tanveer din
Tape Ball Regular
- Joined
- Dec 31, 2016
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Who would be your pick to be the better test batsman? I will go with Ab de villers because Younis khan is failure outside UAE....
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Younis.
Disagree. AB has actually won a test match in Australia for his country. YK is just a flat track bully
You've got the wrong player lol.ABDV's a better batsman in UAE than Younis Khan (ABDV averages 137 in UAE!).
He's also a better T20 batsman and ODI batsman.
However ABDV is pretty awful in England, NZ and India (averages in 30s), awful in Srilanka (averages in the 20s) and averages only 44 in Australia.
I dont rate both but Ill take AB by a shade because Younis is kind of useless outside Asia while AB can still make it count once in a while.
Both are extremely overrated.
Make what count?
Make an innings of substance.
Younis Khan is good as an FTB as they come but outside Asia he is zilch.
217* in India to setup a win.
174 at Leeds in prime swinging conditions.
106 in the Perth 41 chase.
278 and 164 in UAE. The second one was more impressive because SA were 1-0 down after being comprehensively beaten. Along with Smith, he completely batted Pakistan out of the game. This was against prime Ajmal.
116 against a rampant Johnson in SA to setup their only victory.
Numerous stonewalling efforts.
Have you watched any of them?
Only 174 in Leeds is worth in my opinion.
I already know his abilities as an Asian batsmen.
I dont think you would be wrong to call him better than AB though because i also dont believe AB is million times better. Just shades it for me, and you wouldnt be wrong in picking it the other way.
He is talking about AB here.
You've got the wrong player lol.
I do agree that Younis is a great great test player but here I will pick AB.
IMO, he is a brilliant test batsmen. He is one of the most consistent performers of his era. He is clutch(in tests) and scores runs when matters i.e. whether it was long back in Perth 2008 or Adelaide 2012 or even in PE 2018. None of these series would have been won by SA if not for these innings.
Against the best team in the world and the team that matters the most, Australia, he has got the best record by any South African. Australia always used to thrash SA home and away but it changed in Smith captaincy and since then, both Amla and de Villiers have taken SA to different heights, Amla being more influential in tests while ABD in Odis.
He has proved his worth in subcontinent too by scoring two double hundreds in two major SC countries, India and Pakistan along with being the player of the series in the UAE 2014 tour against the peak Ajmal. In extreme swinging conditions, his 174 at Headingley was no less than a masterclass.
Averages and number of tons are what, really nothing. Stats don't capture the greatness of the player, it will never be. He is an ATG without fail. Younis is brilliant too though. I have great respect for him too.
I do agree that Younis is a great great test player but here I will pick AB.
IMO, he is a brilliant test batsmen. He is one of the most consistent performers of his era. He is clutch(in tests) and scores runs when matters i.e. whether it was long back in Perth 2008 or Adelaide 2012 or even in PE 2018. None of these series would have been won by SA if not for these innings.
Against the best team in the world and the team that matters the most, Australia, he has got the best record by any South African. Australia always used to thrash SA home and away but it changed in Smith captaincy and since then, both Amla and de Villiers have taken SA to different heights, Amla being more influential in tests while ABD in Odis.
He has proved his worth in subcontinent too by scoring two double hundreds in two major SC countries, India and Pakistan along with being the player of the series in the UAE 2014 tour against the peak Ajmal. In extreme swinging conditions, his 174 at Headingley was no less than a masterclass.
Averages and number of tons are what, really nothing. Stats don't capture the greatness of the player, it will never be. He is an ATG without fail. Younis is brilliant too though. I have great respect for him too.
Please spare some time in digging stats too before analysing the two players careers . <B>How a player having 1300 hundred less scores ,12 centuries less in almost identical no of matches can be better than the player with above mentioned qualities .</B>Ab can only dream of Yunus 4 th innings heroics . Ab has only hundred in 4 th innings .Ab has clearly 2 points less average than Yunus ( last year clearly dented Yunuss average , fell from 54 to 52).Yunus has Century in 11 countries , and a lot of records . Saying Ab better than Yunus can only be one s only personal bias but factually not true .Ab is more a flamboyant typo player. In that sense , many would say Lara is clearly superior to tendu although lara has less centuries , score and average but more flamboyance .
P.s Ajmal of 2014 was well past his prime , had become very predictable with his doosra , was outplayed by herath in the sirilanka series (aug 2014).
Is YK not an ATG?
Apart from his quality against spin, Younis was a substandard batsman, and comfortably below Miandad, Inzamam, Saeed, MoYo, Zaheer, Majid, Hanif and Saleem Malik.
He was a sitting duck against lateral movement throughout his career, and due to a lack of array of strokes, he never managed to dominate fast bowling. For the same reasons, he failed in Limited Overs cricket.
However, he is mentally the toughest batsman we have produced alongside Miandad. He was tough as nails, and his mentality forced him (statistically) into the league of the greatest batsmen to have played the game. Talent wise, he was nowhere near good enough to average 50+, score 10k runs and over 30 tons.
Nonetheless, he is not close to ATG status. He does not have a legacy as a batsman outside Pakistan, and simply did not manage to dominate a series outside Asia.
He had a golden chance of cementing his legacy in 2016, but he failed in 14 out of the 17 innings that he played in England, Australia and New Zealand, and was not able to enhance his legacy.
As far as de Villiers is concerned, he has had an underwhelming Test career considering his incredible talent. The way he has shown responsibility in the last two years is something he should have done years ago, but he decided to chicken out for couple of years.
He is leagues above Younis as a batsman and his best performances trump Younis', but his lack of hundreds count against him. Flat pitches, weak opposition aside, Younis had a tremendous appetite for scoring hundreds.
de Villiers will have to score 12 hundreds in the next 22 innings to match him on that front.
Who I would have in my team depends on the team composition. Younis is a better fit for a weak lineup, because he pretty much guarantees a big hundred once in a while, and is hard to dismiss cheaply once he is set.
On the other hand, de Villiers will throw his wicket away frequently, but he is an all-condition batsmen who can change the game with a quick-fire 60 or 70. He is a luxury that a strong batting lineup can afford.
chicken out? Lol. He had injuries and needed time to recuperate. The fact that he took on the most dangerous fast bowling attack in the world in Aus recently at age 34 and succeeded shows that he is among the toughest guys out there. The words chicken out should not be used in the same sentence as AB
Apart from his quality against spin, Younis was a substandard batsman, and comfortably below Miandad, Inzamam, Saeed, MoYo, Zaheer, Majid, Hanif and Saleem Malik.
He was a sitting duck against lateral movement throughout his career, and due to a lack of array of strokes, he never managed to dominate fast bowling. For the same reasons, he failed in Limited Overs cricket.
However, he is mentally the toughest batsman we have produced alongside Miandad. He was tough as nails, and his mentality forced him (statistically) into the league of the greatest batsmen to have played the game. Talent wise, he was nowhere near good enough to average 50+, score 10k runs and over 30 tons.
Nonetheless, he is not close to ATG status. He does not have a legacy as a batsman outside Pakistan, and simply did not manage to dominate a series outside Asia.
He had a golden chance of cementing his legacy in 2016, but he failed in 14 out of the 17 innings that he played in England, Australia and New Zealand, and was not able to enhance his legacy.
As far as de Villiers is concerned, he has had an underwhelming Test career considering his incredible talent. The way he has shown responsibility in the last two years is something he should have done years ago, but he decided to chicken out for couple of years.
He is leagues above Younis as a batsman and his best performances trump Younis', but his lack of hundreds count against him. Flat pitches, weak opposition aside, Younis had a tremendous appetite for scoring hundreds.
de Villiers will have to score 12 hundreds in the next 22 innings to match him on that front.
Who I would have in my team depends on the team composition. Younis is a better fit for a weak lineup, because he pretty much guarantees a big hundred once in a while, and is hard to dismiss cheaply once he is set.
On the other hand, de Villiers will throw his wicket away frequently, but he is an all-condition batsmen who can change the game with a quick-fire 60 or 70. He is a luxury that a strong batting lineup can afford.
AB is not my cup of tea, but is ahead of YK comfortably too. You don't average 50 away and be a mug with the bat. He was part of the original big four.
However he needs to continue winning matches though.
How can people rate AB ahead of YK in Tests? Seriously
How can people rate AB ahead of YK in Tests? Seriously