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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? |
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| All Ramps needed was Ponting's skill, Lara's concentration, Viv Richards power, Sachin Tendulkar's technique and Donald Bradman's body, mind and soul.
__________________ Bill Ponsford - The only one who could play in Bradman’s company and make it a duet. |
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Last edited by Pete : 22-02-2007 at 12:15 PM. |
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| Well there isnt much differences statistically. Ok Haydens played more cricket but lets look at there careers if we evened them up. It is impossible to compare them accuratly because of the time difference, but this is a close as I can get. Hayden - Last 60 matches, 5413 runs at 54.13, 19x100, 18x50, Hs 380 Hobbs - Last 60 matches, 5299 runs at 56.97, 15x100, 27x50, Hs 211 I dont see much difference, Hobbs averages around 2 runs more but Hayden has more runs and more hundreds. I think it is even.
__________________ Bill Ponsford - The only one who could play in Bradman’s company and make it a duet. |
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| Hayden has never played on uncovered wickets... but has played in three countries where both conditions and the quality of the seam / swing bowling actually could occasionally merit attention. Code: Mat I NO Runs HS1 HS2 HS3 Ave 100 50 0 in England 10 18 2 552 138 68 42 34.50 1 1 2 in New Zealand 4 7 0 197 61 38 37 28.14 0 1 0 in South Africa 10 18 0 624 122 102 96 34.66 2 3 5 Code: Mat I NO Runs HS1 HS2 HS3 Ave 100 50 0 in Australia 24 45 2 2493 187 178 154 57.97 9 9 2 in England 25 38 3 1723 211 119 107 49.22 4 10 1 in South Africa 10 17 2 982 187 97 93* 65.46 1 8 1 |
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Likewise, during his formative years, Matthew Hayden would have known the sort of condtions that he would be required to bat under and so would have concentrated on building his skills to suit those conditions. He has done that very well so far and better than a lot of other batsmen. You cannot ask for more than that. At the end of the day, all that matters is how a player performs under existing conditions; if he does well, he is a good player. It is no use arguing how Hayden would have performed under the conditions in which Hobbs batterd and vice versa. It is like saying that someone like Mark Ramprakash is really a great batsman despite his poor record because his batting would have put Bradman to shade if he had been around in the 1930s. And if you go around looking for excuses like Simon Jones' fall helping Matthew Hayden's batting, we are entering the realm of the ridiculous. That line of 'if only' arguement can be extended to almost anything...like if Pietersen had been given out when he was clearly leg before early in his innings of the final Ashes test of 2005. |
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| I'd be interested to see how long Hayden continues now. Now that Australia have lost their two World Champion bowlers (from Test cricket at least) the true worth of any future big innings will come to the fore. Australia's batsmen will now face much greater pressure - on going to the wicket - in the full knowledge that they no longer have an attack to dismiss good teams. If Hayden manages a triple hundred at Karachi or Gillespie a double ton at the Kennington Oval, in the next few years, then they will indeed be great players.With regard to inflated averages; in days gone by, cricket matches used to involve the use of the entire playing surface. Test matches in my memory haven’t bothered to use the entire playing surface. Whether this is because international sides wish to lessen the threat of sharp spinning bowling, or because the ground authorities wish to gain much more revenue from punters sitting closer to the action, I don’t know. But I am rather inclined to go for the former there, because it’s been a very long time indeed since I’ve seen school-boys sitting cross-legged between the advertising hoardings and the boundary rope. Doubtless someone will reply that it is an insurance thing; to do with halting the horror of players running full tilt into all that boundary advertising; and by that same token, continuing the exhilarating sight of ultra-athletic fielders slip-sliding on one knee (watch out Simon Jones) to flick-back boundary-bound balls just before the rope. I still think it is a method of negating the effect of massive spinning deliveries. Ensuring that a mightily mis-hit smash into the wide deep blue yonder is ever more likely to clear the rope; and giving brutal batsmen fabulous, yet unlikely, high scores.
__________________ Red-it, Red-it, Read it and wept |
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