• Welcome to the Cricket Web forums, one of the biggest forums in the world dedicated to cricket.

    You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join the Cricket Web community today!

    If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

Healy or Marsh

Ford_GTHO351

U19 Vice-Captain
Who do you all think was the better wicketkeeper, Ian Healy or Rodney Marsh?

IMO I felt that Healy was the better wicketkeeper.
 

NikhilN

International Regular
I would say Rodney Marsh because if you compare his match-catch stats to Ian they are much better
 
Last edited:

Ford_GTHO351

U19 Vice-Captain
Healy's Test wicketkeeping stats
119 Matches, Catches: 366, Stumpings: 29

Marsh's Test wicketkeeping stats
96 Matches, Catches: 343, Stumpings: 12


Healy's ODI wicketkeeping stats
168 Matches, Catches: 194, Stumpings: 39

Marsh's ODI wicketkeeping stats
92 Matches, Catches: 120, Stumpings: 4
 

Neil Pickup

Cricket Web Moderator
Proud Indian said:
I would say Rodney Marsh because if he compare his match-catch stats to Ian they are much better
Match-Catch stats are the worst statistical tools ever.
 

NikhilN

International Regular
Healy took 3 catches each match in tests while Marsh took 4 catches each match in tests.

In ODIs Healy took 1 catche each match while March also took 1
 

marc71178

Eyes not spreadsheets
Proud Indian said:
Healy took 3 catches each match in tests while Marsh took 4 catches each match in tests.
But Marsh kept to Lillee where Heay kept to Warne (a lot of edges there going to slip rather than the keeper)
 

Ford_GTHO351

U19 Vice-Captain
Proud Indian said:
I would say Rodney Marsh because if you compare his match-catch stats to Ian they are much better
Marsh played in a era when it was easier for the bowlers to set up and take wickets, so there was more of a chance that Marsh would get a catch/stumping.

Healy played more in a era where the batsmen usually set the tone of the match, so therefore there was less of an chance for Healy to get a catch/stumping.

So you can't really use match-catch stats to assess ones keeping ability.

Healy was IMO the better keeper and to add, he is also in my best ever Test XI.
 

a massive zebra

International Captain
I would say Healy because Marsh never proved himself to be a good keeper of spin bowling. His stumpings per match ratio is testimony to that. Im not saying he could not keep to spinners, just that Healy proved his ability to do so and Marsh did not.
 

SpaceMonkey

International Debutant
a massive zebra said:
I would say Healy because Marsh never proved himself to be a good keeper of spin bowling. His stumpings per match ratio is testimony to that. Im not saying he could not keep to spinners, just that Healy proved his ability to do so and Marsh did not.
That proves nothing, it just shows that Healy played with better spinners who gave him more CHANCE to stump.

The only true way to prove who is the better keeper is to have stats like Percentage of catches took to catches they dropped and the same with stumpings. It would also help if you saw both keepers play and made for long periods and then you could make an informed view.
 

krkode

State Captain
What you really need is the match-drop statistic. Or the match-byes statistic.

Like Neil expounded, match-catch statistics are worthless. They show nothing of the keeper's ability which is the point in question here. Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis were fast bowlers hence giving Moin Khan way way more catches than he would have had had he been playing for a primarily spin team like India. That said, Nayan Mongia probably has a lot fewer catches/match than Moin Khan. But it doesn't necessarily tell you who is the better keeper.
Giving your wicket keeper catches shows the bowler's ability (composition) more than it does the keeper's. If wicket keeper A got 100 chances and took 100 catches in 100 matches, and wicket keeper B got 100 chances and took 100 catches in 101 matches, does B suddenly become the lesser keeper because he has a lower catch/match ratio? No!
 

luckyeddie

Cricket Web Staff Member
Ford_GTHO351 said:
Marsh played in a era when it was easier for the bowlers to set up and take wickets, so there was more of a chance that Marsh would get a catch/stumping.

Healy played more in a era where the batsmen usually set the tone of the match, so therefore there was less of an chance for Healy to get a catch/stumping.

So you can't really use match-catch stats to assess ones keeping ability.

Healy was IMO the better keeper and to add, he is also in my best ever Test XI.
You'll have to run that one by me again. Are you saying that the bowlers of the 1970's were better than in the 80's and 90's yet the batters were worse or more gullible? Not being funny, just don't follow the argument.

My gut feeling is that, of the two Healy, was the better wicket-keeper, and that's a judgment I make having watched them both on many occasions, not based on any statistic. He just looked neater, more compact, less scruffy, less likely to chisel a bookie when out for a stroll with Lillee - the usual criteria.

I'd actually rate Healy as about the third or fourth-best keeper I've ever seen, so he wouldn't get near my all-time XI, but still a hell of a glove man.
 

Ford_GTHO351

U19 Vice-Captain
luckyeddie said:
You'll have to run that one by me again. Are you saying that the bowlers of the 1970's were better than in the 80's and 90's yet the batters were worse or more gullible? Not being funny, just don't follow the argument.
What I meant was that when Marsh was playing, most batsmen were less attacking than when Healy (especially in the latter part of his career) was playing. So you would of had batsmen in Marsh's era mainly playing defensively and there lies more of an opportunity for a edge. In Healy's era (mainly the second half of his career), batsmen would attack more and therefore there would be more of an opportunity they would either hold out to a fielder or be bowled.
 

deeps

International 12th Man
krkode said:
Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis were fast bowlers hence giving Moin Khan way way more catches than he would have had had he been playing for a primarily spin team like India. That said, Nayan Mongia probably has a lot fewer catches/match than Moin Khan. But it doesn't necessarily tell you who is the better keeper.
having said that, wasim and waqar both have very high percentages of bowled and lbw's as compared to most bowlers (espeically waqar)... So despite being great bowlers and taking many wickets, they got their wickets in methods not invovling the keeper as much as say some1 like mcgrath or gillespie..who use the keeper alot...

and this is why keeper-catch ratings are useless.. U can have the best keeper in the world keeping...whilst i'm bowling to sachin tendulkar...i very much doubt the keeper would get many catches... But if a crap keeper was keeping to glen mcgrath against me batting...the crap keeper would get soo many chances,that eventually he'd catch one...

Keeping to fast bowling is a relatively simple thing...most catches are taken by the keeper, and very few are put down...It doesn't matter whose keeping,wether it healy or marsh...or gilly..they'd all take it...heck,even patel catches most edges from a quick...It's keeping to spinners thats the real test..and healy has shown he is a better keeper to spin that marsh.. having said that...marsh didn't have any quality spinners bowlin to him..

But my vote goes to healy, soley on the reason that he's proven himself where marsh wasn't given the opportunity to prove himself
 

Top