter, he makes it for his superior record.

1. Victor Trumper
"The art of Trumper is like an art in a bird's flight, an art that knows not how wonderful it is. Batting was for him a superb dissipation, a spontaneous spreading of fine feathers." - Neville Cardus

2. Frank Worrell (capt)
"Worrell told me that as soon as a ball was delivered he could tell the blade of grass on which it was going to drop and therefore could place his feet and body for any stroke he wanted to make… There was no memory of anyone scoring runs with such grace and power." - CLR James

3. David Gower
"Half England wants to mother him or marry him, and everyone else wants to bat as he does, as if in some enchanted dream. Wry in calamity, nonchalant in triumph, never straining too hard." - Peter Roebuck

4. Gundappa Viswanath
To many he was the real Little Master, for the mastery involved innovation and the ability to utilise the grammar of the game to compose its poetry.

5. Ranji
"He was a law unto himself. His extraordinary quickness of mind and eye allowed him to do things utterly impracticable for others. He broke the hearts of the best fast bowlers by the way he deflected their fastest deliveries to the boundary." - H S Altham

6. Frank Woolley
This great allrounder said of himself, "When I am batting, I am the attack." Robertson-Glasgow said Woolley was "easy to watch, difficult to bowl to and impossible to write about".

7. Alan Knott
"[He was] an original, his keeping so undemonstrative that its excellence was not always appreciated until a wide catch allowed him to display his agility." -Tony Pawson

8. Jim Laker
"Jim possessed a classical action, side-on looking over his left arm, coming down hard on a braced left leg and swivelling so sharply that he even dug a pit on soft turf. It was perfection." -Trevor Bailey

9. Michael Holding
"A former track athlete, Holding, tall and sparsely built, has a long, lithe, lissom run-up, elbows pumping like a dancer's, head reared as if to delight in the zephyr resulting from his own fleetness. His gyratory action climaxes in an apparently effortless release of the ball." -David Frith

10. Ray Lindwall
"The genius of Lindwall was expressed in a variety of ways, not least in his cleverly disguised and devastating pace changes and in a bouncer delivered without any giveaways… When I saw Lindwall approaching I sensed the expectancy. A hush would descend on the ground." -Len Hutton

11. Bishan Bedi
"When you have seen Bishan Bedi twirl down his spinners after 60 overs with the same gentle rhythm as he settled into at the start of the spell, you understand why his is a great bowling action. A clockmaker would have been proud to set Bedi in motion - a mechanism finely balanced, cogs rolling silently and hands sweeping in smooth arcs across the face." -Tony Lewis


Suresh Menon is a writer based in Bangalore

ESPNcricinfo all-time World XI: Suresh Menon picks an elegant XI | All-time XIs | Cricinfo Magazine | ESPN Cricinfo
 

MrPrez

International Debutant
I must be honest - in terms of the most entertaining to watch, I reckon almost all of the players I'd pick are from the past 30 years. I understand including older batsmen in "World XIs" due to it being generally accepted that picks are made relative to the time ie the standard of cricket back in the day is nowhere near the current standard. When it comes to "who would I most enjoy watching," though, it comes down to actual aesthetics etc, and tbh I can't name one play from back in the day that I've seen footage of that actually played as aesthetically pleasingly as a modern-day star.
 

Jager

International Debutant
You're deranged Prezzy. The bowling actions of Larwood, Tyson, Lindwall... the genius of Hammond, Trumper, Harvey etc
 

MrPrez

International Debutant
You're deranged Prezzy. The bowling actions of Larwood, Tyson, Lindwall... the genius of Hammond, Trumper, Harvey etc
I understand enjoying their batting due to romantic appeal, but surely there's no way you actually believe that Hammond, Trumper etc batted more beautifully than the aesthetically pleasing players of today...
 

watson

Banned
You're deranged Prezzy. The bowling actions of Larwood, Tyson, Lindwall... the genius of Hammond, Trumper, Harvey etc
I think that you've miss-understood Mr Prez Jager.

Aesthetic appreciation is not objective, but rather subjective, That is, aesthetic appreciation is based purely on the emotions of the observer.

So relying on another person's eye-witness account which says that watching Victor Trumper bat is an aesthically pleasing experience makes little sense.

It's a bit like saying that Van Gogh's 'Starry Night' must be appreciated by all observers. It might be a pleasing painting to 95% of people, but Watson might be one of the minority who believe that Van Gogh is a rubbish painter. No one can tell me otherwise because the emotional part of my brain informs me that his works are ugly. Period.

It is not up to someone else to tell me what my reality should be. It simply is.
 
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fredfertang

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
I understand enjoying their batting due to romantic appeal, but surely there's no way you actually believe that Hammond, Trumper etc batted more beautifully than the aesthetically pleasing players of today...
Hammond was an imperious batsman, with that famous cover drive that Zaremba uses as his current avatar, but I certainly don't suppose he was better to watch than the most stylish of recent years, Lara in particular. But I do bear in mind that generally those guys batted with wands rather than railway sleepers, and their whole approach was different - there is, for example, quite a bit of footage of Denis Compton around - incredibly easy on the eye, but I simply don't believe he would/could have batted like that today
 

Red

The normal awards that everyone else has
I think in recent years the most elegant players we've seen in Australia are Mark Waugh and Martyn. Michael Vaughan was always good to watch when in form. VVS very very smooth and easy to watch. Lara and Gower as well.

From old footage I've seen (and it's limited), the most beautiful to watch was Archie Jackson. Just so smooth and elegant.
 

MrPrez

International Debutant
Hammond was an imperious batsman, with that famous cover drive that Zaremba uses as his current avatar, but I certainly don't suppose he was better to watch than the most stylish of recent years, Lara in particular. But I do bear in mind that generally those guys batted with wands rather than railway sleepers, and their whole approach was different - there is, for example, quite a bit of footage of Denis Compton around - incredibly easy on the eye, but I simply don't believe he would/could have batted like that today
Yeah, this is pretty much what I'm saying. I honestly don't see how somebody could say that, with historical romance removed, someone like Hammond is easier on the eye than someone like Lara. I understand the variables that cause this, and don't belittle Hammond as a batsman as a result, but I certainly reckon Lara is streaks ahead of Hammond in aesthetics.
 

watson

Banned
Yeah, this is pretty much what I'm saying. I honestly don't see how somebody could say that, with historical romance removed, someone like Hammond is easier on the eye than someone like Lara. I understand the variables that cause this, and don't belittle Hammond as a batsman as a result, but I certainly reckon Lara is streaks ahead of Hammond in aesthetics.
According to you, Mr Prez.

What you have just said is that Blue is 'streaks ahead' of Red; which obviously has no coherent meaning in any objective sense.
 

Dan

Hall of Fame Member
I'd love to watch Jack Hobbs' technique rather than even the best batsman's 'plant the foot and hit' style of the modern day.
 

MrPrez

International Debutant
I understand it's an opinion, but so too is "club cricket is more enjoyable to watch than Test cricket" - if you're of this opinion, it is due to the lower quality that you enjoy it. If that makes sense. Likewise, I reckon anyone who prefers olden cricket aesthetics to the modern parallel feels that way because of the less aesthetic nature of the game due to inferior technique, power etc.

I realize the above doesn't really make sense but I hope people can understand what I'm trying to say.
 

Red

The normal awards that everyone else has
I understand it's an opinion, but so too is "club cricket is more enjoyable to watch than Test cricket" - if you're of this opinion, it is due to the lower quality that you enjoy it. If that makes sense. Likewise, I reckon anyone who prefers olden cricket aesthetics to the modern parallel feels that way because of the less aesthetic nature of the game due to inferior technique, power etc.

I realize the above doesn't really make sense but I hope people can understand what I'm trying to say.
I get what you are saying.

I think there have always been the "club the ball" types, with "lesser" techniques than those who look aesthetically pleasing. And in each era there are the more elegant players, the ones who play the late cuts and the cover drives and the leg glances.

In older days the big hitters were called "forcing batsmen". Vic Richardson was introduced as one by Bill Woodful. So not all olden days cricket was aesthetically pleasing to the purist.

But I do think there is a tendency to look upon those older day players who were elegant as something very special, when there are many today who would rival them in aesthetics. Mike Hussey has as good a cover drive as I've seen, and I can't imagine Hammond's would've been a lot better, if it was better at all...
 

Red

The normal awards that everyone else has
Okay, I think I've settled on my England all time XI...

01. J. Hobbs
02. W.G. Grace (7)
03. K.S. Ranjitsinhji
04. W. Hammond (5)
05. D. Compton
06. F. Woolley (6)
07. I. Botham (4)
08. A. Knott
09. F. Trueman (1)
10. G. Lohmann (2)
11. S. F. Barnes (3)

12. H. Verity


...to face my Australian all time XI:

01. A. Morris
02. B. Simpson
03. D. Bradman
04. G. Chappell
05. V. Trumper
06. R. Ponting/ N. Harvey
07. A. Gilchrist
08. R. Lindwall
09. S. Warne
10. D. Lillee
11. G. McGrath

12. K .Miller
 
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Cabinet96

Global Moderator
Hammond was an imperious batsman, with that famous cover drive that Zaremba uses as his current avatar, but I certainly don't suppose he was better to watch than the most stylish of recent years, Lara in particular. But I do bear in mind that generally those guys batted with wands rather than railway sleepers, and their whole approach was different - there is, for example, quite a bit of footage of Denis Compton around - incredibly easy on the eye, but I simply don't believe he would/could have batted like that today
I think this the key. I just prefer the way modern techniques look. That's not to say I don't appreciate how the players from the past could have been viewed as incredibly stylish, I just don't particularly prefer them to modern day bats. Its probably unfair for someone of my age commenting on such a matter, because 99% of footage I've seen is from the modern day, but I've never seen any past footage of a batsmen which I find more pleasing on the eye than Martyn, Bell, de Villiers or Kohli.

I'd love to watch Jack Hobbs' technique rather than even the best batsman's 'plant the foot and hit' style of the modern day.
I actually prefer those 'plant the foot and drive' style that is grooved from the bowling machine. I can see why you'd prefer watching the old bats though.
 

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