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The ATG Teams General arguing/discussing thread (white ball edition)

stephen

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
If you give equal weightage to batting average and strike rate and use a measure (batting average*SR), difference between Tendulkar and Waugh is 8.40. Likewise, the difference between Bevan and Dippenaar is 11.11. Among this quartet, Bevan has the least runs per innings and the third best SR.
Again, apples to oranges. Openers across history have had higher averages than the rest of the top order. Hayden for example (a contemporary of Dippenaar) averaged 44 but struck at 79, substantially ahead of Dippenaar's 67 strike rate. Bevan was a lot better than Hayden.

Tendulkar was a step up from Mark Waugh, Bevan was two or three steps up from Dippenaar.
 

TheJediBrah

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You can't compare Bevan to Hayden. Completely different roles.

You can rate Bevan higher because he had fewer peers who were as good/nearly as good at his role than Hayden did, but that's not quite the same as just saying that he was "a lot better".
 

stephen

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
How so? They were two different types of batsmen which had two vastly different roles.

I'm also a Bevan fan ftr.
Well he was a lot more valuable to his team - much harder to replace a middle order batsman with Bevan's ability than an opener with Hayden's ability. And that's before you even consider era differences.

Bevan was to the 90s what Kohli is to the 10s. And Kohli is a step up from Shikar Dhawan.
 

stephen

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
But yes, it's very hard to compare ODI openers to middle order batsmen. The different roles mean that raw stats don't mean as much.
 

jimmy101

Cricketer Of The Year
Well he was a lot more valuable to his team - much harder to replace a middle order batsman with Bevan's ability than an opener with Hayden's ability. And that's before you even consider era differences.

Bevan was to the 90s what Kohli is to the 10s. And Kohli is a step up from Shikar Dhawan.
Agree that Bevan is close to irreplaceable. But back in Hayden's day there were very few opening batsmen that could match his aggression, he was still incredibly valuable.

I don't really think Bevan & Kohli are analogous in terms of batsmanship either. Again, they're two different types of players. Bevan could be more compared more closely to MS Dhoni imo (again they were different in their approaches, but both played the role of the "finisher").
 

TheJediBrah

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Agree that Bevan is close to irreplaceable. But back in Hayden's day there were very few opening batsmen that could match his aggression, he was still incredibly valuable.
For a lot of his career Hayden was struggling to even make the team tbf. Took him a few years since returning to the Test team to get past Mark Waugh, and then even got dropped for Simon Katich of all people for a bit. Then Shane Watson came in and did Hayden's job just as well.

I don't really think Bevan & Kohli are analogous in terms of batsmanship either. Again, they're two different types of players. Bevan could be more compared more closely to MS Dhoni imo (again they were different in their approaches, but both played the role of the "finisher").
I think stephen means that Bevan and Kohli are similar in that they were a step above all other players of their time
 

jimmy101

Cricketer Of The Year
For a lot of his career Hayden was struggling to even make the team tbf. Took him a few years since returning to the Test team to get past Mark Waugh, and then even got dropped for Simon Katich of all people for a bit. Then Shane Watson came in and did Hayden's job just as well.
The depth the Australian side had during the late 90's/early-to-mid 2000's was insane so it can't really be held against Hayden that, no matter how effective he was, there was always going to be some form of competition for his spot. The fact that he forced his way into the side when Gilly & Mark Waugh were firing on all cylinders says quite a bit. Let's also not forget that Hayden won the AB medal for ODI player of the year in 2008 in the twilight of his career.

If you compare the fortunes/structure of the Australian side from then to now, Hayden would be pretty much an automatic lock for the team. Warner/Hayden would be unmoveable, with Finch, Carey & Uzzy most likely getting pushed down the order to accommodate him. If we rewind the clock, again Hayden would be a shoe-in, most likely leapfrogging ahead of players such as Taylor, Marsh & Boon in the pecking order.
 

stephen

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
He is clearly wrong then. There is no way Bevan was a step above Tendulkar ,Lara or Ponting in ODIs.
He absolutely was in the 90s. An argument could be made for Tendulkar but Bevan was definitely ahead of the other two.
 

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