bigfluffylemon wrote:Good stats MIB
As I said over on the NZ Eng thread, it's been a poor year for batters from most countries.
sussexpob wrote:I guess the problem with assessing modern day test cricket is, its easy to come to the end of an exceptional statistical era and see the return to norm as the exception. The big boom in batting post 2000 that lasted for a decade was the exception in test history - the return to the high 20s in 2020s is not in anyway historically poor, its just not the record breaking years of the recent past. And while 2010s was also run heavy, much of this is accounted for Australia and India's home form, which by any metric from history is the strongest sustained trend of form in test history with both teams averaging over 40 per home wicket for extended periods. This has in many ways hid the general decline, and now both teams are no longer sustaining it, the average has dropped across the board. I guess you could say the Bradman's era was a batting zenith as well, but Bradman adding 100 runs per test onto the end score over a normal, world class batsman in his place, actually skews the data - the Ashes was the majority of tests, and the difference between Bradman and the next best is the difference between having a normal year and not.
I think blaming batsmans approaches and T20 style playing is just an easy cop out explanation, if you ask me. While SRs have risen in test cricket, currently they are rather skewed by one side playing bazball slogging. Without England factored in, the SR in tests is about mid-50s in the 2020s.
Is 55SR representative of a self-destructive approach to the game? Because making a world XI of the last 25 years, the likes of Hayden, Sehwag, Ponting, Lara, Tendulkar (in that period), Gilchrist, Sangakarra, Michael Clarke, KP, Kohli, Smith, Root, Langer..... all batting at that mark or over. You want to go back a few years, Sobers, Viv, Chappell, Bradman... all do pretty well to. There is a larger proportion of legendary era defining bats that play aggressive relative to their era than defensive ones. Aggression historically pays.
At the end of the day, the difference between 285 and 300 all out doesn't really justify one era being terrible and another being perfectly good. And I dont think 55SR for everyone but England represents a game of reckless smashing. Most teams still play test cricket with patience
meninblue wrote:The batsmen have started playing T20 shots and do not bother to leave the risky balls to the keeper. As a result shot selection is very probable to be wrong and collectively when players of both teams play such brand of cricket the test matches count ending within 3 and 4 days will keep on increasing. What is easily visible to the naked eye while watching matches over the years, also makes the explaination simple. Even in last few tests i watched, there were so many examples of rubbish T20 shots and approach and surely if i had noted the count would be very very high of bad percentile cricket and approach. No point keeping a track of it, that is a job for coaches of those teams. I would not want to make a simple thing complex for the sake of it. imo there is no need for statistics to see the difference in way batsmen are approaching test cricket.
sussexpob wrote:meninblue wrote:The batsmen have started playing T20 shots and do not bother to leave the risky balls to the keeper. As a result shot selection is very probable to be wrong and collectively when players of both teams play such brand of cricket the test matches count ending within 3 and 4 days will keep on increasing. What is easily visible to the naked eye while watching matches over the years, also makes the explaination simple. Even in last few tests i watched, there were so many examples of rubbish T20 shots and approach and surely if i had noted the count would be very very high of bad percentile cricket and approach. No point keeping a track of it, that is a job for coaches of those teams. I would not want to make a simple thing complex for the sake of it. imo there is no need for statistics to see the difference in way batsmen are approaching test cricket.
Dare I say, you are making the fatal error assuming the change in the way the game is played is to blame, and that being aggressive in itself is inferior in terms of creating runs than it is to block and be cautious. That's pretty common, because most test cricket observers (including myself somewhat) have observation bias towards the game evolving, and want to believe that.
Is I mentioned, in the last 10 years India and Australia had home batting form that is unprecedent in the history of the game. One or two downturns in key players, and that record breaking form has ended. But how, in the grand scheme of a whole decade, has the approach worked?
In the last decade, in years India bat over the average current strike rate for the 2020s..... average wickets of 40, 67, 52, 32, 40 and 47...... 67 in a year is all time best stuff. Anything over 40 is extremely rare in the history of the game. 32 is above average. When India bat below the SR55 mark average.... 29, 29, 25 with average decreasing with SR.... Conclusion ..... when India go bazball in recent times they are historically unstoppable. When they defend, they are below average to bad. Australia.... pretty similar. England ... went from historical lows in batting at timid rates to now world leading batting averages at extremely high ones.
You can look at this in anyway you want I guess. For me, it shows that teams when on form or players not in decline can attack incredibly effectively, and that when they are not they tend to try to grit it out. But we shouldnt confuse 36 year olds like kohli, Sharma or Smith getting to the end and becoming poor, or Marnus finally having a bad year or two after averaging 60 as some generational problem with batting.
meninblue wrote: Rohit Sharma, well I would not even keep him on par with Gautam Gambhir in tests. Gauti, Ajinkya, Saurav and Virat were all better batsmen than him, let alone comapring him with Sehwag, Sachin, Rahul, Chet and VVS. He is lucky to be in test team thanks to Mumbai lobby and captaincy.
sussexpob wrote:meninblue wrote: Rohit Sharma, well I would not even keep him on par with Gautam Gambhir in tests. Gauti, Ajinkya, Saurav and Virat were all better batsmen than him, let alone comapring him with Sehwag, Sachin, Rahul, Chet and VVS. He is lucky to be in test team thanks to Mumbai lobby and captaincy.If you wanted to take India's best team from the 2000s era vs their last ten year best available team based on playing at home.
Jaiswal averages more than Sehwag
Murali Vijay averages more than Gambhir
(Note - the overall opener performance irrespective of partnerships in the last 10 years is 3-4 runs more than in matches Sehwag played, so whoever you pick as the pair, the modern pair are better.... and weirdly, Gambhir's poor average of 27 is included in that figure).
Pujara averages more than Dravid
Kohli averages more than Tendulkar
Sharma averages more than Laxman (although its almost even)
Pant averages more than Ms Dhoni
Shubman Gill averages slightly more than Ganguly
So yes, the recent retirements, injuries to pant, and loss of form from two older players in terms of home test output is arguably the most devastating talent drain a team has ever sustained. You bemoan falling scores from the team, but what you are actually bemoaning is essentially the most successful batting line up of all time at home coming to the end of a sustained decade long hotstreak as the team falls apart with retirements and age.
You can say this is all down to modern day cricketers coming in to replace not being to standard. Well, do you remember that period around 2011 to early 2013 when the retirements were coming in and Tendulkar, Sehwag and Laxman's high scoring days were passed them?
4-0 loss in England. Two tests by an innings, one by 300 runs, one by 200 runs...... one of the objectively worst tours a side has ever played in England
4-0 in Australia. Guess what? Two losses by an innings, one by 300 runs, one by 115.... Almost as abject.
2-1 at home to England for the first and only time in decades.
You can expect exceptionally historical run heavy sides to lose most of their talent and just continue smashing runs. Even your yardstick team for measuring it got battered in the same transition situations.
Arthur Crabtree wrote:Getting bowled out in 13 overs feels like something that might have happened in the Victorian era.

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