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The stats do not do him justice!

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
If batting is so easy in the modern era then how come Tendulkar has only relied on good scores against Bangladesh & Zimbabwe to average over 50 since 2000? By your illogical comparisons, this just proves Tendulkar would've been nothing more then a footnote if he played in the same era as Bradman.
Actually it doesn't. Any fool who has watched Tendulkar could see quite clearly that he declined massively in 2003 and has only fairly recently begun to play even remotely close (and still a fair way behind) how he played 1990-2002.
 

wfdu_ben91

International 12th Man
Actually it doesn't. Any fool who has watched Tendulkar could see quite clearly that he declined massively in 2003 and has only fairly recently begun to play even remotely close (and still a fair way behind) how he played 1990-2002.
But if batting is so easy as you claim it is in post 2001, then despite the decline Tendulkar should've been able to maintain his brilliance from the 90s.
 

aussie

Hall of Fame Member
But if batting is so easy as you claim it is in post 2001, then despite the decline Tendulkar should've been able to maintain his brilliance from the 90s.
His tennis-elbow woes would have clearly affected that between probably ENG 02 to about PAK 07/08. From the AUS tour, Tendy has been showing sings of a renaisance of his 90s self.
 

zaremba

Cricketer Of The Year
A truly once-in-several generations talent like Richards or Gilchrist, in their brief on-peak years (Richards '76 and '79-'81, and Gilchrist '99/00-'03), might just have done - the case that almost whatever you bowled, it was going. However, Hayden emphatically didn't - if you could bowl a decent well-directed inswinger at a reasonable pace he was a sitting-duck to you. Nor did virtually anyone else - it just isn't possible.
I just don't agree. A batsman who flays an attack will seize control from the fielding side. I've seen it happen literally hundreds of times.

And your reference to those players' peaks misses the point. A player can be far from his peak and yet play an exceptional or controlling innings. Eg Viv Richards at Antigua in 1986 when he was, by your reckoning (and I'm not particularly disagreeing), not at his peak. The point about his career peak is that this is the time when the likelihood of such an innings is at its greatest. But all sorts of players, whether at their peak or not, have played controlling innings.

The likes of Boycott, Atherton and Kirsten very rarely scored especially quickly, and thus don't fit the mould that people are arguing in favour of - ie, that aggressive batsmen can just play shots to whatever they want and they thus have complete control. Even in their own way - being difficult to lure into indiscretions - they did not exactly control the game, as bowlers could still get them out by bowling the outstanding ball (sometimes it required that to dismiss all three, and many besides)
I watched McKenzie and Smith at Lord's last year batting in a Boycott/Kirsten mode. And believe me, they controlled the game.
 

wfdu_ben91

International 12th Man
I just don't agree. A batsman who flays an attack will seize control from the fielding side. I've seen it happen literally hundreds of times.

And your reference to those players' peaks misses the point. A player can be far from his peak and yet play an exceptional or controlling innings. Eg Viv Richards at Antigua in 1986 when he was, by your reckoning (and I'm not particularly disagreeing), not at his peak. The point about his career peak is that this is the time when the likelihood of such an innings is at its greatest. But all sorts of players, whether at their peak or not, have played controlling innings.
Gilchrist vs. England at Perth, 2006. :D
 

Migara

Cricketer Of The Year
Despite the fact that all of the bowlers I listed have decent records?
West Indian bowling before the series

Code:
Player		Wkts	Ave	Econ	SR
[B]HC Griffith	35	29.62	2.81	63.2[/B]
LN Constantine	26	38.65	3.23	71.7
OC Scott	20	40.3	3.98	60.6
[B]GN Francis	19	30.52	2.84	64.3[/B]
CA Roach	2	51.5	2.78	111
FR Martin	1	417	2.79	894
LS Birkett	1	59	3.1	114
JED Sealy	0	-	10.66	-
GA Headley	0	-	3.34	-
GC Grant	0	-	1	-

SAF bowling before the series

Code:
Player		Wkts	Ave	Econ	SR
[B]CL Vincent	57	25.71	2.46	62.5[/B]
AJ Bell		19	36.57	2.78	78.9
DPB Morkel	17	39.94	2.79	85.7
NA Quinn	15	39.73	2.68	88.7
Q McMillan	13	49.46	3.42	86.6
[B]HW Taylor	5	31.2	2.73	68.4[/B]
JAJ Christy	2	33.5	3.72	54
B Mitchell	2	78	3.83	122
IND bowling before the series

Code:
Player		Wkts	Ave	Econ	SR
[B]L Amarnath	21	25.09	2.05	73
MH Mankad	14	28.92	2.18	79.3[/B]
CS Nayudu	2	123	3.78	195
VS Hazare	2	121	3.05	238
CT Sarwate	1	28	2.04	82
SW Sohoni	0	-	2.49	-
Gul Mohammad	0	-	1	-
Not a single 25- average bowler in those sides. Closest is CL Vincent.
All those bowling figures does not show even a glimpse of a good attack.
 

Beleg

International Regular
definitely inzamam. easily among the top three most talented batsmen of his generation (tendulkar and lara being the other two). just didn't perform as well as he could have.
 

Ikki

Hall of Fame Member
You just missed the small hyphen after 25 showing it was <25.
To be fair, Ben said they were decent - which they are. I'd say in most people's books 25 and under would be really pushing amongst greats.
 

Shri

Mr. Glass
definitely inzamam. easily among the top three most talented batsmen of his generation (tendulkar and lara being the other two). just didn't perform as well as he could have.
Yeah, and he has an amazing average when batting in the second innings of a test match. A true match winner when chasing in test matches.
 

Migara

Cricketer Of The Year
To be fair, Ben said they were decent - which they are. I'd say in most people's books 25 and under would be really pushing amongst greats.
Bowling figures of Bangladesh and Zimbabwe. Players with >20 wickets. Now this also has a comparable bowlers list. Heath Streak (28.1), Brain (30.5), Mbangwa (31.5), Hasan (31.8), Huckle (34.9), Price (35.9), P. Strang (36) and Brandes (36.2). Note that SAF, IND and WI had one bowler of 25-30, one with 30-35 and two hopeless ones. ZIM could field four bowlers with average of 30-35. Still you believe that attack to be very good?
 

Ikki

Hall of Fame Member
Bowling figures of Bangladesh and Zimbabwe. Players with >20 wickets. Now this also has a comparable bowlers list. Heath Streak (28.1), Brain (30.5), Mbangwa (31.5), Hasan (31.8), Huckle (34.9), Price (35.9), P. Strang (36) and Brandes (36.2). Note that SAF, IND and WI had one bowler of 25-30, one with 30-35 and two hopeless ones. ZIM could field four bowlers with average of 30-35. Still you believe that attack to be very good?
I wasn't talking about the attacks, I was talking about your want of <25 bowlers.

The 3 sides of India, WIndies and S.Africa in Bradman's time weren't strong. But the SRs for those days are misleading because very few bowlers had SRs in the 50s and being in the 60s was very good. Being in the 70s was good-to-average. And having two bowlers with sub 30 averages in an attack certainly wasn't bad. I think "decent" is apt. So for being not near Australia nor England, they weren't shabby. Regardless, few batsmen could consistently average 100+ against them.
 
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rivera213

U19 Vice-Captain
Do tell. How is it as different? An explanation would be nice...for once.
Don't give me the "for once" **** when all you've provided is statistics which you got from cricinfo/wisden coupled with your huge bias (for whatever reason) for the 30's.

Apart form natural progression of the sport (more people playing it being the obvious 1), then nothing has changed between Bradman and Tendulkar's time at all. 8-)


You brought up Lohmann to show that he has a low average, hence he must be the best bowler by that account. Yet your cricketing knowledge fails you. Cricket in the 1880s was played in a different manner, on different pitches, with differing variables. Low scores were common, and hence low bowler's averages. That's why the average bowler averaged 19 in Lohmann's time.
That doesn't mean anything since my point was that the person with the lowest average isn't the best bowler of all time therefore it's not a given that the batsman is automatically the best batsmen because he has the highest average of all time.

Statistics, as I've said before (but you seem unwilling to admit), are relative to an era.

All your comparisons between eras are useless with different bowlers and batsmen participating.


I have brought proof: stats and the generation by generation comparison of bowlers with regards to how they were rated by their peers. You have brought puff - nothing; excess, no proof.
Wow, you've copied statistics. You must study at Cambridge!

But contrary to your belief, that isn't proof of Bradman being a better batsman than Tendulkar (since "better2 in sport is largely opinion based), as I said countless times before statistics are relevent only in comparing the era.

I'm not saying Bradman wasn't the best of his era by some distance, only that you can't automatically equate his average with being worth 99.94 in the 50's-90's or even more than the best of those eras. I find it truly hard to believe the 2 "best" batsman (Bradman and Headey" were pre-WWII (for the most part, they were at peak in the 30's at least).

It seems strange a sport would be so stagnant in terms of individual quality even after 70 years.


The irony is you think I am in awe of the past where I am more in favour of modern cricketers and only 1-2 would make my all-time XI.
Yet you think the 30's is 1 of the "toughest" eras when in fact in terms of cricketing ability (it would need you to be able to tell the difference between good and bad, and form your oown opinion god forbid) the sheer number of quality bowlers and batsmen have increased per decade after WWII (and ending with the crop of the 90's).

It's not even in the top 5.


Hilarious. His "talent"? Talent doesn't mean anything in cricket unless it is converted into scores. Mark Waugh was not one of the best of his era. Was one of the better batsmen, but certainly not in the top tier. However, using your shoddy reasoning he is even better than Bradman!
Talent means everything when the person you are arguing with (ie- me) is saying that whilst Bradman was more successful than Tendulkar, he wasn't better (aka more talented) than him (or Graeme Pollock or Barry Richards or Garry Sobers etc).


Tendulkar is a fine batsman. But not fit to be in the same breath as The Don.
Based on what?

Your limited knowledge of how to use that thing made of willow and ignorance of sporting progression more than likely.


Drivel in the sense that your whole argument is based on footwork and technical stroke-play and not what really happened. Drivel in the sense that there is not much footage at all of the past and how you seem to generalise all this to suit your argument.
Well in that case Bradman had a twin brother who played for Australia at the exact same time.

And no, it doesn't "suit" my argument when I have no bias towards Bradman OR Tendulkar. You have an obvious bias towards Bradman.

If someone were to average 125 nowadays after 100 tests you would say "well, Bradman would've averaged 150".


LOL! So Sobers, Waugh (S), aren't comparable to Tendulkar or Lara because they batted at 6?
In quality, every batsman is comparible (though the role they've been given differs so it's not necessarily fair to compare SR for example) but quality shines through whatever position they come in. The positions however aren't that comparible in terms of success.

Someone coming in @ 6 will almost certainly start against an old soft ball. While it's not as easy to spot as a shiny new cherry, all things considered, it's easier to get started against.

You will also almost certainly get more NO @ 6 than at No. 4 thus increasing the average. I don't disagree with the ruling of NO innings being disregarded as an "inning" you faced since it's fair on those batting lower, but I expect anyone with common sense to take that into account when comparing ability.

This of course is dependant on forming independent opinions, so I think it may be a bit beyond you.

You are also more likely to face bowlers a bit more worn out @ 6 and 7 than @ 3 or 4 (this is exaggerated the further back you go taking into account nutrition, health and fitness change).

Tendulkar being at 4 is dead in between the opener and the late-middler order role (assigned for AR) and is generally the place where the best, non-opening, batsman (unless they are also an AR such as Sobers) comes into bat (ex- Tendulkar, Crowe, G.Pollock, Lara, G.Chappell, Miandad etc)

And, BTW, Steve Waugh batted @ 5 for the majority of his career, though granted he sometimes dropped down to 6 for (whatever reason).


It's become obvious that I am wasting my time arguing with a noob.
I have as much grasp of the statistics as you do and that's all you've brought.

I haven't seen 1 original opinion from you in this whole thread! All your opinions are based on statistics which is in fact NOT an opinion.

Anyone who hasn't seen 1 game of cricket can take the top 5 in the batting average lists, or find the highest averaging batsmen of every 10 years and put them side-by-side. That isn't knowledge. Knowledge is being able to look past statistics and judge for yourself. You aren't able to do that.


We've already done analysis on hardest countries to bat in...Australia is one of the hardest. Especially, in domestic Cricket, where Australia's state sides are comparable, or even better, than most Test sides.
Australia has never been a harder place to bat than England and nowadays it is generally much easier.

Who "done" the analysis and what criteria was taken into account?

As for Australian state cricket, it depends on the state.

New South Wales on paper are as good as or better than Bangladesh, West Indies and maybe Pakistan.

But the rest are not necessarily better than our top county teams and some are worse.

I'd certainly take a full strength top 5 CCD1 team over Victoria & WA and South Australia, Tasmania & Queensland are of similar level to our "best" CCD2 teams.

I'd actually take Kent all things considered over the lat 3 state sides I named.

I'll give you NSW since they are a pretty good outfit on paper.


Their careers spanned 11-12 years, what are you talking about? Qadir and Chandra are not near O'Reilly and Clarrie.
They spanned 11-12 years in THEIR era. You're beginning to annoy me with every single "opinion" of yours being based on assumptions derived from statistics.

Have you seen any footage of Chandrasekhar at all?


I use stats, facts, opinions on them by contemporaries and historians...and that is wrong?
Yes that is wrong because that's not YOUR opinion. It's someone else's or a mixture of many people's.


How else do you form an opinion about them?
I don't know, how about maybe.... base it on footage you've seen otherwise make no assumptions considering their era was nowhere near as good man-for-man as later eras.


What's really pathetic is how little you know about Cricket's history, yet have the temerity to question Bradman. Not just a regular great...but the greatest by a country mile! Absolutely astonishing.
Nope, the most SUCCESSFUL by a country mile and I know a lot about cricket's history, I just don't rely on articles of romantic old fools to form an "opinion" around.


LOL, that is EXACTLY what they were. They were absolutely abysmal away and only decent at home. India was one of the weakest teams during that period - batting and bowling. And as I said, West Indies were only a force towards the late 70s and 80s.
You think Bedi and co are "mediocre"? Wow, what a moron. You don't know about batting OR spin bowling. Congrats.

How about slamming Waqar and Wasim's ability to move the old AND new ball in either direction while you're at it?

And West Indies were a force from 1976 pretty much til Ambrose and Walsh were past their best in the late-mid 90's. They weren't always THE best, but they were always in the top 2.


Still waiting on you to prove any of your assertions. "I saw Bradman on some youtube clips and I have seen Tendulkar, so Tendulkar is better" is not an argument.

Quick son, proof.
Not on You Tube, actually You Tube has about 1/10th of what I've seen of Bradman which is more than likely a hell of a lot more than you- unless you were around in his time so dementia may be to blame for your tosh...

As for the Tendulkar vs Bradman debate, I think if you knew 1 iota about batting you'd at least see how I could possibly rate him as highly as the Don. All the things which make up a batsman seem to go over your head.

I think a few in this thread, even if they disagree with my opinion, at least know where I'm coming from.

There's no video or stat which will prove/disprove what I'm talking about since the 2 batsmen are split by a number of decades.

The only way to really prove/disprove my opinion is to see both batsmen bat in both eras against the same bowlers on the same wickets. That wont happen until someone invents a time machine.


Yes, because it was harder to achieve for several reasons. It can also be argued that it wasn't, but let's concede it was. A 50 then and a 50 now sure. A 99.94 then and a 55 now?
:laugh:
The thing you're not taking into account is how the best batsmen destroy poor bowling. The majority of the Don's runs weren't against the best English bowlers, but he destroyed the also-rans as well as notching up some against the better bowlers.

There was never as great a seam partnership in terms of ability (imo of course, but at the risk of sounding arrogant I think I'm a good judge of talent) as those I mentioned earlier in the thread and even Larwood who many, and I, consider the best English bowler of the time is a country mile away from all the seamers of the likes of Waqar, Wasim, Donald, Ambrose, Walsh etc as an individual.


Bradman was not playing in the toughest era possible. Ok, we can concede that. Still, he was playing in a tough era. If Bradman had averaged 60, I could see your point. A 60 then and a 55 now, alright. But not 99.94. Bradman's era was not that weak. And if you are trying to say it was...prove it.
As I alluded to above, the best bowlers of the time weren't 40 runs per person worse, but the average and poorest bowlers at test level were much worse.

Bradman's era was probably the 5th hardest era to bat in and again, you're equating success with talent. This thread is about the batsmen who's 2 levels don't match up.


You see, I've already done a decade by decade comparison of batting and bowling. You haven't. And until you do, you won't understand that Bradman's era was still very difficult. So let's see you prove it :happy:.
How about knowledge of bowling and batting ability. Do you have any?


Prove it. Some facts and figures would be nice. How was it one of the worst eras for the sport? I already showed you the average batsman's score through the 70s-now; the average bowler's score is little different.
Boring. Stats don't tell the whole story and "your" stats didn't take into account the growing number of players through the eras (which in itself results in better quality. The more people who play a sport generally equals that sport having a better quality man-for-man. Since you're a football fan first and foremost, I thought you would've noticed that), quality of bowling attack, levels of fitness (which in a bowler's case is hugely important).


As an afterthought, I've come to appreciate this forum and it's more in-depth analysis of cricket. These shoddy arguments, like rivera's, are a dime a dozen on other sites.
With all respect to the forum, I've seen very few "in depth" conversations which wasn't completely based on stats which isn't so much an analysis as being able to read and copy from Wisden.

I've yet to hear anyone give me a genuine opinion of their own on players of eras past. Maybe you can tell me why exactly you think Bradman is a country mile ahead of Tendulkar without copying stats from Cricinfo?

I'd lvoe to have in-depth conversations, that's the whole reason I joined, but I have only had a few to date.
 

zaremba

Cricketer Of The Year
I'd lvoe to have in-depth conversations, that's the whole reason I joined, but I have only had a few to date.
In all seriousness, try adopting a less confrontational posting style. Attempting to obliterate, disparage and/or mock the arguments of everyone else can lead to lengthy bitter debates rather than constructive discussions. There are people here with great knowledge and interesting opinions about the game - you're one of them - and it's a question of engaging with them rather than getting bogged down in squabbles.
 
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Ikki

Hall of Fame Member
Don't give me the "for once" **** when all you've provided is statistics which you got from cricinfo/wisden coupled with your huge bias (for whatever reason) for the 30's.
You've done nothing but bring generalisations. And mostly based on footage you've seen, which couldn't have been much.

Apart form natural progression of the sport (more people playing it being the obvious 1), then nothing has changed between Bradman and Tendulkar's time at all. 8-)
Ok, natural progression in terms of what? Evolution of humans? The sport? Be specific and show a measure. Show something tangible that one can measure to see just how much the sport has changed for us to concede that Bradman is inferior to Tendulkar.

You still haven't brought any proof. And trust me buddy, it doesn't take bias to think Bradman is better, it's that clearcut.

That doesn't mean anything since my point was that the person with the lowest average isn't the best bowler of all time therefore it's not a given that the batsman is automatically the best batsmen because he has the highest average of all time.

Statistics, as I've said before (but you seem unwilling to admit), are relative to an era.

All your comparisons between eras are useless with different bowlers and batsmen participating.
Exactly, you brought it simply because it was a low average. Not that you actually knew anything about his era. The thing is...we ALL know about his era and why his average isn't enough to regard him the best of his era. So we are taking into account all variables, that is why Lohmann is never really mentioned in the same breath as the best bowlers.

However, Bradman is always a clear #1 because his era, unlike Lohmann's, is largely the same as today's. Since you are the one who is saying it isn't, you need to prove it. Give examples as to why it isn't. Then illustrate that by showing facts and figures. That's the only way you will be taken seriously.

Wow, you've copied statistics. You must study at Cambridge!
Sorry, that's a cop-out. Few people have looked into statistics enough to compare them era by era. Decade by decade. It's simply more than copy-paste.

But contrary to your belief, that isn't proof of Bradman being a better batsman than Tendulkar (since "better2 in sport is largely opinion based), as I said countless times before statistics are relevent only in comparing the era.
That IS proof. Whether it is conclusive proof depends on the individual. For some people, like yourself, a mountain - or a world's - worth of proof is still not enough and some things will never become conclusive and merely an opinion. I think that says more about the individual than the stats.

Simply put, the closest thing to a fact in Cricket is that Bradman is the greatest batsman of all time...by far.

Simply saying stats are relevant to their era is not enough. Show us why, and why it means Tendulkar is better than Bradman. You give nothing but unsubstantiated generalisations.

I'm not saying Bradman wasn't the best of his era by some distance, only that you can't automatically equate his average with being worth 99.94 in the 50's-90's or even more than the best of those eras. I find it truly hard to believe the 2 "best" batsman (Bradman and Headey" were pre-WWII (for the most part, they were at peak in the 30's at least).

It seems strange a sport would be so stagnant in terms of individual quality even after 70 years.
It doesn't have to be the same; that's the whole point. That's why I showed you HOW much, for example, a few points in bowling average, decade to decade is noticed. 90s are much better than 00s, right? Yet the batting averages on the whole (a huge sample, because it is every batsman) is only inflated by a few points. To say that Bradman's average would be affected by 10 would still be absolutely HUGE! Yet he would STILL be far and away the greatest batsman of all time. But you didn't say his average would suffer by 10 points...you said it would suffer enough for him to be inferior to Tendulkar, which is about 45 points worth. Now that is massive.

Think about it again, if 3 points can be so vivid in it's difference, then 10 points would be huge...and 45 points would be unthinkable. Cricket has not stagnated, but it has not differed THAT much.

Yet you think the 30's is 1 of the "toughest" eras when in fact in terms of cricketing ability (it would need you to be able to tell the difference between good and bad, and form your oown opinion god forbid) the sheer number of quality bowlers and batsmen have increased per decade after WWII (and ending with the crop of the 90's).

It's not even in the top 5.
It is one of the toughest, just not THE toughest. Apart from the 90s which is probably the most difficult era, the 00s, 80s, 70s, 60s and 30s are largely the same. You can only appreciate this by looking at Cricket on the whole - and not your isolated, and often contradictory, examples.

Talent means everything when the person you are arguing with (ie- me) is saying that whilst Bradman was more successful than Tendulkar, he wasn't better (aka more talented) than him (or Graeme Pollock or Barry Richards or Garry Sobers etc).
Sorry, no one really measures who is better than what someone else is purely on perceived talent. Talent is good as an after-thought. For example, some may say Lara is more naturally talented than Tendulkar, but who really cares? It's only what they achieved that matters. Which is why I bring up guys like Waugh or Martyn. At bat, they had brilliant techniques and made batting look artistic, but they are nowhere near as good as the Pontings or the Borders.

It all comes down to what was achieved, not what could have been achieved. Talent alone is not enough.


Based on what?

Your limited knowledge of how to use that thing made of willow and ignorance of sporting progression more than likely.
Facts, figures, commentary.... and hopefully common sense.

Well in that case Bradman had a twin brother who played for Australia at the exact same time.

And no, it doesn't "suit" my argument when I have no bias towards Bradman OR Tendulkar. You have an obvious bias towards Bradman.

If someone were to average 125 nowadays after 100 tests you would say "well, Bradman would've averaged 150".
No, I wouldn't. If it occurred nowadays I would consider that batsman better. Provided the batsman in question wasn't always playing Bangladesh, or some equivalent argument.

Anyway, that will be a discussion when a batsman happens to achieve that. Tendulkar is not near that and never will be.

In quality, every batsman is comparible (though the role they've been given differs so it's not necessarily fair to compare SR for example) but quality shines through whatever position they come in. The positions however aren't that comparible in terms of success.
Sure, most batsmen will bat higher, but it's not as clear-cut as that. Certainly not to make a difference of 40-50 points. LOL. Maybe 3-4. Most great batsman have batted that far low and Ponting did, but actually made his name at #3. So your original argument means absolutely nothing.

Someone coming in @ 6 will almost certainly start against an old soft ball. While it's not as easy to spot as a shiny new cherry, all things considered, it's easier to get started against.

You will also almost certainly get more NO @ 6 than at No. 4 thus increasing the average. I don't disagree with the ruling of NO innings being disregarded as an "inning" you faced since it's fair on those batting lower, but I expect anyone with common sense to take that into account when comparing ability.
They may have a bit more NOs than a #3 but not so much that it will create a different standard. At #7, it's more likely. For example, Sobers, even without NOs scored more runs per inning than Tendulkar who batted higher up. Which shows regardless, he was as good if not better.

3-4-5-6 is the mid-order. 3-4 probably a rung above 5-6 but not as different. Conversely, a batsman that comes in at 5-6 will face the spinners and could even see a new, new ball.

This of course is dependant on forming independent opinions, so I think it may be a bit beyond you.
Well, considering I don't think of myself as all-knowing I will look toward other opinions whilst forming my own. That's something that requires humility and intelligence. I am afraid, that's a bit beyond you.

You are also more likely to face bowlers a bit more worn out @ 6 and 7 than @ 3 or 4 (this is exaggerated the further back you go taking into account nutrition, health and fitness change).
To group a batsman that comes in at 6 and 7 just shows how little you actually know about the game. Next you'll tell me because Mark Waugh was a wonder with the willow and because he usually batted higher up, he is better than Kenny Barrington, disregarding the 17 average points between them. :laugh:

Tendulkar being at 4 is dead in between the opener and the late-middler order role (assigned for AR) and is generally the place where the best, non-opening, batsman (unless they are also an AR such as Sobers) comes into bat (ex- Tendulkar, Crowe, G.Pollock, Lara, G.Chappell, Miandad etc)
Er... The best batsmen usually come in at #3. Bradman, Hammond, Ponting, Richards, etc. But there is little difference and often batsmen switch between. It's really more dependent on where the team will need you to bat.

And, BTW, Steve Waugh batted @ 5 for the majority of his career, though granted he sometimes dropped down to 6 for (whatever reason).
The reason being: the team.

I have as much grasp of the statistics as you do and that's all you've brought.

I haven't seen 1 original opinion from you in this whole thread! All your opinions are based on statistics which is in fact NOT an opinion.

Anyone who hasn't seen 1 game of cricket can take the top 5 in the batting average lists, or find the highest averaging batsmen of every 10 years and put them side-by-side. That isn't knowledge. Knowledge is being able to look past statistics and judge for yourself. You aren't able to do that.
Putting statistics aside and judging purely from what you see is one of the dumbest things you can do. I showed you stats, analysis on those stats, how players in those times were rated and why...and you've brought nothing but "I saw some videos" and think that since that's original that it is more valid, or valid at all! :laugh:

You can't get original with Bradman. He is the best batsman of all time by a country mile. All that can be written has already been written about him. You have some naive inkling that you are adding something new and, laughably, worthy.

Australia has never been a harder place to bat than England and nowadays it is generally much easier.

Who "done" the analysis and what criteria was taken into account?
It's been a much harder place to bat especially in the last two decades. Weather is only but one factor. Another: the bowlers. Australia has had by far the best domestic scene in Cricket.

The analysis done was to look at each touring side in each test nation. You see, this forum existed before you joined and many of these points are just re-hashed.

But still, let's see some proof. PROVE that Australia was NEVER tougher to bat in than England.

As for Australian state cricket, it depends on the state.
You're right. Probably not Tassie, but all the other states. :laugh:

New South Wales on paper are as good as or better than Bangladesh, West Indies and maybe Pakistan.

But the rest are not necessarily better than our top county teams and some are worse.

I'd certainly take a full strength top 5 CCD1 team over Victoria & WA and South Australia, Tasmania & Queensland are of similar level to our "best" CCD2 teams.

I'd actually take Kent all things considered over the lat 3 state sides I named.

I'll give you NSW since they are a pretty good outfit on paper.
We're talking about Hayden, remember? Hayden played the domestic scene in the 90s. Where W.A., N.S.W., Queensland and Victoria were better than most of the test sides.

Australia had such competition for a Test spot, that it's 2nd tier players would have gotten into many of the Test sides available. That's why someone like Hayden could be dropped so easy. That's why it took so long for Mike Hussey to get a go. That's why Gilchrist debuted when he was 28.

Do a search on the forums, this point has already been raised before and the teams already mentioned, state by state.

They spanned 11-12 years in THEIR era. You're beginning to annoy me with every single "opinion" of yours being based on assumptions derived from statistics.
Um, as far as I know, 11-12 years then was still 11-12 years now.

Have you seen any footage of Chandrasekhar at all?
:laugh:


Yes that is wrong because that's not YOUR opinion. It's someone else's or a mixture of many people's.
It is my opinion. My opinion, and yours too, will never be completely original. Originality does not equate accuracy nor validity. Whatever critique or testimony there is, has already been given to Bradman. You are not treading new ground.

I don't know, how about maybe.... base it on footage you've seen otherwise make no assumptions considering their era was nowhere near as good man-for-man as later eras.
No one can form a good opinion only on what they have seen. Especially about past cricketers. You cannot fathom the importance of the matches, their tension, their era's standard nor the quality of the player by looking at highlights. That's simply inane.

You have to use what you see, with what ACTUALLY happened (wink wink: stats) and put them into some valid and verifiable context. Not based on one's own whims and or fallible memory.

Nope, the most SUCCESSFUL by a country mile and I know a lot about cricket's history, I just don't rely on articles of romantic old fools to form an "opinion" around.
That's right, you've got Youtube and your grandpaps reels :laugh:.

You think Bedi and co are "mediocre"? Wow, what a moron. You don't know about batting OR spin bowling. Congrats.
LOL, yes he was mediocre as a bowler and simply one of India's great spinners. There's a reason why India were not much good away. Look at the facts son, stop imagining things.

How about slamming Waqar and Wasim's ability to move the old AND new ball in either direction while you're at it?
Waqar debuted at the end of 1989 and both he and Wasim were primarily bowlers of the 90s.

And West Indies were a force from 1976 pretty much til Ambrose and Walsh were past their best in the late-mid 90's. They weren't always THE best, but they were always in the top 2.
They were good, but not the best team till about the 80s. And that's it for them, who else was great?

Pakistan - Only towards the end of the 80s.
New Zealand - Nope.
India - Nope.
Sri Lanka - No way.
Australia - Nope.
England - For a time maybe.
S.Africa - Didn't Exist.

Not on You Tube, actually You Tube has about 1/10th of what I've seen of Bradman which is more than likely a hell of a lot more than you- unless you were around in his time so dementia may be to blame for your tosh...
No, unfortunately, all I have is what has been shown on TV and the clips found on the Internet. You must have some secret stash not even the documenters of his life could touch. :laugh:

As for the Tendulkar vs Bradman debate, I think if you knew 1 iota about batting you'd at least see how I could possibly rate him as highly as the Don. All the things which make up a batsman seem to go over your head.
I do get it, that's why I think you're so incredibly naive.

I think a few in this thread, even if they disagree with my opinion, at least know where I'm coming from.
Yes, they know where you are coming from; naivety and ignorance.

There's no video or stat which will prove/disprove what I'm talking about since the 2 batsmen are split by a number of decades.
And using that theory, Larwood was an even better batsman than Tendulkar - since there is no way to prove or disprove, right?

The only way to really prove/disprove my opinion is to see both batsmen bat in both eras against the same bowlers on the same wickets. That wont happen until someone invents a time machine.
Your first mistake was to think your opinion constituted a valid argument.

You have given no proof, and worse what little in the way of opinion you have is non-sensical.

The thing you're not taking into account is how the best batsmen destroy poor bowling. The majority of the Don's runs weren't against the best English bowlers, but he destroyed the also-rans as well as notching up some against the better bowlers.
But even amongst the best, 1-6 (or 1-5), there's still little variation and not much to suggest the gap. You see, this is what you keep missing. It's like there is a hippo on your lap, but you can't feel it.

We are not talking about a difference of a few points, we are talking about 40-50 god damn points.

There was never as great a seam partnership in terms of ability (imo of course, but at the risk of sounding arrogant I think I'm a good judge of talent) as those I mentioned earlier in the thread and even Larwood who many, and I, consider the best English bowler of the time is a country mile away from all the seamers of the likes of Waqar, Wasim, Donald, Ambrose, Walsh etc as an individual.
But you've proven you know jack about Larwood and his era so what good is your judge of talent? Is the ACB or ECB going to ask you to scout soon? I doubt it.

The irony is, the bowlers Tendulkar did do well against was simply the WIndies. He didn't do well against Pakistan nor S.Africa in the 90s. His successes against Australia were either when one or both of Warne or McGrath weren't there. So even on that account, your outta luck.

As I alluded to above, the best bowlers of the time weren't 40 runs per person worse, but the average and poorest bowlers at test level were much worse.
But they weren't the poorest at test level...LOL, you've gone from demeaning the English attack underrating it's potency to raping it by equating it with the WORST test bowlers. :laugh:

Bradman's era was probably the 5th hardest era to bat in and again, you're equating success with talent. This thread is about the batsmen who's 2 levels don't match up.
Between the 2nd-6th eras there is little difference in terms of batting. Even between the 1st and 2nd there is not that much of a gap.

How about knowledge of bowling and batting ability. Do you have any?
Yes. And, don't take my word for it, but many people on this site have played Cricket at one level or another ;).

Boring. Stats don't tell the whole story and "your" stats didn't take into account the growing number of players through the eras (which in itself results in better quality. The more people who play a sport generally equals that sport having a better quality man-for-man. Since you're a football fan first and foremost, I thought you would've noticed that), quality of bowling attack, levels of fitness (which in a bowler's case is hugely important).
Of course stats don't tell the whole story. But that never was the point, was it?

I didn't say: Bradman 100 and Tendulkar 55, hence Bradman is better. I explained WHY those numbers are important. I explained HOW they were achieved. I explained the STANDARD of the eras. Whether there are 100 players or 1000, both have a standard.

With all respect to the forum, I've seen very few "in depth" conversations which wasn't completely based on stats which isn't so much an analysis as being able to read and copy from Wisden.
Then what are you doing here? Seriously. You've gone and questioned one of the easiest answers in Cricket and even fudged that up. Why don't you take your intelligence elsewhere?

I've yet to hear anyone give me a genuine opinion of their own on players of eras past. Maybe you can tell me why exactly you think Bradman is a country mile ahead of Tendulkar without copying stats from Cricinfo?

I'd lvoe to have in-depth conversations, that's the whole reason I joined, but I have only had a few to date.
I've already told you why. But my opinion is also the opinion of others. It will never be unique.

Bradman was a once-in-10-generations-player. His sharp mind, hand-eye coordination and his refusal to be second best, for some 20 years, made him the run-machine no one else has yet come close to. When England opposition were down by some several hundred runs, Keith Miller purposely gave away his wicket while Bradman was annoyed that Keith didn't continue the slaughter. Such is the mind of this perfectionist. He was a boy who hit a ball against a wall with a stump and trained himself. His dedication has never been matched and his natural aptitude is unlikely to be.

If Tendulkar simply batted selfishly, only to get runs for himself, at the expense of time or team or entertainment...he STILL wouldn't touch Bradman. Bradman doesn't have to be this cricketing god with every stroke in the book and the most perfect of footwork, that's not what is required to have his average. It's all the other things that make him special and untouchable.

And it has nothing to do with bias. Viv Richards is my favourite batsman...but not even he is the gleam on Bradman's shoe.
 
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Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
But if batting is so easy as you claim it is in post 2001, then despite the decline Tendulkar should've been able to maintain his brilliance from the 90s.
Not really. Tendulkar of 2003-2006 was little more than a Herschelle Gibbs or Greg Blewett standard batsman. He really wasn't that good.
 

Richard

Cricket Web Staff Member
I just don't agree. A batsman who flays an attack will seize control from the fielding side. I've seen it happen literally hundreds of times.
The way it see it, the fielding side loses control. Not the batsman gains it. I've seen literally hundreds of examples of a batsman coming in, looking dangerous then being nipped out by a good bit of bowling. The bowler can always do this, at any given time; the batsman can never stop the bowler doing whatever he is capable of doing. Only the pitch and ball can do that.

EG, not Mike Gatting nor anyone else could have stopped Shane Warne producing The Ball in 1993. But by producing such a ball, a bowler can stop a batsman doing anything.
And your reference to those players' peaks misses the point. A player can be far from his peak and yet play an exceptional or controlling innings. Eg Viv Richards at Antigua in 1986 when he was, by your reckoning (and I'm not particularly disagreeing), not at his peak. The point about his career peak is that this is the time when the likelihood of such an innings is at its greatest. But all sorts of players, whether at their peak or not, have played controlling innings.
Such random innings' can occur at any random point - Nathan Astle Christchurch 2001/02 being the example I'd always cite. But for some players, it's the sort of innings they'll play once in their life; for most, it's the sort they'll play never. Only a truly once-in-several-generations talent like Richards or Gilchrist will play them more than once (or possibly twice). Though no, they don't have to be on peak consistency - Richards of 1986 and Gilchrist of 2006/07 being the two examples from said batsmen.
I watched McKenzie and Smith at Lord's last year batting in a Boycott/Kirsten mode. And believe me, they controlled the game.
The pitch was the winner. The pitch made it almost impossible to bowl the sorts of deliveries required to dislodge any batsman playing in any manner.

And BTW, both McKenzie and Smith would've been out for <20 had England been able to appeal properly.
 
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zaremba

Cricketer Of The Year
The way it see it, the fielding side loses control. Not the batsman gains it.
I don't think these are mutually exclusive alternatives. On the contrary, batsmen very often cause bowlers to bowl badly. Very few players are able to play as if in a vacuum, oblivious to what's going on around them (and when they do, they hit the heights - I think it's what's termed being "in the zone"). And because a batsman might be capable of scaring, or frustrating, the bejeesus out of a bowler, or of upsetting his all-important rhythm, he will be able to exert real control over events.

Yes there's always the possibility of the "unplayable" delivery but they're very very rare and the possibility of their occurrence is therefore of only peripheral relevance in assessing whether the bowler is truly "in control" of events.
 
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Burgey

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Not really. Tendulkar of 2003-2006 was little more than a Herschelle Gibbs or Greg Blewett standard batsman. He really wasn't that good.
That's an interesting point, and probably well right.

What's also interesting is people often (rightly imo) make such an allowance in that case, but don't allow for the fact that other players may not have been at their best/ not have developed yet, in the previous decade.
 

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