In your scenario, a player like Sutcliffe would struggle because cricket has evolved over a 50-60 year period -- an evolution that Sutcliffe would have no benefit from. If he'd been born in a different era, there's nothing about his record, or the descriptions of those who saw him play, that suggests he wouldn't have succeeded as a batsman. He obviously thought a great deal about the game and how to bat; what's unclear is how he would've expressed himself had he been a modern batsman (i.e. the style of batsman he would've been.)C_C said:I think every single player back in the amatuer era would struggle to keep their record intact if transplanted to the modern era,simply due to the fact that the professional era sees the game being played at a far more cerebral level, with a far fitter crew in charge.
I believe that a direct comparison of one's already attained level of expertise is far more accurate probabilistically than the supposition of what they would achieve if transplanted to a modern era.ohtani's jacket said:In your scenario, a player like Sutcliffe would struggle because cricket has evolved over a 50-60 year period -- an evolution that Sutcliffe would have no benefit from. If he'd been born in a different era, there's nothing about his record, or the descriptions of those who saw him play, that suggests he wouldn't have succeeded as a batsman. He obviously thought a great deal about the game and how to bat; what's unclear is how he would've expressed himself had he been a modern batsman (i.e. the style of batsman he would've been.)
He faced Grimmett and O'Reilly.Jono said:Who did Sutcliffe face? Did he face anywhere near the quality that Marshall and Holding was? Or are we just going on numbers again?
Yeah. And a whole hoarde of no-names.ohtani's jacket said:He faced Grimmett and O'Reilly.
Yes, but a brilliant mind is still a brilliant mind.C_C said:Just like any university professor in mathematics would be able to school Newton in math, most amatuer players would have much to learn from the professional ones. It maybe unfair but that is the fundamental tenet of evolution- be it species or mere technologically/mentally - we are more competent today than people 100 years ago on average.
Some of them were names in their day -- like Mailey. I wouldn't be surprised if a great deal of bowlers known to us become no-names in 80 years time.C_C said:Yeah. And a whole hoarde of no-names.
I think it would be incredibly harder for me to average 50 runs in today's cricket as opposed to a field comprised of McGrath, Murali and our grannies.
![]()
Not really.Yes, but a brilliant mind is still a brilliant mind.
There are several brilliant minds today who cannot grasp the cutting edge of mathematics or physics. All that shows is that everyone has their ceiling and knowledge gained incrementally through generations upon generations cannot be substituted by a crash course for a man 6000 years ago.If Newton learnt everything that's been discovered in mathematics since his time, who's to say he couldn't apply it? It's almost as though you're saying he couldn't comprehend it.
Intensity of the game is very much a matter of the level of the game. Look at Hooper or Hick. Brilliant in less intense scenarios such as county cricket, mediocre in the toughest crucible of all- tests. Games back then were played with much much less intensity and as such, the mental abilities of players from that era to survive the intensity of professional cricket is in question.Even if you want to stick to direct comparisons, surely they must work both ways. How many batsmen in the modern era could play 54 Tests in a 11 years and average over 50? How many could score runs in conditions like The Oval in 1926 and at Melbourne in 1929? What makes you think that a modern batsman could apply themselves in conditions they're not used to, or even suited to? Since when did a batsman's concentration become a matter of evolution as opposed to a defining characteristic?
Regardless of what you posted, how did these sides receive such racially biased umpiring when they didn't even play there in the time?C_C said:And IND/WI have played the game from 1920s/30s.
Very much in the blatantly racist period which you seem to imply didnt happen.
WI started playing the 20s,IND in the 30s.marc71178 said:Regardless of what you posted, how did these sides receive such racially biased umpiring when they didn't even play there in the time?
OK, I struggled with logarithms at school, so I have no idea what those things are, let alone whether Newton could cope with them.C_C said:There is simply no garantee that Newton would be able to grasp partial differential equations or galois theory or its like.
What makes you think they were played with less intensity? A Test such as The Oval in 1926 sounds like the most intense of cricketing situations, and from all accounts, Hobbs and Sutcliffe applied themselves as well as any batsmen before or since.Games back then were played with much much less intensity and as such, the mental abilities of players from that era to survive the intensity of professional cricket is in question.
This makes it seem like batsmen from the 20s and 30s didn't think about the game or develop their skills, but instead played instinctively, with a lack of inhibition or restraint. Yet some of these players were deep thinkers of the game, & indeed, if you're to acknowledge that Grimmett was a legend, then you must give Sutcliffe praise for being able to play Grimmett and discern between the legbreak, topspinner, googly and flipper. For if Grimmett was already beginning to master the variations of spin, then surely Sutcliffe was trying to pick the delivery; how to score and when to defend -- he hardly approached Grimmett with reckless abandon.I think modern batsmen, if directly transplanted to the 20s or 30s, would be able to handle the conditions much better than other way round, simply because modern batsmen prepare their games much more methodically and analytically- carefully trying to eliminate errors from their games, as well as being much much fitter on the whole.
The less methodical you are, the less likely it is that you will adapt.
that, my friend steds is a great post fully truesteds said:Gavaskar, on the grounds that he wasn't a Yorkie.
Okay here is the first.ohtani's jacket said:What I meant to ask is whether Gavaskar's adjusted average is still the highest of any batsman against that West Indian attack... It seems to me that any player who had success against the Windies -- Gooch, Boycott, Chappell, Viswanath, Vengsarkar, Border and Lamb -- receives a career bump of either the Packer years or series where one or more of the West Indian quartet didn't play.