I wont go into an argument with you over it as it is a fair enough opinion if some one feels the nineties was his best. I can't separate it from his current run though. He is a smarter cricketer, has a way bigger repetoire of shots and his career right now is comparable to any period he has had in his career in my opinion. I wont go bisecting which is the better period as a) The current period hasn't finished, b) I love both the phases.And he is doing well, not better than the mid-late ninenties though. He was the best I've ever watched during that time.
No question. He always would. No doubt in my mind.Forgetting the money and fame, and purely from a statistical point of view, I wonder if Sachin would trade his records with, say a Damien Martyn or Justin Langer, so long as he experienced the team success they did.
EDIT: Maybe not Langer, because he never won a World Cup.
Hmm, I'm not sure I would. Like baseball, cricket is a very individual game.No question. He always would. No doubt in my mind.
Ah yes, you did. He might, I probably wouldn't. The more your teammates suck, the better you look in comparison.I did say forgetting about the money and fame, as in not taking that into account.
Dont think he would trade his nationality. Langer-esque record will earn him what Langer earned.Hmm, I'm not sure I would. Like baseball, cricket is a very individual game.
As a player? I'm not sure I would - just from a monetary perspective. The difference could be tens of millions of dollars.
As a fan, I'd certainly trade Sachin's record for a better team throughout the nineties, let alone a team as good as Australia had. So from a fan's perspective, its a no-brainer.
Now, if the question were if he could achieve the same fame and money with a Langer-esque record and still be part of a winning team, I think that's a closer call and he might take it.
Might still perform better than Yuvraj in tests.Reckon he should bat left handed for the rest of his career. Just to make things fair.
No need to be doubtful about thatMight still perform better than Yuvraj in tests.
VIjay, Badrinath, Pujara, Rahane, Chopra....Like who?
well then his infancy has continued for 6 years...and he has been given more chances than most players...Yuvraj's stats aren't terrible considering he's still in the infancy of his career.
Pujara & Rahane will almost certainly be in the India team for many years to come, but I don't think they're ready yet. Most 21-year olds aren't. I'd leave it for a couple of years, some tours to other countries and then put them in. Plus you'd be placing both of those out of their natural batting positions buy putting them in @ 6.VIjay, Badrinath, Pujara, Rahane, Chopra....
In terms of number of innings, not years. 45 innings doesn't tell you everything about a player (that's under a 3rd of his possible career), especially when India play so few home tests.well then his infancy has continued for 6 years...and he has been given more chances than most players...
Sehwag is a middle order batsman, and he opens. Vijay can play in the middle.Murali Vijay is an opener. I wouldn't put him ahead of Sehwag or Gambhir and that doesn't solve the middle-order problem.
Badrinath can play anywhere in the middle order. To say a #6 spot should be restricted to those who play #6 only is asinine. The top six should be your six best batsmen in the country. That's it - no more no less. The positions should then be decided based on ability.Where would you put Badrinath? He's generally a No. 3, you could put him @ 3, Tendulkar 4, Dravid 5, Laxman 6, but he's not a direct replacement for Yuvraj and that's moving the established players down a slot and switching Tendulkar and Dravid around (you can't have Tendulkar coming in lower than No. 4)
People are obsessed with long term, who cares about long term? Can you help me now? That's the only thing I care about. If he gives me a couple years, that's more than enough. And Aakash has changed his game quite a bit recently and should get a go.Which Chopra do you mean? Aakash? If so then I don't think he's good enough by a long way, plus he's 31. Hardly a long term replacement. He's India's version of Ramprakash- great at first-class level but not up to the task at test level.
No you don't have to change the order. You can put any of those batsmen at #6. And Yuvraj wastes space. Hell, I'd rather have Irfan Pathan there.I'm not a fan of Yuvraj, but I wouldn't put any of the promising young batsmen in the test team yet and I also wouldn't move the order around which you'd have to do to put 1 of the batsmen SilentStriker mentioned in the team.
20 odd tests is easily enough to decide whether a player is test-class or not...In terms of number of innings, not years. 45 innings doesn't tell you everything about a player (that's under a 3rd of his possible career), especially when India play so few home tests.
He averaged 70.66 in the series against us in 2008 with a run average of 53, OK it was only 2 tests but he looked in form.
He had a poor series against New Zealand though.
I'm not a fan of Yuvraj, but I wouldn't put any of the promising young batsmen in the test team yet and I also wouldn't move the order around which you'd have to do to put 1 of the batsmen SilentStriker mentioned in the team.