| | |
| |
| Welcome to the World-A-Team Cricket Forum. We promote friendly, good-natured, quality cricket discussion. |
| |||||||
| Australia Cricket Forum A forum for domestic cricket discussion. Tell us about your favourite club in Australia. Who are the key players to watch? |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
| ||||
| Quote:
|
| | |||
| |||
| Quote:
I think of him as a fortunate Hick: had Hick been batting in Hayden's timeframe (and against the limited opposition Hayden has faced) I think he'd also have averged 50+... but we all know what Hick actually managed after regular maulings by the top attacks of his era.. and I think Hayden would have done the same in Hick's place. Bottom line: you could have sent the likes of Ponting and Martyn out with a lightweight bat from the 1950s and (as with Mark Waugh before them) it would have made little difference. Same with Jayawardene, Yousuf and many, many others. Take that ultra-modern bat from Hayden... and I reckon he'd have struggled to have anything like the same impact: he's been VERY reliant on short arm jabs, pushing hard on forward defensives and getting through / over the infield with thick edges... and would have had to work a LOT harder for the same rewards! |
| |||
| Quote:
You cannot compare averages across generations. You never could. You can only compare them amongst contemporaries. Quote:
A first class bully. When he stepped up to the big boys, he failed. Drop him down to his comfort level and he started looking like a world class player. That was not misfortune on Hick's part or fortune on Hayden's. Just Hick's failure. Simple. That does not need to be brought into any discussion of Hayden. Quote:
You can't prove a single thing of what you've said in this paragraph but you still try to pass it off as fact. Saying "bottom line" doesn't make it true. It's all wishful thinking. So all these other guys, who score runs now along with Hayden in the same era of "inlfated" averages, would be able to play in the 1950s with a "lightweight" bat but not Hayden? Hmmm....... My grandfather had a bat from the 50s once used by Worrell. I can assure you it was not lightweight. You've used this "time travelling" argument to promote the charms of Carl Hooper, who though he had average to low success in his own time, would have miraculously been a bigger success if he had played earlier! Hayden is one of the game's elite players. I don't believe he is a great but he is on the rung below that. His record DEMANDS that he be given that respect. Don Bradman, Sachin Tendulkar, Viv Richards, Brian Lara, Malcolm Marshall (to name just five players) are greats of the game of cricket. They are not great because they did what they did in 1947 or 1977 or 1997 etc.. They are great because of what they do. Greatness in sport is about delivery and performance. If you can do it and look good at the same time then they'll love you even more but doing it is what counts first and foremost. At the tail end of his career, Hayden can look back at what he has ACHIEVED in the only timeframe he could achieve it in (i.e. his own reality and space in time!) and consider his career a huge success!! |
| ||||
| Quote:
I am sorry, but I cannot agree to that assessment. IMO, Hick was and always will be a second-rate batsman whose status is reflected in his mediocre Test record. He is one of several players who could do well in the First Class arena but fail to make the next grade convincingly. Mark Ramprakash is another of the same genre. Quote:
By far the most awful batting technique that I have ever seen was that of Graham Gooch. Yet, the same people who criticise Hayden think of Gooch as demi-god, even though the latter's overall batting record is significantly inferior to that of the Australian. |
| |||
| Quote:
For starters... he'd not have had to face the Aussie attack! Equating Hick with Ramps, however, makes no sense: Ramps was far, far more accomplished and sophisticated... and did NOT struggle against the best opposition. Hick always looked more likely to thrive when the going got easy and the opposition was weak... but Ramps (and this is the frustrating bit) was quite the reverse! Ramps was one of the few England players EVER who could (with different management and captaincy) have been as accomplished as Dravid. |
| | ||||
| ||||
| Quote:
|
| | |||
| |||
| Quote:
|
| ||||
| One question if Hayden is only averaging 53+ because he is playing currently what does it say for ever other batsman in world cricket who average 40. Hayden could of walked into any side in the history of the game, his power doesn’t come from his bat have you ever seen him his is massive his chest and shoulders are bigger than most rugby players. Yes I would agree that his last hundred came against poor opposition, 153 at the MCG vs England.
__________________ Bill Ponsford - The only one who could play in Bradman’s company and make it a duet. |
| | ||||
| ||||
| Quote:
|
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |