How do the stats conclusively prove Anwar>Ganguly. Ajit Agarkar holds the record of the player fastest to reach 1000 runs and 200 wickets. Does this mean that he is the greatest all rounder or even one of the great all rounders to play the game?pratters.......Ganguly is the quickest to get to 5000,6000,7000,8000 and 9000 ODI runs.
Anwar lags behind in this aspect inspite of playing more innings than Ganguly as an opener.
I have been putting forward facts like these and u call them bull crap?
Saqi was the fastest to get to 100, 150, 200, and 250 wickets in ODI's. Does that mean he’s better than Murali or Warne based on that fact alone?pratters.......Ganguly is the quickest to get to 5000,6000,7000,8000 and 9000 ODI runs.
Anwar lags behind in this aspect inspite of playing more innings than Ganguly as an opener.
I have been putting forward facts like these and u call them bull crap?
That's true, by the end of the 90s Anwar was rated right behind Lara, Waugh, and Tendulkar. His personal loss certainly impacted his cricket negatively, and from 2000-03 he was a shadow of his former self.I think Saeed Anwar is massively underrated outside the subcontinent.
You have to remember that "at one point in his career, Anwar was battling with Sachin Tendulkar for the number one ranking in world cricket. He even had the same number of ODI centuries as Tendulkar: 17. But after that he went out of form, scoring only 3 more centuries."
He got to 17 centuries extremely quick, had a better average than tendulkar at the time too. He suffered personally and as a result played little cricket for Pakistan and hardly ever got to regain his form.
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It is Bull Crap. Your stats are Bull Crap.pratters.......Ganguly is the quickest to get to 5000,6000,7000,8000 and 9000 ODI runs.
Anwar lags behind in this aspect inspite of playing more innings than Ganguly as an opener.
I have been putting forward facts like these and u call them bull crap?
Excuse me but that is Bull Crap as well and I like Saeed.I think Saeed Anwar is massively underrated outside the subcontinent.
You have to remember that "at one point in his career, Anwar was battling with Sachin Tendulkar for the number one ranking in world cricket. He even had the same number of ODI centuries as Tendulkar: 17. But after that he went out of form, scoring only 3 more centuries."
He got to 17 centuries extremely quick, had a better average than tendulkar at the time too. He suffered personally and as a result played little cricket for Pakistan and hardly ever got to regain his form.
you should check this out first, buddySanz......Dada is the quickest to reach 6000 ODI runs.
Pls check Print Page - Sourav's illustrious 13-year international career in pics
ODIs existed before 1996.Sanz......Dada is the quickest to reach 6000 ODI runs.
Pls check Print Page - Sourav's illustrious 13-year international career in pics
Ganguly read that googly, hardly his fault that the ball just shoots along the ground.Well that is why I have said that. His coming down the track and tonking them over long on and mid wicket looks good. But I have seen him look very foolish also.
YouTube - Shane Warne Makes Sourav Ganguly Look Foolish
(Yeah, I shouldn't have put this in. But it does look ridiculous)
His playing against Hogg seemed to be more of guess and pray. Well I might be biased against him. But, I will still maintain that he is not as good as the rest against spinners.
Yeah, he picked it, but not out of the hand. Don't think he's ever been the best reader out of the hand, generally he doesn't care and will just hit it for runs anyway!Ganguly read that googly, hardly his fault that the ball just shoots along the ground.
Thats difficult to say with certainty but you are spot on that he doesn't care anyway. His big lofted drives off spinners (sometimes medium pacers too) appear to be premeditated and he starts moving very early not because he picks the ball (googly or leg-break in this case) early but because he trusts his ability to go through the shot with a fairly good chance of success.Yeah, he picked it, but not out of the hand. Don't think he's ever been the best reader out of the hand, generally he doesn't care and will just hit it for runs anyway!
What got him there was that it was a pre-empted shot in the first place, and he had to change the shot because he saw that it was the wrong-un. Otherwise he wouldn't have given himself so much room. And yeah, then the variable bounce just made it look worse.
at their peaks, from all accounts, prasanna might have emerged the winner more often than not. ganguly was a superb player of spin, no doubt. his did murder mediocre spinners and good spinners alike. but against the great ones he could not be that dominant always. you could back a lara or flower - to name two left handers - to do that more often than ganguly against great tweakers.I have always felt, when I have seen Ganguly do this, that it would have been great to see him against someone like Prasanna whose flight was probably the most deceptive of all off spinners.
Yes.at their peaks, from all accounts, prasanna might have emerged the winner more often than not. ganguly was a superb player of spin, no doubt. his did murder mediocre spinners and good spinners alike. but against the great ones he could not be that dominant always. you could back a lara or flower - to name two left handers - to do that more often than ganguly against great tweakers.
it might have something to do with ganguly's weak leg side play. more all round batsmen perform better, obviously, while confronting the great bowlers of any variety whereas a good batsman's technical flaws are quickly exploited by the great bowlers. i guess that is where the line is drawn - i can think of several examples like mcgrath/atherton and warne/ cullinan.
well said mate. as for old players, i am just extrapolating your opinion and assuming that i would enjoy watching compton/hammond/sobers/hobbs as much as i appreciated sachin/lara/richards/gavaskar because great players will always be great and on a given day any one of them could have lorded over the rest.I often times don't like to rate players that i haven't seen played..specially those players that have very similar stats and records with other players.. this is a great example of those players.. they had so much in common..both of them awsome ODI players... it would have been realy hard for me to rate them if i hadn't seen them bat.. i was lucky enough to watch them play and bat.. and have been their for a long time now..
I will go with Saeed anwar simply because i loved watching him.. his bating style..his timing and his cut shots.. they were just priceless...
Here's what Ian Chappell said about that dismissal of Ganguly:Yeah, he picked it, but not out of the hand. Don't think he's ever been the best reader out of the hand, generally he doesn't care and will just hit it for runs anyway!
What got him there was that it was a pre-empted shot in the first place, and he had to change the shot because he saw that it was the wrong-un. Otherwise he wouldn't have given himself so much room. And yeah, then the variable bounce just made it look worse.