I would imagine almost everyone who saw both Sutcliffe a d Hammond play came away in the belief that Hammond was better, one would imagine there had to be a reason.
I personally think that he gets overrated,.at least on the forum.
In any event.
Fingleton's comments were the most interesting, especially when quoting Herbie Collins' opinion that Headley was the most complete batsman he ever saw. Fingleton signed off by saying: "I must stress, finally, that statistics didn't matter a tinker's cuss with me
Sure, Hammond was probably the greater Batsmen, but Hammond in 1929 dropped the hook shot from his arsenal to become a more front foot heavy Batsmen, thus leaving himself open to the technical flaw of not having much of a legside game, this left him vulnerable to good spin bowling to the leg stump and shortpitched pace bowling, manifesting in Hammond's home ashes record and record against Learie Constantine being disappointing.
Sutcliffe on the other end, was an extremely fine player of the hook and pull shots and thus combatted short pitched pace better, and the tactic of bowling to his leg stump did not work in England considering Sutcliffe averages 70 to Hammond's 37 in the English Ashes and combatted Constantine/Larwood very comfortably.
Hammond was probably overall a better Batsmen, but his technique was almost certainly more flawed than Sutcliffe's technique and he would have a harder time adapting to different eras and contexts than Herbert. If you take Hammond to current Australia, he'd have a very bad time facing Cummins and potentially Hazlewood, he would've to reinforce and reincorporate his hook and pull shots again before the end of the tour. Sutcliffe on the other hand, would combat the elite pace bowling pretty well. That is the fundamental sign of a superior technique, more adaptable, more well rounded and less flawed.
I meant underrated as in historically, Him being put under Compton is crazy considering the disparity in what they actually did, Compton might've done it in a much more dashing and stylish manner, but at the end of the day, he did less, far less.