It's amazing to me how you still can't see how hilariously biased you are on this. You will shout from the rooftops about every player that rates Richards higher or every XI that includes Richards, but somehow any player/XI that includes Gavaskar is either biased or "rubbish" or not contemporary or wasn't made between January 1969 and may 1975 hence it doesnt count etc.
Biased about what?
Placing numbers into context?
Should we just go according to no of votes then, because then Sobers, Viv and Sunny are ahead of and way better than Bradman? Actually Sunny has three times as many votes as Hutton and, oh wow four times as many as Hobbs. Well this would be revealing.
@peterhrt did a very detailed breakdown of the constituencies of who voted for these lists. For lists primarily made up "who I played with and against" it obviously explains why people like Bradman isn't at the top of the list where he should be.
With regards to yes, some of the teams being highly "nonsense" in the framing as all time XI's , yes
Kirmani's team had seven men from the sub-continent, three West Indians and one from England.
Gavaskar, Greenidge, Viv Richards, Gower, Javed Miandad, Imran Khan*, Kapil Dev, Kirmani+, Holding, Bedi, Chandrasekhar.
Is this one that should be held up alongside efforts from Crowe and others?
The below post so very clearly explains the disparity, is this also biased?
Gavaskar's vote count is impressive. Obviously a lot more of the judges saw him than they did Barry Richards, especially in the sub-continent and Caribbean. Only Prasanna from the 31 sub-continental judges picked Richards and he never saw him play, and only Lawrence Rowe from the Caribbean chose him. Gavaskar received 25 votes from the sub-continent and 15 from West Indians. Outside those regions he has 19 votes to Richards' 16.
Of those who chose both in their team, Bird, Bland, Gooch, Thomson and Procter said Richards was the superior bat. So did Martin Crowe but he changed his mind a few years later. Rowe preferred Gavaskar. Richards himself picked Gavaskar to open with Greenidge, his old Hampshire partner.
And these aren't opinions, they're just facts. So yes, one tried to discern the credible from the, let's say less so.
Some of you try to turn everything into a slight. Sunny is one of the greatest openers of all time, period.
Was Barry more highly rated by the cricketing community that saw them both, without doubt. There's a list of cricketers, pundits and others who rates Barry as the best batsman they've ever seen, period.
Does Sunny have a greater far reaching legacy that extends to today, being from India, and having a hyper visible profile which he ensures is in the spotlight as often as humanly possible? Yes.
To apply context isn't biased, and you are better than this petty ****. Or maybe not, I don't know anymore.