Johan
Hall of Fame Member
being consistent with your argument is meaningless when your argument has an inconsistent application of a concept behind itLol your assumptions are irrelevant as long as I am consistent with my line of arguments.
being consistent with your argument is meaningless when your argument has an inconsistent application of a concept behind itLol your assumptions are irrelevant as long as I am consistent with my line of arguments.
Jeff Thomson made a mockery of these speed tests by bowling full tosses so the pitch didn't slow his deliveries. He also won accuracy accolades by hitting the stumps with his 'fullies' while others in the test bowled regular deliveries, often deviating off the pitch. I witnessed those tests live, and Andy Roberts was by far the most impressive.Here are the numbers. Please seethe lol.
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RidiculousAt the Aeronautical College in Wellington, New Zealand in 1955 metal plates were attached to a cricket ball and a sonic device was used to measure their speed, with Tyson's bowling measured at 89 mph (143 km/h), but he was wearing three sweaters on a cold, damp morning and used no run up, Brian Statham bowled at 87 mph (140 km/h). He certainly bowled faster than 89 mph in matches, and Tyson claimed that he could bowl at 119 mph (192 km/h)
Which you are repeatedly guilty of btwbeing consistent with your argument is meaningless when your argument has an inconsistent application of a concept behind it
Top five things that never happened.Which you are repeatedly guilty of btw
It happens all the time with you as far as inconsistent application is concerned. Flat pitches matter for some cricketers and not others, series context matters for some cricketers and not others, injuries matter for some cricketers and not others, bad form matters for some cricketers and not others.Top five things that never happened.
Never happened. Depends on the context. Injury thing is the other way around, I never denounced any runs just because someone was in bad form.It happens all the time with you as far as inconsistent application is concerned. Flat pitches matter for some cricketers and not others, series context matters for some cricketers and not others, injuries matter for some cricketers and not others, bad form matters for some cricketers and not others.
You were actively trying to downplay Laras failures in the 90s by saying he was going through a bad patch.Never happened. Depends on the context. Injury thing is the other way around, I never denounced any runs just because someone was in bad form.
We have mutual respect for each other. We can afford to argue once in a while.What the hell are you two even arguing about? Your mutual dislike? Please explain.
No, I was saying it's worse to underperform against great teams at your peak than it is to underperform when you're declining.You were actively trying to downplay Laras failures in the 90s by saying he was going through a bad patch.
You never brought this argument for other bats though and it came across as excusing Lara's failures.No, I was saying it's worse to underperform against great teams at your peak than it is to underperform when you're declining.
I don't care how it came accross, point was Sachin underperformed against great attacks even at his peak (39) and I don't like that being excused.You never brought this argument for other bats though and it came across as excusing Lara's failures.
Here is the background:Please explain.
Thanks for admitting you just brought that argument for Sachin vs Lara and not others, which proves my point.I don't care how it came accross, point was Sachin underperformed against great attacks even at his peak (39) and I don't like that being excused.
Definitely ridiculous, more than ridiculous, actually.Ridiculous
I am guessing he would have bowled more than 90mph and since there was no protective gear back then, he would have been even more terrifying to face.
Alright, let me give a real explanation then.Your mutual dislike? Please explain.
Thanks. That sounds very CW.Here is the background:
A while back some of us were questioning whether Jack Hobbs's high standing was justified given that there are question marks over the professional standards of that early 20th century era and we don't have footage to verify anything.
Johan took umbrage on that and began to build a strawman counter argument that because we suggest cricket evolves, every quality cricketer of a modern era is automatically better than any ATG of a precious era. Nobody argues that of course but he thinks he is being clever by making this strawman seem silly.
The reality is that all of us have cut off points in cricket history when we don't consider the standards of the time to use the stats as reliable on face value. Even Johan believes this but will never admit it given his high defensiveness over early era English cricketers like Hobbs and Barnes.
And he will periodically register this strawman though it doesn't help his case or anything really.
Hope that helps.