TheJediBrah
Request Your Custom Title Now!
Cook was a pretty good player of spin IIRC. He would have been a very good middle order batsman
Your implication seems to be that in flatter environments, opener tax is less applicable.Yeah I think English openers more than any would be reasonably to apply an across the board tax to. Not in recent years though of course with the BazBall roads they've been dishing out
Yeah I guess it is. In general it's not as relatively difficult to open in Australia or the subcontinent as it is in England IMO. You won't convince that Hayden, Warner and Sehwag would have averaged 10 runs more batting in the middle order. Hayden wasn't better than Tendulkar and LaraYour implication seems to be that in flatter environments, opener tax is less applicable.
ExactlyGenerally speaking
Ball moves more
Fresher bowlers
Usually the better bowlers bowling instead of the all rounder, rubbish spinner etc
It’s a no brainer
Sutcliffe’s 65.73 looking pretty good.I was thinking the same especially in light of Gill's runs in the middle order.
Generally speaking, I'd add at least +5 to openers across the board. Even more so to those who faced tougher opening conditions.
I was more referring to modern era (1970 onwards).Sutcliffe’s 65.73 looking pretty good.
How convenientI was more referring to modern era (1970 onwards).
You can't add anything "across the board" though. There will be players, even if a minority, that are better off opening. Just because some (or most) players would do better down the order doesn't mean that every single player will, and certainly not all by the exact same margin. Cricket is a lot more nuanced than that.I was thinking the same especially in light of Gill's runs in the middle order.
Generally speaking, I'd add at least +5 to openers across the board. Even more so to those who faced tougher opening conditions.
Can you give examples as to which openers you find underrated on CW the most?In case you guys have not worked it out yet, the +10 to the batting avg was just me exaggerating to make a point. I just think we, here at CW, as a community have done the test openers dirty and we should revisit our overall batting rankings considering the openers tax. That is all. Its no longer mere speculation even though its just a sample size of a few.
Its not specific openers though. If we are doing a batting ranking, for example, openers are usually showing up around where you would expect them based on sheer numbers. I know Hobbs is considered top notch but even in my time of watching cricket, I think the likes of Gooch and even Gavaskar and Gary Kirsten, for example, are rather underrated in that I feel they all should probably go up a tier than where they are ranked today. I never had Gavaskar in the Sachin-Lara tier, for example but after recent events, and after his own success whenever he did bat in the middle order, I think he probably does belong in that tier of batsmen below Bradman-level.Can you give examples as to which openers you find underrated on CW the most?
Wouldn't this apply more to the likes of Sehwag, Hayden and Warner than GavaskarI think it just proves that openers' tax is real and most openers, especially the strokemaking ones, would have done far better batting in the middle order
I would add some runs to all of them, yes. I said Gavaskar coz he was one who actually showed he could bat better and even faster when batting in the middle order, the few times he did that.Wouldn't this apply more to the likes of Sehwag, Hayden and Warner than Gavaskar
It's changed over time. In Sutcliffe's era the opener tax was very small, Hobbs and earlier it was basically nonexistent.Sutcliffe’s 65.73 looking pretty good.
Yeah, pre 1914 there wasn't an opener tax at all.It won't really be any different in any era tbh, at least since the war.
As much as it pains me to say, Gavaskar is definitely in the Lara/Sachin tier (he works hard enough he might even make it into the Hayden tier).Its not specific openers though. If we are doing a batting ranking, for example, openers are usually showing up around where you would expect them based on sheer numbers. I know Hobbs is considered top notch but even in my time of watching cricket, I think the likes of Gooch and even Gavaskar and Gary Kirsten, for example, are rather underrated in that I feel they all should probably go up a tier than where they are ranked today. I never had Gavaskar in the Sachin-Lara tier, for example but after recent events, and after his own success whenever he did bat in the middle order, I think he probably does belong in that tier of batsmen below Bradman-level.