King Cricket
International Coach
Do hundreds mean everything? Yes they do.
And three hundreds? Sehwag has two, against two of the world's toughest opponents. And Hayden has one, against the weakest team of test cricket. So.....
Do hundreds mean everything? Yes they do.
This is my point exactly. "Century throughput" as you put it is one of the better ways to determine top-order batsman. Triple centuries don't win matches against quality opposition but hundreds do and averages can be misleading because of batsman scoring massive hundreds on flat wickets or against weak opposition.Finally, let's take a look at a few stats comparing Sehwag, Hayden, and Gavaskar.
Average 100s
Virender Sehwag: 199.28
Matthew Hayden: 146.14
Sunil Gavaskar: 177.85
Clearly, Gavaskar is the best of the 3 since he has sustained such a high average over more innings than either of the other 2. Hayden is in second place with a decent average and 30 centuries. But Sehwag's record is impressive. Whenever he scores a century, he is likely to double up! If Sehwag scored fifteen more centuries and all of them were 100 and out (nothing past 100), his average would be 147.93, which is still a run above Hayden's. The point I'm trying to bring here is that if the people who are overrating Sehwag now are actually right, they will have underrated him.
Century Throughput
Sehwag: 15 in 115 innings = 13%
Hayden: 30 in 184 innings = 16%
Gavaskar: 34 in 214 innings = 16%
I'd give this one to Hayden since SG was a tad under 16. Hayden's productivity is unquestionable and the number of centuries he's racked up in as many games as he has is admirable. Sehwag's inconsistency shows through with this statistic, which is one factor that over-raters think he has worked on over the last year or two. Only the next two seasons will really let us draw conclusions as to whether he is being overrated or not, since he seems to have hit his prime right about now.
The weakest team? You mean the team that had a pace bowler with over 200 Test wickets to his name at an average of under 30 - Heath Streak. When was the last time an Indian pace bowler averaged under 30 with the ball with over 200 wickets to his name?And three hundreds? Sehwag has two, against two of the world's toughest opponents. And Hayden has one, against the weakest team of test cricket. So.....
Well Sehwag's triple against Pakistan resulted in a victory. Which is to show that victories really depend on how the bowlers perform, something you continually ignore. Additionally, I showed a breakdown of Hayden's, Sehwag's, Ponting's and Dravid's doubles, which shows that all four of them are about even with regards to scoring their big tons on flat tracks or poor opposition versus not. I can do the same for all centuries if you wish.This is my point exactly. "Century throughput" as you put it is one of the better ways to determine top-order batsman. Triple centuries don't win matches against quality opposition but hundreds do and averages can be misleading because of batsman scoring massive hundreds on flat wickets or against weak opposition.
The weakest team? You mean the team that had a pace bowler with over 200Test wickets to his name at an average of under 30 - Heath Streak. When was the last time an Indian pace bowler averaged under 30 with the ball with over 200 wickets to his name?
How about 100's scored when under 1000 runs have been scored in the match?Well Sehwag's triple against Pakistan resulted in a victory. Which is to show that victories really depend on how the bowlers perform, something you continually ignore. Additionally, I showed a breakdown of Hayden's, Sehwag's, Ponting's and Dravid's doubles, which shows that all four of them are about even with regards to scoring their big tons on flat tracks or poor opposition versus not. I can do the same for all centuries if you wish.
No, but until just a few years ago, Zimbabwe was probably equally as strong as the West Indies & New Zealand of recent memory. They had Andy Flower (much better batsman then Sehwag), who averaged over 50 with the bat and is arguably the best batsmen to have ever kept wicket and Heath Streak who was probably as good as any bowler nowadays when he was at his peak. Obviously, after these two retired then Zimbabwe became minnows. The only true minnow to have played the game is Bangladesh because they've never produced a world-class cricketer. I fail to see why you would deduct statistics from matches where world-class players were playing.King Cricket said:So you want to say Zimbabwe is a strong team? Come on, Ben, stop posting this nonsense just to defame Indian players.
And BTW, if I leave out Glen McGrath (He's a pure legend), when was the last time an Australian pace bowler averaged under 30 with over 200 wickets to his name? Cricinfo says that "last time" was Jason Gillespie. If I remember correctly he was dropped in 2004 and never got picked since then. Our last time was Javagal Srinath, who retired in 2003. A year before Gillespie. Now say Srinath is over-rated and your Gillespie is the best fast fowler to have ever appeared in cricket.
Another fact, only two English pacers I have seen playing average under 30 and has 200 wickets to their name- Darren Gough and Andy Caddick.
Sehwag is overrated. Carbon Copy of Chris Gayle, who averages 40 in lesser conditions. Anyone who averages under 10, in two different countries which possesses bowler-friendly conditions cannot be rated one of the best.
Virender Sehwag as an Opening Batsman in New Zealand & South Africa:
Code:Mat Inns Runs Ave Overall 6 9 88 9.77 in SA 3 5 49 9.75 in NZ 3 4 39 9.80
Cricinfo Statsguru - V Sehwag - Test matches - Batting analysis
No, you've not read my post. My point was that runs in the subcontinent generally count for less than runs outside. Not that subcontinental runs are better than runs in South Africa, Australia etc. That's my main gripe with Sehwag, his average drops to 42 outside Asia with a terrible record in New Zealand and South Africa and with only 4 of his 15 Test Hundreds. Then in result matches his record is even worse. Taking his runs in draws out, he averages 30 with only 1 hundred.
Think you may have misread my post.
I love how people put words into my mouth and how Matthew Hayden can't be compared to Sunil Gavaskar despite the fact that Gavaskar scored 22 hundreds (out of 34) in drawn matches whilst Hayden scored 23 hundreds in won matches (out of 30) and yet Hayden gets called a flat-track bully? But yet the epitome of a flattrack bully - Virender Sehwag is considered 'close' to Matthew Hayden.
It was a shame that Mark Taylor was ever made captain because had he not been captain that he would've dropped in the mid 1990's and Hayden would've gotten his chance to cement his spot in the Australian lineup. Hayden was shafted into world cricket against the best sides The West Indies & South Africa and despite that he outperformed Mark Taylor comprehensively. He made a century in Adelaide 1997 and would've made another one in Perth against Ambrose, Walsh & Bishop had he not thrown his wicket away in the second innings to Carl Hooper on 47. In someways Mark Taylor's captaincy was probably a blessing in disguise because it filled Hayden's hunger to score 30 hundreds in just 94 Tests.
The ODI part is also debatable mate. Ganguly was a better opener in ODIs than Hayden.The fact that Ben needs to put down all these other great batsman just shows they threaten his biased opinion about Hayden being the greatest.
I had a laugh when Ben said something along the lines of "and if Hayden had not got out for 47 with a silly shot he would have scored a ton".
That's like saying if Sehwag had not got out for 254 against Pakistan and there was no bad light or rain he would have scored 600 not out.
To be honest, Hayden is probably the best modern day opener when you take his ODI stats into account, but don't tell Ben I said that.
Yes, some of his runs were scored on flat pitches, and he is an obnoxious weed, but he was a very good batsman.
To be honest, Hayden is probably the best modern day opener when you take his ODI stats into account, but don't tell Ben I said that.
...and Ganguly, Kirsten, Saeed Anwar, Graeme Smith, Greenidge etc.![]()
Tendulkar wouldn't be too happy with that assertion.