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__________________ "Checkout the big brain on Brett" Pulp Fiction |
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As for Harmison we will have to take a long term view and assess his record over a period of time. If he fails to reach the top five for a while in the future we will say that reflects in his performance and the number 1 position can be seen in context. Nothing but a bit of a accident.
__________________ "Checkout the big brain on Brett" Pulp Fiction |
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They do. The batsmen get rated against the bowlers on show, and the performance of the other players in the Test... http://www.sidlothian.com/cricket/cricket.htm Quote:
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| Thanks flanlflinger, you saved me from doing a lot of typing By the way, as you and I were talking about Sobers, I just came back from Barbados over a week ago and bought the great man himself a drink!! |
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Nevertheless, thanks for putting me right. How the hell did Harmison end up number one? The West Indians were very poor in the Caribbean last time out. Big anomaly.
__________________ Red-it, Red-it, Read it and wept |
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| The presence of the then highly rated Lara, Sarawan anmd Chanderpaul probably made a diffrence... |
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__________________ Steven |
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| My first concern with the rating system is the win bonus: it inflates the ratings of players in a successful team... which seems pretty mean. Thorpe and Fraser never had the luxury of playing in successful teams... not least because they had the (mis)fortune to live in very interesting times when the quality of opposition was high (for Thorpe think of the attacks of WI, Aus, Pak, Ind, SA). My other concern is the way it is skewed towards the prima-donnas. If you bat like Gilchrist does.. and just try and ride your luck even when the needs of the team are for something else... you'll always be flattered by the ratings when compared to a player like Atherton (never had a license to go looking for runs, burdened throughout his career with the job of protecting his fragile middle order team-mates from new ball pairings like Ambrose and Walsh, Donald and Pollock, Wasim and Waqar and McGrath and Gillespie. This one's even more serious: if you bowl as Waqar did.. rather erratically, but in short spells with attacking fields and a license to go for it... the ratings flatter you... where if you are left bowling long spells with the old ball with the field back and the batsmen are on top... you'll perhaps be doing more for your team but with no-where near the reward. Wasim might well have suffered on that front... and certainly Fraser... and more recently Freddie "go block up an end" Flintoff and Ashley "go block up the other end" Giles... will have suffered. It's difficult to see just how the ratings can credit donkey-work... but take one look at the huge workload shouldered by Walsh, Warne, Murali, McGrath and Kumble: that's been a massive factor in the value of those players... and it's overlooked. |
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| Most of the points Rachael makes are interesting ones about the possible limitations of the present rating system. Except Asheley Giles a rubbish bowler. I have seen him with attacking fields hasn't got a clue.Against SA in the 2nd Test on the fourth day attacking fields didn't make an impression. Best bowling his negative line which rules out lbw. Yes the present rating systems may give misleading impressions but until someone proposes a better replacement we will have to go by the present one. Does anyone know how the present system was drawn up? Who was involved? Expert statistians I assume. |
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