Dominate Sachin? No, but he certainly would not have been shellacked. A large reason for that would be a) playing him in India where Sachin grew up eating spin for breakfastn and b) playing him in Australia where it is very difficult to bowl spin full-stop. I could see Warne doing well in Sri Lanka for example. But do I think he'd be averaging in the 40s against India? No way.Ikki do you seriously think Warne at peak would have outbowled Sachin at peak and other Indian batsmen? Over their entire careers, I can't remember one instance of Warne dominating Tendulkar on a consistent basis for even a short duration.
That is reasonable. Warne may not have averaged in 40s and 50s at his peak in India but he certainly would not have averaged in the 20s or even lower 30s. I love him he is a great champion but I think his position as No.4 in CW all time list is overrated.Dominate Sachin? No, but he certainly would not have been shellacked. A large reason for that would be a) playing him in India where Sachin grew up eating spin for breakfastn and b) playing him in Australia where it is very difficult to bowl spin full-stop. I could see Warne doing well in Sri Lanka for example. But do I think he'd be averaging in the 40s against India? No way.
In 2004 which is really the only series he played against India where he was a) established and b) fit, Warne averaged 30 IIRC and missed the best pitch of the series where Hauritz and Clarke cleaned up for peanuts.I think low 30s is a pretty reasonable estimate.That is reasonable. Warne may not have averaged in 40s and 50s at his peak in India but he certainly would not have averaged in the 20s or even lower 30s. I love him he is a great champion but I think his position as No.4 in CW all time list is overrated.
What?Warne's dominance is massively over-rated . Warne was more skillful and entertaining but got dominated by pretty much most great batsmen of his era, Ricky OTOH has dominated bowlers including the best ones.
For my money I Put Ricky a better cricketer than Warne.
Exactly.Case closed.In 2004 which is really the only series he played against India where he was a) established and b) fit, Warne averaged 30 IIRC and missed the best pitch of the series where Hauritz and Clarke cleaned up for peanuts.I think low 30s is a pretty reasonable estimate.
And if he had, that would still put his record on par with the likes of McGrath and many other pacers in it's completeness. For a spinner to achieve that is somewhat amazing. But Warne was so much more than dollars and cents...he was magic - I say this in reference to why CW rated him so highly. You take a poll anywhere and 95% of the time they will tell you Warne was the most important player for Aussie dominance in this last era. Heck, the players in question say it is him. By 2000, he was already regarded as one of the best cricketers of all-time; McGrath wasn't even seen as the best bowler at that moment, Ponting was still growing up and Gilchrist was just starting out.
However the key point was India missed it's major players of spin in Tendulkar and Ganguly in that series and Dravid was not really upto the mark. So 2004 is not exactly a indicator of "what could have been" Warne's case. That's why I said, he wouldn't have averaged 40s+ but wouldn't have averaged less than 30s also.. maybe around 35.In 2004 which is really the only series he played against India where he was a) established and b) fit, Warne averaged 30 IIRC and missed the best pitch of the series where Hauritz and Clarke cleaned up for peanuts.I think low 30s is a pretty reasonable estimate.
And if he had, that would still put his record on par with the likes of McGrath and many other pacers in it's completeness. For a spinner to achieve that is somewhat amazing. But Warne was so much more than dollars and cents...he was magic - I say this in reference to why CW rated him so highly. You take a poll anywhere and 95% of the time they will tell you Warne was the most important player for Aussie dominance in this last era. Heck, the players in question say it is him. By 2000, he was already regarded as one of the best cricketers of all-time; McGrath wasn't even seen as the best bowler at that moment, Ponting was still growing up and Gilchrist was just starting out.
Tendy yes.However the key point was India missed it's major players of spin in Tendulkar and Ganguly in that series and Dravid was not really upto the mark. So 2004 is not exactly a indicator of "what could have been" Warne's case. That's why I said, he wouldn't have averaged 40s+ but wouldn't have averaged less than 30s also.. maybe around 35.
The second paragraph is just adulation of your idol and nothing much replyworthy there (in a positive sense because I respect your opinion from a fan point of view).![]()
Inexperience, and rain in Cardiff tbh.They didn't play that badly during the Ashes, they just lost those critical moments, which is very un-Australian cricket team like, not sure what that coems down to, lack of mental toughness or not respecting the opponent enough. Who knows.
Yes now are going to filter out 10 or tests to claim that Warne was a better bowler than Mcgrath for most of his career.And Kiwi/S.African batsmen had it over McGrath in Australia.
That's what it was, an Excuse. Even when Warne was up against an Injured Tendulkar and a Dysfunctional Indian team in 2004, he still managed poor bowling average in India.At least Warne had an excuse; he was injured throughout the period in question and was playing against the best players of spin at their home or mostly on pitches that weren't conducive to spin bowling - Australia.
That's your opinion which I believe is tad biased because of how much you admire Warne. Warne was great but I would not put him greater than Ponting in the list of aussie cricketers.As a player; meaning leader, bowler, fielder and often handy bat...Warne was the most important player during our dominant era, then probably McGrath and then Ponting/Waugh.
- Firstly how is an average of 30.07 poor?That's what it was, an Excuse. Even when Warne was up against an Injured Tendulkar and a Dysfunctional Indian team in 2004, he still managed poor bowling average in India.
It is poor when you are Shane Warne, fully fit bowling on supposedly Spinner Friendly tracks and you end up being the worst spinner from either team in that series.- Firstly how is an average of 30.07 poor?![]()
Was with you until this point. Whilst it's true he didn't play against India when he was really humming, can't completely excuse his relatively poor figures with injuries in either 1998 or 2001 in India. The Indians just played him really well on pitches which Warne didn't adapt well/quickly enough to bowl well on.I am fairly certain that a number of the people questioning Warne's importance to the Australian team during its peak are talking complete rubbish because they have not followed the Australian team during its peak.
The thing is that during that time the side which had always caused Australia the most trouble was India. India caused Australia the most trouble largely because of Warne's struggles against them. India during that time period never looked like being anywhere near the number 1 side until they played against Australia and when they did they looked like world beaters.
Do you think that it's coincidental that Australia's only drawn home test series in that time was against India? Do you think it's coincidental that Australia only managed to beat India at home once in that time - in a series in which they finally had a fully fit Warne (for all but the best spinning wicket mind you)?
The fact of the matter is that Warne never faced India in his 93-97 peak, nor did he face them in his 02-07 peak, except once where he did a very good job on roads. Coincidentally the only team that ever looked like beating Australia between 95-07 was the WIndies until Ambrose retirement and India.
EDIT: Forgot to mention that Ponting was absent for the wins in that series in India.
Point was McGrath has his own skeletons. Stop talking about him as if he never got hammered or ever had a problem.Yes now are going to filter out 10 or tests to claim that Warne was a better bowler than Mcgrath for most of his career.
So in 2004 he was poor?That's what it was, an Excuse. Even when Warne was up against an Injured Tendulkar and a Dysfunctional Indian team in 2004, he still managed poor bowling average in India.
Bowling spin in India is easily off-set by the fact that the pitches are a) too slow and b) are pitches the greatest players of spin have grown up on. Sri Lanka are not far behind in their playing of spin. Look how Warne did there. More bounce there with oodles of turn and he owns.Warne didn't do much better on pitches conductive to Spin Bowling(Sound like India), so the last line of the argument does not hold much water.
Pretty sure you're in the minority, but agree to disagree.That's your opinion which I believe is tad biased because of how much you admire Warne. Warne was great but I would not put him greater than Ponting in the list of aussie cricketers.
Sure, Tendulkar not being there is something to warrant discussion. Still, Warne missed the test Clarke took 6/9 off. I think it is fair to say that Warne would have likely averaged under 30 and would have had the best stats a spinner had in India for ages.However the key point was India missed it's major players of spin in Tendulkar and Ganguly in that series and Dravid was not really upto the mark. So 2004 is not exactly a indicator of "what could have been" Warne's case. That's why I said, he wouldn't have averaged 40s+ but wouldn't have averaged less than 30s also.. maybe around 35.
The second paragraph is just adulation of your idol and nothing much replyworthy there (in a positive sense because I respect your opinion from a fan point of view).![]()
Actually he wasn't that great in 2004.Point was McGrath has his own skeletons. Stop talking about him as if he never got hammered or ever had a problem.
So in 2004 he was poor?
Bowling spin in India is easily off-set by the fact that the pitches are a) too slow and b) are pitches the greatest players of spin have grown up on. Sri Lanka are not far behind in their playing of spin. Look how Warne did there. More bounce there with oodles of turn and he owns.
Pretty sure you're in the minority, but agree to disagree.
Sure, Tendulkar not being there is something to warrant discussion. Still, Warne missed the test Clarke took 6/9 off. I think it is fair to say that Warne would have likely averaged under 30 and would have had the best stats a spinner had in India for ages.
As for T-C - replied because of Jono - we just disagree. Warne was too loose and gave away pressure too often throughout the time. He was wayward and way short of confidence. Of course, he makes the good point at having to play the best spinners of his time at their prime makes it debatable as to whether Warne would have fared largely better, but it still doesn't detract from the fact that Warne wasn't near his best then. Not even close. It's in this period his shoulder gave way and his finger injury meant he had to change his approach totally. You only see it post 2000 where Warne's flipper becomes a rarity and he relies merely on short variations of spin and deception in flight.
Haa dont bring that "you are Shane Warne" argument to make it seem as if Warne was supposed to spin out India. 30.07 is not poor series average under any circumstances for any bowler.It is poor when you are Shane Warne, fully fit bowling on supposedly Spinner Friendly tracks and you end up being the worst spinner from either team in that series.