ClownSymonds
U19 Vice-Captain
Yes, but I want Tendulkar in this team somewhere.LongHopCassidy said:3. Bradman
4. Viv Richards
Yes, but I want Tendulkar in this team somewhere.LongHopCassidy said:3. Bradman
4. Viv Richards
Pollock and Barry Richards, undoubtedly great players suffer due to limited amount of international cricket played.andyc said:Am somewhat surprised that so far I'm the only one to have said Pollock
agreedDasa said:3. Bradman
4. Tendulkar
5. Lara
Yes, but when did they tour England, which is where you claim they had the racist biased umpiring.C_C said:WI started playing the 20s,IND in the 30s.
They didnt have home umpire neutrality. Or can you not read through the rest of the posts on this matter ?marc71178 said:Yes, but when did they tour England, which is where you claim they had the racist biased umpiring.
India toured England in 1932 and played a one test series. They again toured England in 1936 and played 3 tests.marc71178 said:Yes, but when did they tour England, which is where you claim they had the racist biased umpiring.
When did this amateur era end and the professional era begin? The Packer years? Sutcliffe, by definition, was a professional cricketer.What makes me think it was less intensity ? Simply because it was unprofessional- and nomatter what the arguments are, non-professional sports is simply not as competetive as professional sports- the carrot of money is a big one and that does make you try your best.
What about bodyline?? Wasn't it ranked as the most important event in cricket history?The books written in those eras show the lack of intensity pretty vividly. You had batsmen who considered it unfair to bowl the googley ! You had fielders walk to the boundary and fetch the ball - once you beat the infield, it is a sure four runs almost.
How can one argue about 'same intensity' with that kinda relaxed mindset ?
Eh, to quote the Don -- "Figures are not entirely conclusive but it is difficult to avoid their significance if a man produces them year after year against every type of opponent and under all conceivable conditions."Yes, Sutcliffe might've had a decent time against Grimmett, but fact remains, due to the amatuerness of the era, you have a very very wide field in terms of quality. A bit like Murali bowling from one end and a club bowler from the other. Too uneven and too inconsistent a field to worth taking those statistics seriously for what they are.
I think it turned into professional cricket from the 60s onwards - the late 50s were a transitional period.When did this amateur era end and the professional era begin? The Packer years? Sutcliffe, by definition, was a professional cricketer.
Massively overbloated event simply because of the culture-shock to the aussie psyche- it says a lot about the so-called mental toughness and seriousness of the sport when people start complaining that the bowler is 'unfair' to bowl a googly or its 'unfair' to bowl anything but waist high deliveries.What about bodyline?? Wasn't it ranked as the most important event in cricket history?
Stucliffe's record is the type that cannot be held above or equal to the 50+ averaging crew or even the near-50s crew from the profressional era. The opposition Sutcliffe played against, the level the game was played at is nowhere close to the quality and intensity of professional test cricket. Unfit fielders who didnt even run full throttle to the boundary ( you beat the infield and you get a four pretty much garanteed), etc etc.Eh, to quote the Don -- "Figures are not entirely conclusive but it is difficult to avoid their significance if a man produces them year after year against every type of opponent and under all conceivable conditions."
Sutcliffe's record is the type that can't be denigrated.