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| Welcome to the World-A-Team Cricket Forum. We promote friendly, good-natured, quality cricket discussion. |
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| Australia Cricket Forum A forum for domestic cricket discussion. Tell us about your favourite club in Australia. Who are the key players to watch? |
| View Poll Results: Who's the 2nd greatest Aussie batsman? | |||
| Ricky Ponting | | 9 | 56.25% |
| Steve Waugh | | 3 | 18.75% |
| Neil Harvey | | 0 | 0% |
| Greg Chappell | | 2 | 12.50% |
| Other | | 2 | 12.50% |
| Voters: 16. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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| What about the great Victor Trumper, considered one of the best batsmen of all time on 'sticky wickets.'
__________________ third-umpire.com |
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| Can only comment on the ones I've seen so have gone for S.Waugh There have been many Aussie batsman I'd rather watch (his brother for one) but for guts and productivity, and if you wanted a player from any country in the 90s to bat for your life he must be your man. |
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| I still have Ponting slightly below the other three great Australian batsmen I have seen (Chappell, Waugh and Border). For all those talking about his average, I remember the exact same statements when Gilchrist finished the tour of South Africa after his double and hundred and averaged 61. What does he average now? 49? Bottom line is, statistics are not too important. In 1986, four players still playing in test cricket averaged over 50 (Border, Javed, Richards, Gavaskar). Now there must be about 15. More importantly, only five additional players averaged over 45. This clearly shows one can't compare people by using figures, like so many are doing nowadays. Ponting's in great form and he really is a delight to watch but there really was no escaping in test cricket 25 years ago when every test team had at least one world class opening bowler. Botham and Willis was a far better test than the current England line up. New Zealand was always a test, Pakistan were much stronger - as were India (and let's not mention the West Indies). I personally believe the record of Chappell in World Series cricket and his continual performance against top class bowling (with the exception of one bad patch in 81 I think against the West Indies) puts him at the top of this list. Border was consistent, you always knew what you'd get from him - his performance in the dark days of Australian cricket was immense (the defeats to NZ) and his Caribbean tour in about 83 was probably the best defiance the quartet EVER had. Finally Waugh, once he won his position back, he put together a five year run of form against quality bowling that unfortunately we will never really get to compare with Ponting. Let's just remember the record of Hayden as a very sobering thought. How good is he? I would suggest he was really pretty mediocre if the truth be known. Last edited by Milo : 06-12-2006 at 11:02 AM. |
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| Not many options for the poll. Ian was better than Greg Chappell IMHO no matter what their career numbers ended up. Harvey is probably the most over-rated batsman there ever was. Style over substance.(Like Dean Jones getting replaced by Mark Waugh) Ponting will end up with all the records but in this era of roped in boundry lines,weak bowling attacks & the new bat technology of today he has it easy. Border was superior to Steve Waugh because he played the majority of his cricket in a weak team & played in a stong bowling era,so I would pick him.
__________________ " You don't want the truth,you can't handle the truth." Last edited by KennyG : 06-12-2006 at 03:35 PM. |
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See http://statserver.cricket.org/guru?s...lds= viewtype |
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Totally agree with you on Jones-Waugh. That Mark Waugh replaced Jones was an absolute crime. |
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| Ian batted #3 & was more attacking.Alot of older Australian cricketers & commentators agree with me too. Deano was better in O.D.I.'s & test cricket than Junior was.Deano batted alot at #3 too. Steve tried it & couldn't handle it.Mark did not have the stomach to even try. As you might have guessed Dean Jones was my favourite.
__________________ " You don't want the truth,you can't handle the truth." |
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| I always liked Dean Jones a lot Kenny. He was your equivalent of David Gower, in that the selectors always messed him about. He did have the odd bad spell (he had a woeful Ashes series in 90/91, when they dropped Steve Waugh for his brother) but when they actually dropped him he had just saved a test match in Sri Lanka and was batting as well as he had ever done. In one day cricket, he still makes my all time XI (batting at 4 after Viv and before Javed). |
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