Belawal2014
ODI Debutant
- Joined
- Feb 2, 2015
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Good to know. I'll write this down.
Write it in blue please, it's my favorite color.
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Good to know. I'll write this down.
Nope, not at all.
Barry Richards played 4 Tests in 1970 in which he averaged 72 followed by SuperTests fully 7 and 8 years later in which his average was even higher.
And he never got to play the minnows of the day - India and New Zealand and England.
I think it's pretty obvious that he was the next best batsman after Bradman, and those of us who watched him pulverise international bowlers - including spinners - in domestic cricket in Australia and England are well aware of his status.
Write it in blue please, it's my favorite color.
I'm no fan of Bradman, but given that we now have flat covered wickets, helmets, leg side fielding restrictions and the weakest bowling standards since the 1920's I suppose that he would average well over 150 in modern Test cricket.
Well Bradman only played in two conditions. He never really played in dust bowls of Asia, that's a whole different challenge. Where playing 4/5 day of rest is really challenging. Asian spinners at their home is not a cake walk. Plus he played one kind of cricket and one kind of bowlers, playing three different format is not easy.
At the same time Bradman is Bradman, he had twice the avg of next guy not only in test but also in FC. Which is just too good to be true. That's why his name is definition of impossible. Anybody who can better him, he will be worthy of name tag. "Better than Bradman", I don't think I will see that in my life time.
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Don't buy this rubbish of Bradman averaging the same or anywhere close to 99 in this era.. As I said the only reason for rating him is he was above his peers.. Nothing more, nothing less. So, feel free to remove those rose-tinted glasses.
And that's based on what exactly?
Late 1928 (20 y/o) - late 1938 (30 y/o)
5100 runs @ 98
http://stats.espncricinfo.com/ci/en...9;spanval1=span;template=results;type=batting
No Test cricket for 8 years (30 y/o - 38 y/o) because of the war so lost some of his best years as a batsmen
Late 1946 (38 y/o) - late 1948 (40 y/o)
1900 runs @ 106
http://stats.espncricinfo.com/ci/en...6;spanval2=span;template=results;type=batting
Now if you look at the numbers of batsmen from the last 20 or so years (min 20 Tests) Sanga tops the list with an ave of 59
http://stats.espncricinfo.com/ci/en...5;spanval2=span;template=results;type=batting
As for Bradman he averaged around 35 more than the next best (Compton with an ave of 64) during his time (again min 20 Tests from 1928 to late 1948)
http://stats.espncricinfo.com/ci/en...8;spanval2=span;template=results;type=batting
So Bradman averaging in the 90s in modern times is not that far fetched actually. He was an absolute freak of nature.
Let's assume I always ranked 1st in my class of 60 students from 1 to 12 grade. I absolutely outdid everyone by ranking consistently no.1. Now I am enrolled into university where I have to compete with 1000 students.. Now do I still have a chance to maintain the same level of success? Maybe yes but now it's much much lower. Who's to say there won't be any one, two or even three students out of that sample size who will be as good as or even better than me?
Bradman played mainly against the same opposition in similar wicket conditions in Aus and England. SA, Ind and WI were less than mediocre bowling units and England was the only "strong" side by that ear's standard. Also, there has been a lot of debate about his performance on sticky wickets.
Sanga averages 95.57 against BD, 89.33 against Zim, and 80.25 against Pak. Sehwag averages 91.50 against Pak. But when we look at their overall record, they couldn't maintain the same level of success against all oppositions. Which brings to my main point: when you compete against just few oppositions, it's not imposable to adapt.. However when you compete with multiple sides, your success rate will be affected. If Bradman was playing in 80s, he would be competing against the quality bowlers from WI, Pak, NZ, and Eng. If we go 90, there will be an addition of side like South Africa. Moreover, there will be lot of variety of wicket conditions such as fast wickets and slow-turning tracks. Ponting's average of 26.48 in India after 14 matches is the proof that even world-class batman can fail to adapt to wicket conditions that they aren't used to.
So, who's to say Bradman will succeed against all oppositions in all pitch conditions? It's one thing playing against 4 oppositions (only 1 quality side) and playing against 9 teams (4 or 5 quality sides)?
Bradman is not an anomaly when we look at other sports. Ronaldo (at Medrid) and Messi averages 1 goal per game in past few seasons in European League. Then there is Alexander Karelin, Usain Bolt, Michael Phelps, Floyd Mayweather.. All these players are head and should above their peers. So, it's absolutely possible for someone to be as good as bradman.. But the real question remains: is Bradman as good as he is portrayed to be?
Pretty thought provoking post actually, but people will either not answer it or look to deflect it with weak reasoning.
Let's assume I always ranked 1st in my class of 60 students from 1 to 12 grade. I absolutely outdid everyone by ranking consistently no.1. Now I am enrolled into university where I have to compete with 1000 students.. Now do I still have a chance to maintain the same level of success? Maybe yes but now it's much much lower. Who's to say there won't be any one, two or even three students out of that sample size who will be as good as or even better than me?
Bradman played mainly against the same opposition in similar wicket conditions in Aus and England. SA, Ind and WI were less than mediocre bowling units and England was the only "strong" side by that ear's standard. Also, there has been a lot of debate about his performance on sticky wickets.
Sanga averages 95.57 against BD, 89.33 against Zim, and 80.25 against Pak. Sehwag averages 91.50 against Pak. But when we look at their overall record, they couldn't maintain the same level of success against all oppositions. Which brings to my main point: when you compete against just few oppositions, it's not imposable to adapt.. However when you compete with multiple sides, your success rate will be affected. If Bradman was playing in 80s, he would be competing against the quality bowlers from WI, Pak, NZ, and Eng. If we go 90, there will be an addition of side like South Africa. Moreover, there will be lot of variety of wicket conditions such as fast wickets and slow-turning tracks. Ponting's average of 26.48 in India after 14 matches is the proof that even world-class batman can fail to adapt to wicket conditions that they aren't used to.
So, who's to say Bradman will succeed against all oppositions in all pitch conditions? It's one thing playing against 4 oppositions (only 1 quality side) and playing against 9 teams (4 or 5 quality sides)?
Bradman is not an anomaly when we look at other sports. Ronaldo (at Medrid) and Messi averages 1 goal per game in past few seasons in European League. Then there is Alexander Karelin, Usain Bolt, Michael Phelps, Floyd Mayweather.. All these players are head and should above their peers. So, it's absolutely possible for someone to be as good as bradman.. But the real question remains: is Bradman as good as he is portrayed to be?
Great points.
Somewhat disagree on the last one, the athletes mentioned are superior to their peers but not to the extent Bradman was. He is an anomaly and his domination can only be compared to Wilt Chamberlain(basketball) but similar to Bradman his performances are taken with a grain of salt because of inferior competition.
In my opinion, you hit the nail on the head with the high school to university transition example and the examples of the players given below further strengthens that argument.
Let's assume I always ranked 1st in my class of 60 students from 1 to 12 grade. I absolutely outdid everyone by ranking consistently no.1. Now I am enrolled into university where I have to compete with 1000 students.. Now do I still have a chance to maintain the same level of success? Maybe yes but now it's much much lower. Who's to say there won't be any one, two or even three students out of that sample size who will be as good as or even better than me?
Bradman played mainly against the same opposition in similar wicket conditions in Aus and England. SA, Ind and WI were less than mediocre bowling units and England was the only "strong" side by that ear's standard. Also, there has been a lot of debate about his performance on sticky wickets.
Sanga averages 95.57 against BD, 89.33 against Zim, and 80.25 against Pak. Sehwag averages 91.50 against Pak. But when we look at their overall record, they couldn't maintain the same level of success against all oppositions. Which brings to my main point: when you compete against just few oppositions, it's not imposable to adapt.. However when you compete with multiple sides, your success rate will be affected. If Bradman was playing in 80s, he would be competing against the quality bowlers from WI, Pak, NZ, and Eng. If we go 90, there will be an addition of side like South Africa. Moreover, there will be lot of variety of wicket conditions such as fast wickets and slow-turning tracks. Ponting's average of 26.48 in India after 14 matches is the proof that even world-class batman can fail to adapt to wicket conditions that they aren't used to.
So, who's to say Bradman will succeed against all oppositions in all pitch conditions? It's one thing playing against 4 oppositions (only 1 quality side) and playing against 9 teams (4 or 5 quality sides)?
Bradman is not an anomaly when we look at other sports. Ronaldo (at Medrid) and Messi averages 1 goal per game in past few seasons in European League. Then there is Alexander Karelin, Usain Bolt, Michael Phelps, Floyd Mayweather.. All these players are head and should above their peers. So, it's absolutely possible for someone to be as good as bradman.. But the real question remains: is Bradman as good as he is portrayed to be?
let's assume i always ranked 1st in my class of 60 students from 1 to 12 grade. I absolutely outdid everyone by ranking consistently no.1. Now i am enrolled into university where i have to compete with 1000 students.. Now do i still have a chance to maintain the same level of success? Maybe yes but now it's much much lower. Who's to say there won't be any one, two or even three students out of that sample size who will be as good as or even better than me?
Bradman played mainly against the same opposition in similar wicket conditions in aus and england. Sa, ind and wi were less than mediocre bowling units and england was the only "strong" side by that ear's standard. Also, there has been a lot of debate about his performance on sticky wickets.
Sanga averages 95.57 against bd, 89.33 against zim, and 80.25 against pak. Sehwag averages 91.50 against pak. But when we look at their overall record, they couldn't maintain the same level of success against all oppositions. Which brings to my main point: When you compete against just few oppositions, it's not imposable to adapt.. However when you compete with multiple sides, your success rate will be affected. If bradman was playing in 80s, he would be competing against the quality bowlers from wi, pak, nz, and eng. If we go 90, there will be an addition of side like south africa. Moreover, there will be lot of variety of wicket conditions such as fast wickets and slow-turning tracks. Ponting's average of 26.48 in india after 14 matches is the proof that even world-class batman can fail to adapt to wicket conditions that they aren't used to.
So, who's to say bradman will succeed against all oppositions in all pitch conditions? It's one thing playing against 4 oppositions (only 1 quality side) and playing against 9 teams (4 or 5 quality sides)?
Bradman is not an anomaly when we look at other sports. Ronaldo (at medrid) and messi averages 1 goal per game in past few seasons in european league. Then there is alexander karelin, usain bolt, michael phelps, floyd mayweather.. All these players are head and should above their peers. So, it's absolutely possible for someone to be as good as bradman.. But the real question remains: Is bradman as good as he is portrayed to be?
It would be unfair to not give this POTW.Let's assume I always ranked 1st in my class of 60 students from 1 to 12 grade. I absolutely outdid everyone by ranking consistently no.1. Now I am enrolled into university where I have to compete with 1000 students.. Now do I still have a chance to maintain the same level of success? Maybe yes but now it's much much lower. Who's to say there won't be any one, two or even three students out of that sample size who will be as good as or even better than me?
Bradman played mainly against the same opposition in similar wicket conditions in Aus and England. SA, Ind and WI were less than mediocre bowling units and England was the only "strong" side by that ear's standard. Also, there has been a lot of debate about his performance on sticky wickets.
Sanga averages 95.57 against BD, 89.33 against Zim, and 80.25 against Pak. Sehwag averages 91.50 against Pak. But when we look at their overall record, they couldn't maintain the same level of success against all oppositions. Which brings to my main point: when you compete against just few oppositions, it's not imposable to adapt.. However when you compete with multiple sides, your success rate will be affected. If Bradman was playing in 80s, he would be competing against the quality bowlers from WI, Pak, NZ, and Eng. If we go 90, there will be an addition of side like South Africa. Moreover, there will be lot of variety of wicket conditions such as fast wickets and slow-turning tracks. Ponting's average of 26.48 in India after 14 matches is the proof that even world-class batman can fail to adapt to wicket conditions that they aren't used to.
So, who's to say Bradman will succeed against all oppositions in all pitch conditions? It's one thing playing against 4 oppositions (only 1 quality side) and playing against 9 teams (4 or 5 quality sides)?
Bradman is not an anomaly when we look at other sports. Ronaldo (at Medrid) and Messi averages 1 goal per game in past few seasons in European League. Then there is Alexander Karelin, Usain Bolt, Michael Phelps, Floyd Mayweather.. All these players are head and should above their peers. So, it's absolutely possible for someone to be as good as bradman.. But the real question remains: is Bradman as good as he is portrayed to be?
So, who's to say Bradman will succeed against all oppositions in all pitch conditions? It's one thing playing against 4 oppositions (only 1 quality side) and playing against 9 teams (4 or 5 quality sides)?
Let's assume I always ranked 1st in my class of 60 students from 1 to 12 grade. I absolutely outdid everyone by ranking consistently no.1. Now I am enrolled into university where I have to compete with 1000 students.. Now do I still have a chance to maintain the same level of success? Maybe yes but now it's much much lower. Who's to say there won't be any one, two or even three students out of that sample size who will be as good as or even better than me?
Bradman played mainly against the same opposition in similar wicket conditions in Aus and England. SA, Ind and WI were less than mediocre bowling units and England was the only "strong" side by that ear's standard. Also, there has been a lot of debate about his performance on sticky wickets.
Sanga averages 95.57 against BD, 89.33 against Zim, and 80.25 against Pak. Sehwag averages 91.50 against Pak. But when we look at their overall record, they couldn't maintain the same level of success against all oppositions. Which brings to my main point: when you compete against just few oppositions, it's not imposable to adapt.. However when you compete with multiple sides, your success rate will be affected. If Bradman was playing in 80s, he would be competing against the quality bowlers from WI, Pak, NZ, and Eng. If we go 90, there will be an addition of side like South Africa. Moreover, there will be lot of variety of wicket conditions such as fast wickets and slow-turning tracks. Ponting's average of 26.48 in India after 14 matches is the proof that even world-class batman can fail to adapt to wicket conditions that they aren't used to.
So, who's to say Bradman will succeed against all oppositions in all pitch conditions? It's one thing playing against 4 oppositions (only 1 quality side) and playing against 9 teams (4 or 5 quality sides)?
Bradman is not an anomaly when we look at other sports. Ronaldo (at Medrid) and Messi averages 1 goal per game in past few seasons in European League. Then there is Alexander Karelin, Usain Bolt, Michael Phelps, Floyd Mayweather.. All these players are head and should above their peers. So, it's absolutely possible for someone to be as good as bradman.. But the real question remains: is Bradman as good as he is portrayed to be?
Let's assume I always ranked 1st in my class of 60 students from 1 to 12 grade. I absolutely outdid everyone by ranking consistently no.1. Now I am enrolled into university where I have to compete with 1000 students.. Now do I still have a chance to maintain the same level of success? Maybe yes but now it's much much lower. Who's to say there won't be any one, two or even three students out of that sample size who will be as good as or even better than me?
Bradman played mainly against the same opposition in similar wicket conditions in Aus and England. SA, Ind and WI were less than mediocre bowling units and England was the only "strong" side by that ear's standard. Also, there has been a lot of debate about his performance on sticky wickets.
Sanga averages 95.57 against BD, 89.33 against Zim, and 80.25 against Pak. Sehwag averages 91.50 against Pak. But when we look at their overall record, they couldn't maintain the same level of success against all oppositions. Which brings to my main point: when you compete against just few oppositions, it's not imposable to adapt.. However when you compete with multiple sides, your success rate will be affected. If Bradman was playing in 80s, he would be competing against the quality bowlers from WI, Pak, NZ, and Eng. If we go 90, there will be an addition of side like South Africa. Moreover, there will be lot of variety of wicket conditions such as fast wickets and slow-turning tracks. Ponting's average of 26.48 in India after 14 matches is the proof that even world-class batman can fail to adapt to wicket conditions that they aren't used to.
So, who's to say Bradman will succeed against all oppositions in all pitch conditions? It's one thing playing against 4 oppositions (only 1 quality side) and playing against 9 teams (4 or 5 quality sides)?
Bradman is not an anomaly when we look at other sports. Ronaldo (at Medrid) and Messi averages 1 goal per game in past few seasons in European League. Then there is Alexander Karelin, Usain Bolt, Michael Phelps, Floyd Mayweather.. All these players are head and should above their peers. So, it's absolutely possible for someone to be as good as bradman.. But the real question remains: is Bradman as good as he is portrayed to be?
the basic problem with it is that it tries too somehow diminish the gap between Bradman and the rest without asking similar questions for modern batsmen.
OP never claimed Bradman avoided competition. He is arguing there is no guarantee Bradman would be this dominant if the spectrum of opposition and conditions were to widen. He goes on to give examples of players who were dominant against particular sides but their overall career averages were brought down when faced with a variety of opposition in different conditions.Bradman did not shield himself from any teams in his era so it is not his fault. The university example is flawed because it makes it seem like Bradman willingly did not test himself against the top competitors and restricted the competition he faced which is far far from the truth
OP never claimed Bradman avoided competition. He is arguing there is no guarantee Bradman would be this dominant if the spectrum of opposition and conditions were to widen. He goes on to give examples of players who were dominant against particular sides but their overall career averages were brought down when faced with a variety of opposition in different conditions.
OP never claimed Bradman avoided competition. He is arguing there is no guarantee Bradman would be this dominant if the spectrum of opposition and conditions were to widen. He goes on to give examples of players who were dominant against particular sides but their overall career averages were brought down when faced with a variety of opposition in different conditions.
But it's pure assumption. It's also assumption to say modern batsmen would have succeeded in the Bradman era where medium paced swing and cut bowlers and quickish spinners were more difficult to face than the quicks due to the nature of the pitches. I don't know why these hypotheticals even enter the debate.
What was so terrifying about pitches in that era ?
The fact that even the other acknowledged ATGs of his era(Hammond, Hutton, Headley, Hobbs) who are still considered by most to be at the top tier levelonly managed to average half of what he did seals his position as the greatest batsman without a shadow of doubt.
yes but thats a false assumption
But it's pure assumption. It's also assumption to say modern batsmen would have succeeded in the Bradman era where medium paced swing and cut bowlers and quickish spinners were more difficult to face than the quicks due to the nature of the pitches. I don't know why these hypotheticals even enter the debate.
Sometimes people just need to use common sense. It's ridiculous to assume Bradman would've averaged 100 against the great bowlers of 80s-90s. He simply had England's number and tortured them mercilessly. A very similar case to Sanga and Sehwag dominating Pakistan.
Sometimes people just need to use common sense. It's ridiculous to assume Bradman would've averaged 100 against the great bowlers of 80s-90s. He simply had England's number and tortured them mercilessly. A very similar case to Sanga and Sehwag dominating Pakistan.
The problem with the Sanga/Sehwag vs Pak argument as I said before is that England were the best opposition in Bradman's time. And he still averaged 89 vs the strongest team. Over 37 matches, which was 75% of his whole career.
England were the only opposition in Bradman's time. All other teams were equivalent to club teams today, perhaps even worse.
Are there examples in cricket and sports generally of athletes torturing a particular side? Yes, there are, which is simply the case here.
Stop clutching at straws. This argument is over unless you have something else to argue.
I acknowledge their greatness and he performed against a great team. Those guys were considered ATGs because there was no one else around. It's funny how they stopped producing ATGs when other teams started coming into the fold.This isn't clutching at straws. It's simple logic mate, England were an extremely powerful team. Bedser, Larwood, Verity, Voce were all excellent bowlers. Not to mention England had Hammond, Hutton, Compton in their batting lineup. You keep calling England the only opposition without realising that the England of Bradman's era was arguably one of England's strongest ever teams, which you aren't acknowledging. You're equating the Bradman era England to just another team, like Pakistan or India of today. But they weren't, they were a side which was filled with multiple ATGs.
It's akin to say, Sanga playing Australia in 90s-2000s in over 70% of his total matches and averaging 80+.
I acknowledge their greatness and he performed against a great team. Those guys were considered ATGs because there was no one else around. It's funny how they stopped producing ATGs when other teams started coming into the fold.
I acknowledge their greatness and he performed against a great team. Those guys were considered ATGs because there was no one else around. It's funny how they stopped producing ATGs when other teams started coming into the fold.
Are you saying Bedser, Compton, Hutton, Hammond, Verity were only great because there were fewer ATGs back then?
I don't even know what to say to that.
It's not funny, or that simple. The last English ATG was Botham. When he emerged, there were five other test nations of quality. Same situation in in the 1950s when England were producing a lot of top men.
English cricket stopped producing ATGs because the County Championship stopped being fit for the purpose of producing excellent test players.
1. The pitches became more uniform, so the English stopped learning how to bat on bouncy pitches and turning pitches.
2. Leg-spin went out of the game because it was not trusted by the skippers, who preferred a flat off-spinner instead, or perhaps an SLA if they felt aggressive.
3. The seven-day-a-week nature of the cricket meant that young fast bowlers turned into medium-pacers to prolong their careers.
Additionally:
4. In the 1970s a lot of the schools sold off their sports grounds so that cut off a source of cricket talent.
5. The heavy industry sector collapsed, so the Larwoods and Truemans who came out of the mines and steelmills and saw cricket as a way to better themselves stopped coming through.
Sometimes people just need to use common sense. It's ridiculous to assume Bradman would've averaged 100 against the great bowlers of 80s-90s. He simply had England's number and tortured them mercilessly. A very similar case to Sanga and Sehwag dominating Pakistan.
I acknowledge their greatness and he performed against a great team. Those guys were considered ATGs because there was no one else around. It's funny how they stopped producing ATGs when other teams started coming into the fold.
And dominated South Africa and kept up the same record at first class level.
Sangakkara's record against Bangladesh and Pakistan is not consistent with his overall first class record.
Bradman's record against England at test level is inferior to his overall first class record.
The argument has good premise but its easy to find loopholes in it
Just like to clarify, if Bradman were to play today, could he still go down as the greatest batsman? Yes he could. He was obviously a freak much like Sobers, Viv, Lara, Tendulkar were. But would he average 100? Absolutely not.
Alternatively it happened when cricket's popularity sharply declined and was overtaken by soccer.
that is conjecture and has no basis in fact
I also believe he wont average 100 but that is more likely due to the sheer volume of matches he would end up playing rather than a lack of ability.
He would be better trained, have better equipment and more knowledge abt the technical aspects of opposition bowling which any champion would exploit
Lol, I love your denials without any counter arguments. It is obviously my opinion, and of many others, based on the aforementioned reasons above.
lmao what!! you listed no reasons for me to counter. You just said you 'believe' (lmao) that he wont average that much.
Infact I listed reasons too. I said I think he wont but not due to same reasons as you
yes you can stay happy in that knowledge if it work for you. Good dayBoy oh boy, you sure do struggle to comprehend. That was obviously a clarification statement, my reasons for it were mentioned in the many posts above. Anyway, I'm done here, I have to face-palm every time I read your posts.
that is conjecture and has no basis in fact
I also believe he wont average 100 but that is more likely due to the sheer volume of matches he would end up playing rather than a lack of ability.
that is conjecture and has no basis in fact
I also believe he wont average 100 but that is more likely due to the sheer volume of matches he would end up playing rather than a lack of ability.
He would be better trained, have better equipment and more knowledge abt the technical aspects of opposition bowling which any champion would exploit
It has a lot of facts supporting it. It is well known that facing much better bowlers with so many competitive teams will make it more difficult to bat.
And yes the more matches played would reduce the average. That is still due to ability because he doesn't have the ability to bat that well playing so many matches. So while he would average probably in the 70s even today, it isn't that much of an anomaly that people make it seem like.
it is.
In no other era has a batsman been so so far ahead of his peers so it def is an anomaly. Only one who came close is Barry Richards but his sample set is too low for him to be considered. I suggest you search for the meaning of the word if you don't think its a big anomaly
it is.
In no other era has a batsman been so so far ahead of his peers so it def is an anomaly. Only one who came close is Barry Richards but his sample set is too low for him to be considered. I suggest you search for the meaning of the word if you don't think its a big anomaly
Let's assume I always ranked 1st in my class of 60 students from 1 to 12 grade. I absolutely outdid everyone by ranking consistently no.1. Now I am enrolled into university where I have to compete with 1000 students.. Now do I still have a chance to maintain the same level of success? Maybe yes but now it's much much lower. Who's to say there won't be any one, two or even three students out of that sample size who will be as good as or even better than me?
Bradman played mainly against the same opposition in similar wicket conditions in Aus and England. SA, Ind and WI were less than mediocre bowling units and England was the only "strong" side by that ear's standard. Also, there has been a lot of debate about his performance on sticky wickets.
Sanga averages 95.57 against BD, 89.33 against Zim, and 80.25 against Pak. Sehwag averages 91.50 against Pak. But when we look at their overall record, they couldn't maintain the same level of success against all oppositions. Which brings to my main point: when you compete against just few oppositions, it's not imposable to adapt.. However when you compete with multiple sides, your success rate will be affected. If Bradman was playing in 80s, he would be competing against the quality bowlers from WI, Pak, NZ, and Eng. If we go 90, there will be an addition of side like South Africa. Moreover, there will be lot of variety of wicket conditions such as fast wickets and slow-turning tracks. Ponting's average of 26.48 in India after 14 matches is the proof that even world-class batman can fail to adapt to wicket conditions that they aren't used to.
So, who's to say Bradman will succeed against all oppositions in all pitch conditions? It's one thing playing against 4 oppositions (only 1 quality side) and playing against 9 teams (4 or 5 quality sides)?
Bradman is not an anomaly when we look at other sports. Ronaldo (at Medrid) and Messi averages 1 goal per game in past few seasons in European League. Then there is Alexander Karelin, Usain Bolt, Michael Phelps, Floyd Mayweather.. All these players are head and should above their peers. So, it's absolutely possible for someone to be as good as bradman.. But the real question remains: is Bradman as good as he is portrayed to be?
don't think anyone really doesWell those who believe that Bradman would average 100 even in today's era, my question is that let's if a batsman emerges today with an average of around 63-65 in both Tests and ODIs after a good number of games, such as 50 Tests and 100 ODIs, would he still be considered an inferior batsman to Bradman?
What does a modern-day batsman need to do to be considered better than Bradman? Keeping in mind the number of matches, teams, and different conditions today as well as three formats.
it is.
In no other era has a batsman been so so far ahead of his peers so it def is an anomaly. Only one who came close is Barry Richards but his sample set is too low for him to be considered. I suggest you search for the meaning of the word if you don't think its a big anomaly
don't think anyone really does
but yeah an average close to 70 def would have a stronger case
what people somehow don't take into account is that Bradman didn't have the facilities these modern batsmen do either so any advantages he had are cancelled out. You cant just put him down by talking abt how he may have had it easy but ignore how it was difficult.
The greatest testament of his greatness to me (as in case of SRT or Viv) is that he maintained beastly standards over an extended period. It was not just a peak. Secondly as SLFan pointed out he missed a great chunk of his peak too due to extenuating circumstances
No one has been as ahead of his peers as Bradman, that's a given. That is why he is considered the best ever batsman, but my point is that we cannot take his average of 99 in absolute terms, simply because cricket was a totally different game at that time, and bowling, fielding standards etc. were not that great, but he still stood out emphatically among his peers and his status as the best ever is not questionable.
However, I'd definitely considered a batsman averaging 65-70 in both Tests and ODIs today as equal to if not superior to Bradman, that is why his 99 average (in absolute terms) is sort of overstated, and that's why I don't believe he is as ahead of the other all-time great batsman in history as his average suggests.
If you look at his average only, you'd think he's twice the batsman Sobers, Tendulkar, Richards etc. are, but I don't believe that is the case. He is still better then them all, but not by such a margin.
No one has been as ahead of his peers as Bradman, that's a given. That is why he is considered the best ever batsman, but my point is that we cannot take his average of 99 in absolute terms, simply because cricket was a totally different game at that time, and bowling, fielding standards etc. were not that great, but he still stood out emphatically among his peers and his status as the best ever is not questionable.
However, I'd definitely considered a batsman averaging 65-70 in both Tests and ODIs today as equal to if not superior to Bradman, that is why his 99 average (in absolute terms) is sort of overstated, and that's why I don't believe he is as ahead of the other all-time great batsman in history as his average suggests.
If you look at his average only, you'd think he's twice the batsman Sobers, Tendulkar, Richards etc. are, but I don't believe that is the case. He is still better then them all, but not by such a margin.
Well those who believe that Bradman would average 100 even in today's era, my question is that let's if a batsman emerges today with an average of around 63-65 in both Tests and ODIs after a good number of games, such as 50 Tests and 100 ODIs, would he still be considered an inferior batsman to Bradman?
What does a modern-day batsman need to do to be considered better than Bradman? Keeping in mind the number of matches, teams, and different conditions today as well as three formats.
that's the trouble with his record, its not something we can comprehend, when we form our opinion we revert to what we have experienced and that dictates what we believe, how can we believe someone is capable of doing something we don't believe is possible. For all we know Bradman may be even better if he played now, we cant comprehend it but its not impossible. Players don't average twice as much as the next player so to us it is inconceivable, its too much for us to wrap our minds around. If you had of told me in 1982 that the West Indies would be easybeats I would have laughed at you, it was inconceivable then.
Let me ask you a question. Let's forget Bradman for a minute here. If you think Bradman would have averaged 60-odd in this era, fine. But then what about Hammond, Hutton, Compton, Hobbs etc. These are top tier ATG batsmen. If you think Bradman's average would drop by 20-30 points, what happens to the others, do you slash 20-30 points off their averages too? Would Hammond and Hutton average 25 in today's era? See how absurd this hypothetical assumption is?
One more thing people need to realise is that simply saying a batsman averaging 100 in today's environment is impossible is the weakest possible argument. Do you think people believed 100 avg was possible before Bradman came along? Absolutely not. He still did it. And again, all ATG batsmen across history, in virtually every single era average 50-60. If Bradman's era was so much easier for batsmen, wouldnt we have seen someone average atleast 80? Or even 70? Or 65? There was no lack of great batsmen in that time, but why did no one come close? The very fact that this statistic of batting average stays within the 50-60 limit is undeniable proof for me how far ahead Don was.
I agree with this, it is always futile to compare players across generations because a lot of assumptions are involved, what is an undisputed fact though is Bradman indeed is the best batsman to ever play Test cricket. How better he was than the other elite Test batsmen is debatable, and you'll never get the right answer for it.
If it's futile to compare players across generations then it is also impossible to judge who the greatest is. We simply don't know.
If it's futile to compare players across generations then it is also impossible to judge who the greatest is. We simply don't know.
It is not impossible, in fact fairly simple.
No batsman has been as ahead of his peers as Bradman, so that makes him the best ever by default.
Greats from other eras didn't enjoy the same circumstances. Prove to me that Viv, Sachin, Sobers wouldn't be scoring hundreds left and right if they played during Bradman's time for 52 tests mainly against one quality team(also debatable) which they had the number of. Bradman's peers were his teammates and England, that's all. Not much to compete against.
Can you prove to us that Viv, Sachin, Sobers could manage to average over 40 if they had to use inferior bats, uncovered pitches, travel on boats and not have all the modern facilities they enjoyed.
Forget 40, they'd average 140 against the bowling Bradman faced.
if it was so easy to average 99 back then why did no one else even cross 60 let alone come close to 90?
or are we assuming that everyone else back then were duds just to satisfy ourselves?
Fastandfurious, you cannot prove it either way; that is why it is futile to compare players across eras, because such a discussion always hits a dead end.
The most logical criteria of rating a great player is to see how he compares with his peers. Viv, Sachin and Sobers were not as better than their peers as Bradman was, which is why Bradman's greatness towers above them.
Fastandfurious, you cannot prove it either way; that is why it is futile to compare players across eras, because such a discussion always hits a dead end.
The most logical criteria of rating a great player is to see how he compares with his peers. Viv, Sachin and Sobers were not as better than their peers as Bradman was, which is why Bradman's greatness towers above them.