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- Oct 2, 2004
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An excellent, well-articulated, thought-provoking post on how we are (mis) judging modern-day batters from [MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION] is this week's choice for POTW.
Congratulations!
http://www.pakpassion.net/ppforum/s...e-undervalued-due-to-microanalysis&p=11804943
Congratulations!
http://www.pakpassion.net/ppforum/s...e-undervalued-due-to-microanalysis&p=11804943
While modern batsmen are often considered to be lucky than their predecessors because scoring runs has become relatively easier in white ball cricket, the fact is that they are also subject to greater criticism due to the widespread availability of data. They are undervalued due to microanalysis and are exposed to greater criticism.
For example, Imam-ul-Haq is still not highly rated by many Pakistani fans in spite of possessing a fantastic ODI record: 50 average, 83 SR and 9 centuries in 58 innings. He is well on his way to scoring 25+ ODI hundreds by the time he retires.
The reason why he is not highly rated is because his numbers are not impressive against first-choice attacks.
Today, every cricket fan can access detailed statistics with just one click and jump to conclusions and pass verdicts regarding different players. This builds a perception and collective perception builds a narrative.
Once a narrative is established, it is usually very hard to change unless something dramatic happens. For example, Imam top scoring for Pakistan in a World Cup and leading Pakistan to glory etc.
On the other hand, Saeed Anwar is widely regarded as Pakistan's greatest opener. Any comparison between him and Fakhar and Imam would be deemed blasphemous.
However, Saeed Anwar averaged 22 in Australia after 26 ODIs, 23 in NZ after 11 ODIs and 25 in South Africa after 22 ODIs.
That is an emphatically embarrassing record for any ODI opener, let alone someone who is widely regarded as the greatest ODI opener produced by Pakistan to date.
When Saeed Anwar was playing, this data was not available or accessible to the fans. There was no Cricinfo, no PakPassion, no social media. The fans only consumed what was served to them, i.e. career record, highest score, number of centuries etc. which built the perception and the subsequent narrative around Saeed Anwar.
If Saeed Anwar played today and produced such numbers against the top sides in bilateral ODI series, he would be blasted left, right and center on social media. There would be numerous threads on PakPassion calling him a flat track bully, weak attack basher etc. This narrative did not exist back then because no one was aware of these numbers.
If you - like me - grew up in the 90's admiring Saeed Anwar's batting, these shocking numbers will not change your perception now. However, if you had knowledge of these numbers while growing up, you might have viewed him in a different light.
This thread is not about Imam or Saeed only and neither is it a pitch to consider them as equals (I myself don't - I will take Saeed over Imam any day). In addition, it also applies to bowlers but I emphasized on batsmen because they are subject to greater criticism because of the narrative that the rules and conditions are favorable for them especially in white ball cricket.
The gist of this discourse is to debate how the overflow of information and ease of access of data has hurt the image of players, especially batsman, and how they have absolutely no room for error.
Nothing is hidden from the public anymore - every single failure is highlighted and discussed. This is an overlooked aspect when it comes to modern players and they have to do a lot more than their predecessors to gain approval of the fans.