TheJediBrah
Request Your Custom Title Now!
India are going to wipe the floor with England. The poms won't stand a chance.
**** we're going to get absolutely wrecked by the team that lost to Pakistan aren't weFor all that, Cevnoing is certainly not as dire as all the Gambhiring which goes on in match threads, and which will no doubt kick off properly once India starts the test matches against England soon.
**** I did that backwards. How do I get India to win?India are going to wipe the floor with England. The poms won't stand a chance.
Try again, less no balls and wides as a proprotion of team totals scored, means a bowler can give more runs to the batsmen and increase their averages, while keep the bowler's average constant.No balls cannot account for a significant change in batting average. The thread started with the description of the change as 'really', which excludes small movements.
An increase of runouts, which is what you said, cannot account for the movement in batting average up. Only the exact opposite of what you stated can do this.
Apologies for not reading the thread properly.
**** this deserves it's own thread, doesn't it.
What an achievement.
It wasn't easy. I had to read through a lot of posts to get there. WW, Blocky, Mr Miyagi, Burgey. And all that zooming in from my phone, all the hours spent trawling through dire off-topic threads to find that occasional Bijed or How_zat gem that was worth my like![]()
Gotta be one of the finest efforts we've ever seen. There was hardly a dry eye in the house when the mighty record was surpassed.
Dude, literally all of the extra increase in Batting averages is because of the lower run-out % - which you are dismissing as non-factor. Once you adjust for that both batting and bowling averages are up by 6% each from 80s.I may also be wrong on no balls and wides decreasing proportionately (but lets be honest, teams like WI were awful back in the day, discipline has improved globally), I don't care. I made an observation that I think that batting averages could have increased in the face of bowling average being more or less constant. I am right. That makes me happy.
Your factual error created a mathematical impossibly. To accept the fact is to recognise the impossibility. They can't be treated independently.Try again, less no balls and wides as a proprotion of team totals scored, means a bowler can give more runs to the batsmen and increase their averages, while keep the bowler's average constant.
Now, you now want to discuss significant and weighting, I already said that I thought run outs were lower than they are (that is my factual error). But it is all mathematically possible.
I may also be wrong on no balls and wides decreasing proportionately (but lets be honest, teams like WI were awful back in the day), I don't care. I made an observation that I think that batting averages could have increased in the face of bowling average being more or less constant. I am right. That makes me happy.
I already conceded several time to several people in this thread that I thought run outs were lower in proportion than they are. I have already conceded that I thought third umpire had more of an effect on increasing them than just the 1990s. But I didn't care about run outs. I still don't.
There was never a mathematical impossibility. There may be factual errors. I don't know everything. And I never said that I do. But my possible observation was proved correct.
So, you can attack me on a factual error being wrong till you're blue in the face (and there may be more after this error). But mathematical impossibility? No.
He's going to make you dig up the numbers to prove that extras haven't risen enough to account for the change.Your factual error created a mathematical impossibly. To accept the fact is to recognise the impossibility. They can't be treated independently.
You can't possibly believe a change in the number of extras will lead to a significant (as mentioned) change?
That would be a masterful bit of trollingHe's going to make you dig up the numbers to prove that extras haven't risen enough to account for the change.
And then he'll say "oh I made a bad bet" and laugh it off
He's going to make you dig up the numbers to prove that extras haven't risen enough to account for the change.
And then he'll say "oh I made a bad bet" and laugh it off
So another interesting stat to take away from that, is that tail-enders averages must have dropped, relatively speaking. I wonder if they've actually gotten worse or just throw their wickets away at the death moreJust to put some numbers -
% Change in bowling average since 80s - 6.4%
% Change in batting average since 80s - 11.6% (Adjusting for the lower rate of run-outs - 6.3%)
% Change in top 7 batting average since 80s - 13.8% (Adjusting for the lower rate of run-outs - 8.4%)
As Bolo said, it's really the top order batting which has benefited more - although just by numbers even that is rather small.
I think they constitute a higher percentage of wickets that fall as a result of an increase in bowling strike rate- we could see the balance shift even if we don't see the actual batting average of tailenders shift.So another interesting stat to take away from that, is that tail-enders averages must have dropped, relatively speaking. I wonder if they've actually gotten worse or just throw their wickets away at the death more
Haven't really gotten worse - but haven't kept up with the top order (10.3% & 5.1%).So another interesting stat to take away from that, is that tail-enders averages must have dropped, relatively speaking. I wonder if they've actually gotten worse or just throw their wickets away at the death more
ah of courseI think they constitute a higher percentage of wickets that fall as a result of an increase in bowling strike rate- we could see the balance shift even if we don't see the actual batting average of tailenders shift.