Would do for equivalent batsmen imocan the combined efforts of Gupte and Qadir outmatch the impact of the one and only Shane Warne?
so........like, what? Qadir average 26 at home (batting equivalent would be 47 I guess) and 50 away (batting equivalent would be 10 away), who is like that?Would do for equivalent batsmen imo
Has a decent WPM away, I would say 20ish there...... Sarfaraz Khan with a long careerso........like, what? Qadir average 26 at home (batting equivalent would be 47 I guess) and 50 away (batting equivalent would be 10 away), who is like that?
That’s really harsh on Sarfaraz. He hasn’t even played a test away.Has a decent WPM away, I would say 20ish there...... Sarfaraz Khan with a long career
And how did you come up with the genius estimate?so........like, what? Qadir average 26 at home (batting equivalent would be 47 I guess) and 50 away (batting equivalent would be 10 away), who is like that?
Also, Zim in the 90s and early 00s, and BD in the early to late 00s were better players of spin than most of the other recognized sides anyways. So it never made proper sense to remove them for these comparisons.Just a plot on the progressive averages of Muttiah Muralitharan, Shane Warne and Anil Kumble against top teams.
Have excluded their numbers against Bangladesh and Zimbabwe.
Murali vs Warne is an interesting curve. Warne obviously had a larger sample size. Kumble started better than both.
The criticism that's often levied against Murali, of his performances vs Ban and Zim, but despite removing numbers against them, his numbers are fabulous.View attachment 46847
Is there any statistical basis for this?Also, Zim in the 90s and early 00s, and BD in the early to late 00s were better players of spin than most of the other recognized sides anyways. So it never made proper sense to remove them for these comparisons.
England in the 90s were far worse than BD in the 00s against spin, for example.
Come on man. bangla in nouthies were literal **** vs bowling of any kindAlso, Zim in the 90s and early 00s, and BD in the early to late 00s were better players of spin than most of the other recognized sides anyways. So it never made proper sense to remove them for these comparisons.
England in the 90s were far worse than BD in the 00s against spin, for example.
Yeah, doesn't prove that English weren't worse.Come on man. bangla in nouthies were literal **** vs bowling of any kind
Pretty sure you can dismiss a hypothesis by disproving it.How do you disprove something that wasn't proven at the first place?
a hypothesis can, but a hypothesis can have a discernible basis, I can't find any reason one would think 90s England were any poorer to playing spin bowling than 2000s Bangaldesh, or frankly, any reason they were poorer to spin than the Indians were to pace at the same time and we don't disregard them as sub Zimbabwe in playing pace.Pretty sure you can dismiss a hypothesis by disproving it.
And proof by contradiction is based on the very idea.
After 70s indians played fast bowlers decentlyHow do you disprove something that wasn't proven at the first place? it's like saying India sucks against fast bowlimg, we all know Indians are terrible to fast bowling, but sub test standard? really?
No they didn't, even their great bats like Dravid and Sehwag were often non factors to good HTD pace, Azharrudin/Sidhu type were awful to pace, even VVS and Virat had a huge problem with vertical movement, it's only Gavaskar/Amarnath/Sachin who stand out against fast bowling.After 70s indians played fast bowlers decently
Proof by contradiction doesn't need any basis tho. There is no basis in assuming that square root of 2 is rational, but we still do it, and then disprove our assumption by coming up with a contradiction.a hypothesis can, but a hypothesis can have a discernible basis, I can't find any reason one would think 90s England were any poorer to playing spin bowling than 2000s Bangaldesh, or frankly, any reason they were poorer to spin than the Indians were to pace at the same time and we don't disregard them as sub Zimbabwe in playing pace.