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Viv Richards vs Sunil Gavaskar vs Greg Chappell - The better Test player?

Richards is arguably second best batsman after Bradman.
 
Chappell’s batting look so aesthetically pleasing! Must have been a joy to watch
 
Absolutely.Richards simply struck terror in the opposition like a bomber raiding an airbase.No batsmen arguably ever could turn the complexion of game as Sir Viv.

It is not about statistics only.It is the impact and ability to demoralise the opposition .Lillee and Imran rated Viv as the best batsmen they ever bowled to more difficult than Barry Richards .One mist never forget the advantage Sunil Gavasakar had during Kerry Packer cricket when he notched 4 centuries against West Indies and 5 against Australia against their 2nd string bowling attacks.He was never prolific against Lillee as Viv nor at his best was he the equal of Viv against Imran.Ian Botham rated Viv Richards as the best bat he ever saw and even the Pakistan players of later eras rank him the best ever like Inzamam or Wasim.He received 64 votes for a place in the all-time xi significantly more than Lara or Tendulkar.

Viv's only weakness may have been against spin.Technically many great batsmen were ahead of him like the Chappel brothers,Gavaskar,Boycott,Tendulkar,Barry Richards etc.Still played many a great innings on the sub-continent like his 120 at Multan in 1989 and 108 at Delhi in 1987-88.

Rather than aggregate or average we should analyse impact and in my view in that respect perhaps noone surpassed Viv.From 1976-80 he was the best batsmen after Bradman,including WSC stats.Even when not at his best in the late 80's he was just about the best batsmen in the world before the ascendancy of Miandad.If he wished he may have broken all the batting records.

Yeah, Chandra got Sir Viv a few times in his beginning and Qadir near his end after his eyes had gone.

Lillee had a bit of success against him too. DK raised himself against the real top batters. There is YouTube footage of him bowling Sir Viv with a fast off-break, last ball of the day, reducing WI to 10-4 or something. That would have been something to watch - two of the ultimate champions of history locking horns.
 
Absolutely.Richards simply struck terror in the opposition like a bomber raiding an airbase.No batsmen arguably ever could turn the complexion of game as Sir Viv.

It is not about statistics only.It is the impact and ability to demoralise the opposition .Lillee and Imran rated Viv as the best batsmen they ever bowled to more difficult than Barry Richards .One mist never forget the advantage Sunil Gavasakar had during Kerry Packer cricket when he notched 4 centuries against West Indies and 5 against Australia against their 2nd string bowling attacks.He was never prolific against Lillee as Viv nor at his best was he the equal of Viv against Imran.Ian Botham rated Viv Richards as the best bat he ever saw and even the Pakistan players of later eras rank him the best ever like Inzamam or Wasim.He received 64 votes for a place in the all-time xi significantly more than Lara or Tendulkar.

Viv's only weakness may have been against spin.Technically many great batsmen were ahead of him like the Chappel brothers,Gavaskar,Boycott,Tendulkar,Barry Richards etc.Still played many a great innings on the sub-continent like his 120 at Multan in 1989 and 108 at Delhi in 1987-88.

Rather than aggregate or average we should analyse impact and in my view in that respect perhaps noone surpassed Viv.From 1976-80 he was the best batsmen after Bradman,including WSC stats.Even when not at his best in the late 80's he was just about the best batsmen in the world before the ascendancy of Miandad.If he wished he may have broken all the batting records.

Yeah, Chandra got Sir Viv a few times in his beginning and Qadir near his end after his eyes had gone.

Lillee had a bit of success against him too. DK raised himself against the real top batters. There is YouTube footage of him bowling Sir Viv with a fast off-break, last ball of the day, reducing WI to 10-4 or something. That would have been something to watch - two of the ultimate champions of history locking horns.

As far as I understand it, cricket is a game of number of runs scored. If a team scores more runs it wins. So logically, a batsman should "demoralize", "strike terror like a bomber raiding an airbase", "like a shark speeding towards a tuna", "a deer in the headlights", "Mike Tyson getting ready to deliver an upper cut", "the headmistress approaching a truant boy", "a hawk swooping down on a pigeon", "a boa constrictor wrapping itself around its prey", "a lumberjack approaching a tree with his chainsaw", "like a PPer arguing without facts", "like Thanksgiving in a turkey's dreams"... well, you get the idea I think, a bowler who believes that the batsman is going to score more runs than the competition.

Gavaskar not only scored more runs than Richards at a higher average, had more longevity, faced better bowling and as an opener protected batsmen lower down the order pushing India to the #1 Test position in the early 1970s at a time no subcontinental team could dream of such a feat, that Richards simply is so far behind that he should never be mentioned in the same sentence as Gavaskar.
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Viv is overrated in Tests, esp here on PP. I have watched his career live and while he was very good, people here have put him on a pedestal higher than he himself would ever put himself.
There is no doubt he was a bully and bowlers by instinct were on the defensive bowling at him, but to call him some sort of a craftsman and technician with the bat is bizarre. He could not hold his own against good spin unless the wicket was totally flat, and that was because he did not have a good defensive technique. His game was based on more hand-eye coordination in the mold of Sehwag (not comparing batsmen here, just their style).
But to each his own, everyone is entitled to their opinion just like I am.
 
Viv is overrated in Tests, esp here on PP. I have watched his career live and while he was very good, people here have put him on a pedestal higher than he himself would ever put himself.
There is no doubt he was a bully and bowlers by instinct were on the defensive bowling at him, but to call him some sort of a craftsman and technician with the bat is bizarre. He could not hold his own against good spin unless the wicket was totally flat, and that was because he did not have a good defensive technique. His game was based on more hand-eye coordination in the mold of Sehwag (not comparing batsmen here, just their style).
But to each his own, everyone is entitled to their opinion just like I am.

Good post. Well written and well argued :)
 
Viv would have scored more runs than Lara had he played in a similarly weak team. With all the great players around him, perhaps he didn’t focus the way he should have. His will to dominate the bowlers regardless of the situation sometimes got better of him.

He could have ground out and averaged in 60s but then what fun would that be? Cricket history would have been much poorer if Viv had taken the “professional approach”.
 
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Junaid throw light on WSC packer supertests to throw light on Greg Chapell as well as scores versus Rest of the World.Remember Viv was not prolific in 1st class games against his own speedsters and also was not at his best versus Pakistan in 1977 facing Imran.Neverthless I do think morally he was a king.Also remember Sunny's 221 at the Oval and his 101 and 57 on a rained wicket at Old Trafford.I wondered whether one should alos mention Ian Chappell and Barry Richards in this bracket who were ranked in the top 3 by none other than Gary Sobers in 1979.

Never forget Greg Chapell's outstanding achievement in West Indies in 1979 where in 5 supertests against close to best attack of all time he scored 621 runs at an average of 69 with 3 centuries.No batsmen performed better against the hostile Caribbean attack on their soil like Greg not even Gavaskar.

It is worth noting that it is more challenging for batsmen to face the West Indian speedsters on the fast bouncy pitches in Australia rather than the slower batting tracks in the Carribean.On a fast Australian wicket Greg scored 246 versus a world xi in Wsc cricket in 1977-78 and amassed 702 runs in a home series v West Indies in 1975-76.Greg had a higher aggregate than even Viv in WSC and a better average.Adding scores versus Rest of the world in 1972 Greg averaged above 55.Thta too this was on the fastest tracks in the world.

In addition Greg has scored an unbeaten 235 in Pakistan in 1980,380 runs in a single test in 1974 and 174 in 1982 in New Zealand as well as a classic 131 at Lords in1972.

Thus he conquered all types of conditions and excelled in cricket with its standards ta the highest level in WSC.Classical knock sin the seaming English conditions,the turning sub-continent tracks and the fast pitches of Australia and West Indies.

Pakistani wickets were flat by all accounts to nullify the Lillie factor..
 
As far as I understand it, cricket is a game of number of runs scored. If a team scores more runs it wins. So logically, a batsman should "demoralize", "strike terror like a bomber raiding an airbase", "like a shark speeding towards a tuna", "a deer in the headlights", "Mike Tyson getting ready to deliver an upper cut", "the headmistress approaching a truant boy", "a hawk swooping down on a pigeon", "a boa constrictor wrapping itself around its prey", "a lumberjack approaching a tree with his chainsaw", "like a PPer arguing without facts", "like Thanksgiving in a turkey's dreams"... well, you get the idea I think, a bowler who believes that the batsman is going to score more runs than the competition.

Gavaskar not only scored more runs than Richards at a higher average, had more longevity, faced better bowling and as an opener protected batsmen lower down the order pushing India to the #1 Test position in the early 1970s at a time no subcontinental team could dream of such a feat, that Richards simply is so far behind that he should never be mentioned in the same sentence as Gavaskar.[/]
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I suppose it could appear that way if you look at the numbers only. If you didn’t see these players and ignore the informed opinion of their peers then numbers alone are what you are left with. You are rewriting a history I don’t think you remember based on a shallow and limited method.

That’s up to you. I wish you well. But try reading books - I guarantee that you will begin to enjoy deeper richness of understanding and enjoyment.
 
I suppose it could appear that way if you look at the numbers only. If you didn’t see these players and ignore the informed opinion of their peers then numbers alone are what you are left with. You are rewriting a history I don’t think you remember based on a shallow and limited method.

That’s up to you. I wish you well. But try reading books - I guarantee that you will begin to enjoy deeper richness of understanding and enjoyment.

Claiming a "deeper richness of understanding" is the last refuge of those who do not have the facts to back their arguments. My post was based on numbers and facts such as batting position, quality of opposition bowling etc.
 
As far as I understand it, cricket is a game of number of runs scored. If a team scores more runs it wins. So logically, a batsman should "demoralize", "strike terror like a bomber raiding an airbase", "like a shark speeding towards a tuna", "a deer in the headlights", "Mike Tyson getting ready to deliver an upper cut", "the headmistress approaching a truant boy", "a hawk swooping down on a pigeon", "a boa constrictor wrapping itself around its prey", "a lumberjack approaching a tree with his chainsaw", "like a PPer arguing without facts", "like Thanksgiving in a turkey's dreams"... well, you get the idea I think, a bowler who believes that the batsman is going to score more runs than the competition.

Gavaskar not only scored more runs than Richards at a higher average, had more longevity, faced better bowling and as an opener protected batsmen lower down the order pushing India to the #1 Test position in the early 1970s at a time no subcontinental team could dream of such a feat, that Richards simply is so far behind that he should never be mentioned in the same sentence as Gavaskar.
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Hahahahahah, savage. I actually don't mind a well meaning, civil, logical, respectful, data driven debate with some of the nostalgic posters here but they run away, never to respond when I challenge their opinions with facts. Harsh called Greg Chappell a master of subcontinental conditions, I presented him with cold hard facts and waited for his response, reminded him a couple of times, but nothing, nada.

All we get in response are more of those inane metaphors. I can respond with my own like "Gavaskar was like a Shaolin monk practising his 5 fundamental stances when confronted by the doorways of hell", "Gavaskar's will was undaunted, immovable like the gargantuan Kanchenjunga" and all that tosh. I choose not to go down that path, these flowery words and figurative expressions do their best to hide the glaring gaps in the actual argument.
 
[MENTION=132062]Harsh Thakor[/MENTION] you didn't get back to me with regards to the conquest of SC conditions by Greg Chappell. Kindly read post#35 and give your views. Having a facts based discussion will be more appropriate when dealing with these 3 titans of our sport.

235 at Faisalabad facing Imran at his fastest.56 and 57 at Lahore in final test.Never played in India.Still averaged around 76 in Pakistan which is remarkable.
 
It also comes down to people you like watching. I'm not saying I'd pick Mark Waugh over Steve Waugh simply because I loved watching the format play, because the gulf in their numbers are so huge. But when it comes to people with pretty similar numbers, I would personally pick the player I love watching most.

Not arguing who was better between Viv and Sunny, but the thing that really goes in Viv's favor is that he completely revolutionized batting and was 30-35 years ahead of his time. People loved watching him play. But then again, you cannot strike off the factors in Sunny's favor that has been previously mentioned in this thread just because of Viv's superiority in terms of demolishing attacks. Both have different factors going in their favor. Sunny played for a weak team, had to face the West Indian bowlers whom Viv didn't have to play against, opened the innings. Those are the points that goes in favor of Sunny, and no one can discount them.
 
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No Gavaskar was more prolific against Imran than Viv. In fact Pakistan was a team Viv used to struggle against.

You want to devalue Gavaskar's 100s, same can be done with Viv or any other ATG batsman for that matter. What is so special about his 120 in Multan, a boring draw? Or his 109* in Delhi against the deadly quartet of Arshad Ayub, Maninder Singh, Ravi Shastri, Chetan Sharma on a flattened wicket? You seriously have the nerve to downplay Sunny's 100s and sing ballads about Viv's 100s against popgun attacks?

Talking about peer reviews are you aware of the fact that during his knighthood celebrations party Sir Gary Sobers called Gavaskar the greatest batsman of all time? Won't be tough to search about similar reviews about Sunny from other greats. FYI Wasim picked Sunny as his most prized wicket and not his bunny Viv.

Sure overall Viv was the best because he was the ODI GOAT but OP specifically asked about test cricket.

In test cricket Viv Richards has been the greater match-winner with his incredible strike rate.Viv has a much better record facing Dennis Lillee ,who was the best paceman of his time . On bouncy Australian tracks,Viv overshadowed every batsmen.Lillee rated him the best he ever bowled to as well as Imran and Wasim.Botham ranked him the bets he ever saw and so did Border,Willis etc.


Comparing them is like rating chalk and cheese .Both were very different types of players.Greg Chappell was like both of them blended into one.To me no great after the Don has equalled Viv Richards from 1976-80.Averaging 86.2 in 1sy yaer of WSC facing greats like Lillee and averaging 118.82 in England in 1976.

I dont deny Gavaskar was a very great batsmen arguably in the top 5-10 of all time and amongst the 3 best openers ever.However it was Viv who turned the complexion of games more.It could even go down to a draw if you add WSC records.No doubt he broke records facing the greatest bowling attacks and there is a case for his being 2nd to only Bradman.However he did not posess the artistry or flamboyance of stars like Lara or Sobers .


Regarding Greg Chappell on the fast wickets and against great pace statistically he was the best.Including WSC supertests this to me is correct.Greg topped aggregate in WSC cricket,averaging more than Viv.Had best scores of 246 and 174 and averaged 69 in West Indies with 3 centuries in 1979.However Greg did not open the batting and was not at his best against the bouncing delivery.
 
Claiming a "deeper richness of understanding" is the last refuge of those who do not have the facts to back their arguments. My post was based on numbers and facts such as batting position, quality of opposition bowling etc.

Your facts are a good beginning to understanding but two dimensional - they lack the third dimension of context, which being there at the time and reading various different perspectives will give you.

Of course you will reject this because you are standing right in front of a wall - you can’t see the whole house. So the house does not exist in your mind because it can’t be perceived by you.

Step back from the wall and see the whole thing. It may take twenty years, but one day you will be reading a youngster tell you that Kohli is overrated, based on his reading of numbers alone. Then you will get my point.
 
In test cricket Viv Richards has been the greater match-winner with his incredible strike rate.
lol.

Who won't have better chances to be a match winner in tests, if you have WI famed pace quartet at your disposal especially when you don't have to face them? And what bowling lineup did Sunny had during most of his career?
 
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Explain the bolded bit [MENTION=132062]Harsh Thakor[/MENTION].

Greg Chappell never set foot in India during his test career.

Greg Chappell played 4 out of his 87 tests in the subcontinent.

3 against Pakistan in 1980: Failed miserably in the turning pitch at Karachi which Pakistan won. Remaining 2 tests were high scoring draws (617 meets 382/2 decl at Faisalabad and the Lahore snoozefest with spinners rendered toothless, where 1200+ runs were scored across 3 innings and not once was there an all out displayed on the scorecard !!!)

1 against minnow Sri Lanka in 1983 where he scored 66 in an innings of 514/4. Arjuna Ranatunga was Lanka's 1st change bowler and there were 4 other hacks who would make Dodda Ganesh and Reetinder Sodhi look like mythical beasts.

You can tag other respected posters to confirm/re-examine your stance regarding this issue. I will say that the Aussie as legendary as he was has no right to be conferred the title 'a master of all conditions'. And SC conditions are a big part just like English/Aussie conditions because of radically different skill sets required.

Don't bring the '70s SCG/MCG=spin wicket' argument because it can never simulate SC conditions in the truest form. Chepauk (and Green Park for a brief period of time) was a lightning quick pitch once upon a time, never have I seen Indian fans bring that up to defend the prowess of old time Indian batsmen against pace. The current Dharamsala pitch has more juice than most SENA pitches, don't see anyone bring that up while talking about 'conditions'.

Thus he conquered all types of conditions and excelled in cricket with its standards ta the highest level in WSC.Classical knock sin the seaming English conditions,the turning sub-continent tracks and the fast pitches of Australia and West Indies.

235 at Faisalabad facing Imran at his fastest.56 and 57 at Lahore in final test.Never played in India.Still averaged around 76 in Pakistan which is remarkable.

Thanks for responding but I had already addressed that in an earlier post. Quoted relevant bits above.

Chappell failed miserably in the only test against Pak which was a typical turning SC wicket.

His 235 came in a match where Australia scored 617 followed by Pakistan's response of 382/2. What does such a match prove? How does it matter what Chappell did against Imran in that pancake pitch? How does it cement his credentials against spin bowling of the SC?

His 56 and 57 in the final test again was on a flat pitch where 3 innings were played, 400+ runs scored in each one of them and not once was a side dismissed.

His average of 76 is misleading because in the only proper SC wicket he failed and did stats boosting in 2 dead pitches. He never set foot in India and never returned to play in Pakistan, he has no credentials in Asia. I am sure no Asian batsman will be rated as ATG if he were to have a similar tryst with SENA countries like the Aussie in SC. Standards are different for our players and non Asian superstars.
 
In test cricket Viv Richards has been the greater match-winner with his incredible strike rate.Viv has a much better record facing Dennis Lillee ,who was the best paceman of his time . On bouncy Australian tracks,Viv overshadowed every batsmen.Lillee rated him the best he ever bowled to as well as Imran and Wasim.Botham ranked him the bets he ever saw and so did Border,Willis etc.

You are free to rate Viv as a greater test batsman, that is not my point of contention. Rather it is the line of argument you choose to make him look like someone greater than what he was and Sunny as someone lesser than what he deserves.

Why does SR matter in test cricket? I don't see Sehwag get extra marks by pundits for having 80+ SR, or for that matter Kapil or Gilchrist. Besides being in such a great team Viv had license to play at a high SR, they hardly ever chased a game, instead invariably dominating ruthlessly. Sunny playing for a weaker team had to be extra cautious, India was a team that had a much lower ceiling than WI. We played for draws against better opponents while WI lorded over inferior units. Put the same Sunny in an ATG team and he would shine as a matchwinner, great players adapt their playing style to their environment and Sunny was a great.

Viv may have played Lillee better but was Lillee the only ATG bowler of his time? Sunny would have handled a few better than Viv and Chappell a few better than the former two. That is the way cricket works, every player has a nemesis and a convenient opponent. Again coming to peer reviews it is a dicey subject. You will get plenty of players who rated XYZ above Viv. Sobers and Wasim rated Sunny as the best, I have seen those videos. Similarly I am sure there will be interviews by ex players calling Barry Richards or Greg Chappell the best of that era. All that is subjective.
 
Your facts are a good beginning to understanding but two dimensional - they lack the third dimension of context, which being there at the time and reading various different perspectives will give you.

Of course you will reject this because you are standing right in front of a wall - you can’t see the whole house. So the house does not exist in your mind because it can’t be perceived by you.

Step back from the wall and see the whole thing. It may take twenty years, but one day you will be reading a youngster tell you that Kohli is overrated, based on his reading of numbers alone. Then you will get my point.

There is likewise enough written material that places Sunny on a very high pedestal due to the fact that he played against the WI fast bowlers. A fact that you doggedly refuse to address and yet have the gall to lecture others on lacking perspective.

I repeat again Sunny and Kapil are the only 2 players who scored run-a-ball test hundreds against WI . Viv never could manage that against those bowlers in county or domestic cricket.
[MENTION=142162]Napa[/MENTION]
 
As far as I understand it, cricket is a game of number of runs scored. If a team scores more runs it wins. So logically, a batsman should "demoralize", "strike terror like a bomber raiding an airbase", "like a shark speeding towards a tuna", "a deer in the headlights", "Mike Tyson getting ready to deliver an upper cut", "the headmistress approaching a truant boy", "a hawk swooping down on a pigeon", "a boa constrictor wrapping itself around its prey", "a lumberjack approaching a tree with his chainsaw", "like a PPer arguing without facts", "like Thanksgiving in a turkey's dreams"... well, you get the idea I think, a bowler who believes that the batsman is going to score more runs than the competition.

Gavaskar not only scored more runs than Richards at a higher average, had more longevity, faced better bowling and as an opener protected batsmen lower down the order pushing India to the #1 Test position in the early 1970s at a time no subcontinental team could dream of such a feat, that Richards simply is so far behind that he should never be mentioned in the same sentence as Gavaskar.
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Epic post . Really enjoyed those cheesy metaphors ... "shark speeding towards tuna" ... Brilliant :bow:
 
Your facts are a good beginning to understanding but two dimensional - they lack the third dimension of context, which being there at the time and reading various different perspectives will give you.

Of course you will reject this because you are standing right in front of a wall - you can’t see the whole house. So the house does not exist in your mind because it can’t be perceived by you.

Step back from the wall and see the whole thing. It may take twenty years, but one day you will be reading a youngster tell you that Kohli is overrated, based on his reading of numbers alone. Then you will get my point.

Gavaskar's context (playing for a team with weak bowlers, protecting other batsmen, pushing India to the #1 ranking) makes his record even more superior to Richards than mere numbers suggest.

Your claim about Richard's superiority based on context is merely imaginary unless you have something to back it up. Not just what some bowler said (there are many bowlers) but something more convincing.

As for reading books, I have read quite a few in my time.
 
Hahahahahah, savage. I actually don't mind a well meaning, civil, logical, respectful, data driven debate with some of the nostalgic posters here but they run away, never to respond when I challenge their opinions with facts. Harsh called Greg Chappell a master of subcontinental conditions, I presented him with cold hard facts and waited for his response, reminded him a couple of times, but nothing, nada.

All we get in response are more of those inane metaphors. I can respond with my own like "Gavaskar was like a Shaolin monk practising his 5 fundamental stances when confronted by the doorways of hell", "Gavaskar's will was undaunted, immovable like the gargantuan Kanchenjunga" and all that tosh. I choose not to go down that path, these flowery words and figurative expressions do their best to hide the glaring gaps in the actual argument.

"Gavaskar was like a Shaolin monk practising his 5 fundamental stances when confronted by the doorways of hell"... legendary!!!

Yeah, Richards scored faster, but he also got out faster.
 
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There is likewise enough written material that places Sunny on a very high pedestal due to the fact that he played against the WI fast bowlers. A fact that you doggedly refuse to address and yet have the gall to lecture others on lacking perspective.

I repeat again Sunny and Kapil are the only 2 players who scored run-a-ball test hundreds against WI . Viv never could manage that against those bowlers in county or domestic cricket.

[MENTION=142162]Napa[/MENTION]

The contribution an opener makes by protecting later batsmen cannot be underestimated. If we had an opener who was half the opener Gavaskar was, we would have won the SA and England series. Recent scores of 19/3 or 40/4 are telling. Incredibly, Gavaskar actually had a higher average outside Asia than he did in Asia. Richards in comparison averages 3 less in Asia compared to his overall average.

http://stats.espncricinfo.com/ci/en...art;template=results;type=batting;view=series
 
In test cricket Viv Richards has been the greater match-winner with his incredible strike rate.Viv has a much better record facing Dennis Lillee ,who was the best paceman of his time . On bouncy Australian tracks,Viv overshadowed every batsmen.Lillee rated him the best he ever bowled to as well as Imran and Wasim.Botham ranked him the bets he ever saw and so did Border,Willis etc.


Comparing them is like rating chalk and cheese .Both were very different types of players.Greg Chappell was like both of them blended into one.To me no great after the Don has equalled Viv Richards from 1976-80.Averaging 86.2 in 1sy yaer of WSC facing greats like Lillee and averaging 118.82 in England in 1976.

I dont deny Gavaskar was a very great batsmen arguably in the top 5-10 of all time and amongst the 3 best openers ever.However it was Viv who turned the complexion of games more.It could even go down to a draw if you add WSC records.No doubt he broke records facing the greatest bowling attacks and there is a case for his being 2nd to only Bradman.However he did not posess the artistry or flamboyance of stars like Lara or Sobers .


Regarding Greg Chappell on the fast wickets and against great pace statistically he was the best.Including WSC supertests this to me is correct.Greg topped aggregate in WSC cricket,averaging more than Viv.Had best scores of 246 and 174 and averaged 69 in West Indies with 3 centuries in 1979.However Greg did not open the batting and was not at his best against the bouncing delivery.

I would totally discount the WSC cricket as it was unauthorized and a rebel league! Gavaskar did not even play there so you have no comparison data available. Let's stick to Test cricket and leave your poetry and prose aside when doing comparisons.
You are comparing one person who was good against pace and poor against spin to another who was a master of playing the greatest fast attack in the world and great at playing spin. Richard played spin off the pitch, and Gavaskar played it right off of the hand. Sehwag's strike rate is way higher than Tendulkar's, but that does not make him better than Tendulkar.

As far as being a greater match winner is concerned, WI were winners not because Richards scored a quick-fire 50, it was because their fearsome pace bowlers ran through the opposition. On the contrary, India did not lose many more matches because Gavaskar saved them by staying at the wicket and putting a price on his wicket.
 
I would totally discount the WSC cricket as it was unauthorized and a rebel league! Gavaskar did not even play there so you have no comparison data available. Let's stick to Test cricket and leave your poetry and prose aside when doing comparisons.
You are comparing one person who was good against pace and poor against spin to another who was a master of playing the greatest fast attack in the world and great at playing spin. Richard played spin off the pitch, and Gavaskar played it right off of the hand. Sehwag's strike rate is way higher than Tendulkar's, but that does not make him better than Tendulkar.

As far as being a greater match winner is concerned, WI were winners not because Richards scored a quick-fire 50, it was because their fearsome pace bowlers ran through the opposition. On the contrary, India did not lose many more matches because Gavaskar saved them by staying at the wicket and putting a price on his wicket.

Gavaskar taking India to the #1 ranking in the early-mid 1970s was an incredible achievement.
 
You are free to rate Viv as a greater test batsman, that is not my point of contention. Rather it is the line of argument you choose to make him look like someone greater than what he was and Sunny as someone lesser than what he deserves.

Everyone is free to rate anyone they like ... however when it comes to actually justifying that opinion with facts, stats and logic the old ERA fanatics almost always run into a deadend generally unable to substantiate their claims and end up running away tail between legs.
 
Here we go again. Both Indian openers gone for scores of 0 and 2. What a huge difference Gavaskar would have made with his 50+ average in SENA countries, and his long occupation of the crease protecting other batsmen.
 
After hundreds of posts in this thread no poster has been able to logically conclude if Viv Richards was even slightly better than Gavaskar in tests let alone the hyperbole about him being in a league of his own.

On the other hand comments in favour of Gavaskar have been more logical.

At the end of the day Gavaskar scored more runs, occupied the crease for longer durations, hit more knocks with high impact value, chased better all while being a test opener and having relatively faced better overall bowling given he missed out on playing Indian bowlers while Viv never got to face his own teammates who were at the time by some distance the most frightening bowling nation on the planet.

Gavaskar making more ATG XIs as an opener than Viv as a middle order batsman has also been another big indicator of Gavaskar’s overall prominent stature in cricket.

Tendulkar and Lara both beat Viv in the middle order at #4 and #5.

With 3 being taken by Bradman he is mostly seen fighting for #6.

Gavaskar mostly steals the opening spot without much of a debate. He’s just clearly way better at what he did than Viv.

It’s all about test cricket though keep in mind.

In ODIs and T20s Viv was PHENOMENAL.
 
Gavaskar was <i>inarguably</i> a far better batsman than Richards.

Your opinion unsurprisingly differs from every single cricket fan who saw these two great men in action..
 
Viv 100%

Sunny - 0%

I took a comprehensive survey of the most intelligent people on the planet asking whether your survey was accurate, and the results came in:

Accurate 0%

Inaccurate 100%
 
I took a comprehensive survey of the most intelligent people on the planet asking whether your survey was accurate, and the results came in:

Accurate 0%

Inaccurate 100%

Yup and I just reconfirmed this.
 
Yup and I just reconfirmed this.

I did another survey asking the most intelligent in the world "Does Tusker conduct accurate surveys?" and the results were:

He does: 100%

He doesn't: 0%
 
** !! Even statically great man fared as good as any post war great

Gavaskar. Richards is much superior overall but Gavaskar is better in tests without any doubt, regardless of Richard's aura and what not. Gavaskar has better stats in every way imaginable.

Really ??? Even statically Viv fared better then him both in 1970's and 80s; Vivy avg 58 in 1970's best among all of who scored over 2500 runs in decade and over 8 test tons..,,not including his Packer tests which will make Sample size even more decent and he still avg more then all his great peers. Gavaskar plundered some really **** weak teams during Packer yrs..

In 80s Gavaskar avg 45 (1980 to 1987) comparing to Viv's 51 (1980 to 1987) and even 49.75 throughout 80s...
 
I always had doubts on who was the standout test batsmen of the 70s-80s era? With no doubts in my mind, Viv was no doubt the greatest ODI batsmen to have graced the game.

However, in testa, many believed he wasn't as good as the likes of Lara or Tendulkar or Gavaskar or Sobers.

To make things more precise, let us compare him with his contemporaries only: -

Sunil Gavaskar: -

Runs: - 10,122
Avg: - 51.12
100s: - 34

Viv Richards: -

Runs: - 8540
Avg: - 50.23
100s: - 24

Greg Chappell:

Runs: - 7110
Avg: - 53.86
100s: - 24

Miandad and AB were there as well but in tests, many felt it eventually came down to this trio only.

So, Viv has a lower average to Chappell and also to Gavaskar, who was an opener and this is without facing his own pace bowling attack as well as not facing enough quality spin bowling as well. To his credit, no doubt, he has a higher SR of 70, but how much of a difference that makes to the other points mentioned against him.

So,to conclude, where does Viv really stand as a test batsmen among his contemporary and particularly when compared to Sunil Gavaskar and Greg Chappell?


Thats because Viv dragged himself a bit longer then both of these 2; Till there age around when Greg retired (34-35) Viv had slightly better test avg of 54; and at age when Sunny retired around 36; Viv test average was 53.09 when he was 37..
 
Chappell never had to face Lillee/Thommo, Viv never had to face the formidable WI quicks. Gavaskar missed out on easy runs against Indian popgun attacks, remember the spin quartet was on the decline and by the time Sunny hit his stride our spin stocks were at an all time low and Kapil Dev was the only legit threat. Also Sunny averaged more away than home in an era of home umpires.

Errr...****** Sunil never faced pair of Lillee & Thomson in test cricket which Viv had to & did well against the pair; even at their fastest...
Indian spin attack was brilliant well around 76; when Chandra and Bedi plundered 40 scalps between them and Viv played two master knocks on turning pitch of Trinidad in second & third game accounting half of Windies run..130 out of 240 and 177 out of 355 ..
Some people love to talk..
 
Viv didnt lost on many all time XI; most players who saw him bat slot him at 3; he made as many XI as Gavaskar & perhaps even more
 
He had many decent players around him like Vishy, Vengserkar, Amarnath but mostly Indians associate game with patriotichood & Viv avg in Asia is brilliant considering patriotic umpires of here.
 
Hang on Viv underachieved ???Joke of century still was rated as 3rd greatest test batter ever; Even statically Vivy fared and avg better then him in both 1970s and 80s not even taking impact of great man's in consideration..Even Viv avg 50+ away from home better then his home record, played 40 innings fewer; his run progression is well up there with bests; For half of his test carrer he avg over 60 !!!
Untill he decided to hang on for too long had he retired at age of Gavaskar & Chappell he avged better then them..
Fact is despite that style he maintained avg better then his peers speaks volume about Viv's skill with bat in hand

His stats across 4 innings are awesome lowesr avg of 48; Yes he underachieved indeed
 
He had many decent players around him like Vishy, Vengserkar, Amarnath but mostly Indians associate game with patriotichood & Viv avg in Asia is brilliant considering patriotic umpires of here.
 
Vanburn Holder 😂..,,
Sobbers was 37 year old men by then; It was terrible Windies attack which he plundeded; Its becauze of this overglorified myths actualy achiever who put that attack to sword like Gooch never got their due...Only time he faced full strength attack he avg 28 in series
 
He didnt hit God mode for 2 years he hit it for 8 years between 1976 to 1982 or 83 he avg 67 plundering close to 5k test runs; this is most dominant pomp of long sample size after incomparable Bradman..
He didn't avg 45 for 15 years; this thread is full of hatered; Even in his last 15 years 1976 to 1991 he avg 53 added by fact he dragged himself a bit & spoiled his stats; He avg better then Gavaskar till his age around 37 (53.09)..In any case Viv fared better then him in both 70s & 80s avg higher in 70s 58 to 55 and 50 to 45 in 80s..
Easy to belite great men but still was rates 3rs greatest test batter ever
 
He didnt hit God mode for 2 years he hit it for 8 years between 1976 to 1982 or 83 he avg 67 plundering close to 5k test runs; this is most dominant pomp of long sample size after incomparable Bradman..
He didn't avg 45 for 15 years; this thread is full of hatered; Even in his last 15 years 1976 to 1991 he avg 53 added by fact he dragged himself a bit & spoiled his stats; He avg better then Gavaskar till his age around 37 (53.09)..In any case Viv fared better then him in both 70s & 80s avg higher in 70s 58 to 55 and 50 to 45 in 80s..
Easy to belite great men but still was rates 3rs greatest test batter ever
 
Sobbers even said Subash Gupte as better then late Shane Warne; his hate for Viv is something else; In any case Viv was more consistent then him avg more then him in both 1970s & 1980s.. He was league or two above him if not more.. It's ODI where Viv perhaps underchaived a bit and he was better test player.. Best of his era in any format by comman consensus
 
Score less then me ?? Really ?? Viv avg better then him in both 1970s and 1980s 58 in 70s to his 55 (helped by plundering weak attacks during Packer yrs)..
Viv overdragged himself to spoil his stats a bit till his age when he retired at 37 even then Viv had better avg 53.09

Opening also gives opportunity to attack hard new ball upfront not any difficult... Even Viv opened against Lillee & Thommo in their absolute fastest scored 279 runs in last 4 innings with 2 tons in his second ever tour..

Just for record even statically Viv is most successful batter against Imran in his pomp from 1980 to 88 when Imran picked 240 scalps at 17 a piece, Viv avg 59 in those 3 series leading run scorer from both sides and Windies vs Pak were low scoring encounters unlike IND Pak in those days played on featherbeads where Miandad, Gavaskar, Abbas pilled up their stats; Gavaskar over glorfied myth of dominating Windies quatret although he only faces them in 1 series and avg 28 .poor record against Lillee and Hadlee's too..
If Viv is giving me more consistent runs with far more dominating batting & personality I will choose him any day of the weak and many unbiased knowledgable people do put Viv as best batter of his era in any format by some margin..
He was rated 6 slots above Gavaskar and he is a tier above him..
 
Score less then me ?? Really ?? Viv avg better then him in both 1970s and 1980s 58 in 70s to his 55 (helped by plundering weak attacks during Packer yrs)..
Viv overdragged himself to spoil his stats a bit till his age when he retired at 37 even then Viv had better avg 53.09

Opening also gives opportunity to attack hard new ball upfront not any difficult... Even Viv opened against Lillee & Thommo in their absolute fastest scored 279 runs in last 4 innings with 2 tons in his second ever tour..

Just for record even statically Viv is most successful batter against Imran in his pomp from 1980 to 88 when Imran picked 240 scalps at 17 a piece, Viv avg 59 in those 3 series leading run scorer from both sides and Windies vs Pak were low scoring encounters unlike IND Pak in those days played on featherbeads where Miandad, Gavaskar, Abbas pilled up their stats; Gavaskar over glorfied myth of dominating Windies quatret although he only faces them in 1 series and avg 28 .poor record against Lillee and Hadlee's too..
If Viv is giving me more consistent runs with far more dominating batting & personality I will choose him any day of the weak and many unbiased knowledgable people do put Viv as best batter of his era in any format by some margin..
He was rated 6 slots above Gavaskar and he is a tier above him..
 
Sobbers even said Subash Gupte as better then late Shane Warne; his hate for Viv is something else; In any case Viv was more consistent then him avg more then him in both 1970s & 1980s.. He was league or two above him if not more.. It's ODI where Viv perhaps underchaived a bit and he was better test player.. Best of his era in any format by comman consensus

In case of Wasim saying Viv is his bunny ??? Keeping Indian patirotism away most sane people rate Viv a league above him though buny Viv avg 51 against Pak when Wasim played better then Gavaskar, Lara & Tendulkar..
Iny any case Wasim choosed 5 greatest batter he saw recently search anywhere and he rated Viv Richards as no.1 followed by Martin Crowe at 2; Brian Lara 3, Inzi 4 and Sachin 5th..
Viv avg more then overrated Gavaskar in both 70s and 80s and his stats were spoiled because he hung in for too late till 40 if he would have retired around 37 Sunny age his avg is better significantly 53.09..
Viv lowest avg across 4 innings of test is 48 take it that stats of underachiever..
Viv avg 40+ against every nation so called underachiever which overrated Gavaskar his fan Sobbers cant..
Wasim rated Viv as best he saw ever..

'"If I talk about one batter with unmatched technique, charisma & swagger there is no one like Viv Richards. I bowled to all greats post 1980 but Viv was class apart""
 
He didnt hit God mode for 2 years he hit it for 8 years between 1976 to 1982 or 83 he avg 67 plundering close to 5k test runs; this is most dominant pomp of long sample size after incomparable Bradman..
He didn't avg 45 for 15 years; this thread is full of hatered; Even in his last 15 years 1976 to 1991 he avg 53 added by fact he dragged himself a bit & spoiled his stats; He avg better then Gavaskar till his age around 37 (53.09)..In any case Viv fared better then him in both 70s & 80s avg higher in 70s 58 to 55 and 50 to 45 in 80s..
Easy to belite great men but still was rates 3rs greatest test batter
 
Errr again

Errr...In so called SENA nation
Gavaskar acored 2400 runs @44
Viv scores 3900 runs @54..
His average in Windies were helped by fact that he thumped a poor Windies attack in 1971 where they fielded people like Jack Nigeria a club class bowler at best..or smashing Jamuadeen and these guyz in 1976 apart from raw Mickey Holding.
No wonder Chandra and Bedi were among the wicket takers in that summer; Viv in second and third game on turning trindad surface scored half of Windies total runs but obviously these can go to dustbin..
 
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Imran was a medium pacer in 1977; it was around 1980 when he truly became out and out tearway who demolish batting line ups..
Viv was most succesfull batter against Imran in his pomp between 1980 to 1988 he avg 59 in these span..

Greg thumped 235 in a series on highway (Imran refuse to bowl on that featherbed) where everyone was making merry when Imran promised fast wickets in 1982 he excused and refuse to play the series like he did many a times post Packer to let his stats stay intact.. By the way till his age Viv avg slightly bettee 54 something..

Not many talk about Viv's performance in 1980 series in Pak on minefields where next best batter HA Gomes scored 220 runs fewer then him (140 to Viv's 370)..He avg 72 next Windiee batter avg 28 again Gomes...He was best batsman again second best or top team of 1970s Aussies..avg 59 against Pak in 1980s when they were second best team in world..
Viv over Greg even his best mates will agree..
 
Sunil Gvasakar for me. This because opening the innings is always the most difficult thing to do in an era when the great Aussie and West Indian fast bowlers were at their peak. Okay Sunny was not the most entertaining to watch but he was the ultimate test batsman often holding his team together. He had an impeccable technique where as the other two most walked in when conditions were easier and the ball being older was easier to handle.
 
As Mikey Holding said, if Viv wanted to chase records, he would have broken all records in the book. He played for making an impact and boy did he do that.

Forget out of all these 3, I’d put Richards at the top of the pack all time
 
Mine would be among the 3
1. Gavaskar
2. Richards
3. Chappell
 
Viv in asia ( Ind+ pak)
24 match-1510 run- avg 44, 4 hundred.
Look nothing extraordinary.
 
Gavaskar is overrated he scored 30 of 100+ balls during a WC match. He won't even be selected for Dhaka Super Kings in today's time :shakib
 
I don't have very strong views on who was the best batsman of the three, but as a commentator, analyst and overall human being Gavaskar is the worst of 3.
 
I have not seen any of them live (started to watch cricket from around 1997).

But, it seems like Gavaskar was the best among these 3.
 
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