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  • dogmeatD Offline
    dogmeatD Offline
    dogmeat
    wrote on last edited by
    #1600

    Anderson was England's Rigor. A limited player who fashioned a very good career through obduracy and making the absolute most of his limitations.

    Off the top of my head better English openers would be Hobbs, Sutcliffe, Hutton, Gooch and Boycott.

    Andersons in the second tier with guys like Vaughan, Edrich and Strauss who were of a similar ilk

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    • V Virgil

      For me Gilchrist has to be looked at, we'd never seen a keeper play as a batsmen like him before
      Only negative consideration is hes not the best Keeper of all time. Its his batting that made him stand out
      He's a big reason why OZ were so good in the early 2000's in both Tests and ODI's

      MN5M Online
      MN5M Online
      MN5
      wrote on last edited by MN5
      #1601

      @Virgil said in Other Cricket:

      For me Gilchrist has to be looked at, we'd never seen a keeper play as a batsmen like him before
      Only negative consideration is hes not the best Keeper of all time. Its his batting that made him stand out
      He's a big reason why OZ were so good in the early 2000's in both Tests and ODI's

      Hard to measure really. He certainly seemed very good from what I remember and I’m sure McGrath and Warne had no complaints.

      But people say Ian Healy was better and going a bit earlier apparently Alan Knott was an absolute gun ( handy batting average too ) possibly Rose tinted glasses but I remember our boy Smithy fondly too.

      Alec Stewart was a good keeper batsman but Gilly absolutely turned shit on its head.

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      • G Offline
        G Offline
        Godder
        wrote on last edited by
        #1602

        Andy Flower was another excellent keeper batsman who is often forgotten. Playing for Zimbabwe doesn't help boost the stats obviously, so he's particularly impressive given that.

        In terms of pure glove work in the past 50 years, besides Alan Knott and Healy as mentioned, Rod Marsh and Smith were also ahead of Gilchrist in my opinion. Dujon and Parore were also handy, as was Mark Boucher. Bob Taylor was even better than Knott with the gloves (Taylor has the FC record for most WK dismissals) but Knott was a somewhat better batsman.

        All that said, hard to go past Gilchrist once you add the batting into it.

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        • dogmeatD Offline
          dogmeatD Offline
          dogmeat
          wrote on last edited by
          #1603

          Except that Gilchrist would never get a look in my WorldXI because you wouldn't need his batting so you pick the best keeper. Taylor or Healey IMO.

          Wicketkeeping really changed with the demise of uncovered wickets. Whilst still a specialist position it didn't put the same emphasis on tidiness behind the stumps and progressively the keepers batting ability became more and more important.

          Godfrey Evan's is apparently the best gloveman ever, but despite ability as a batsman he didn't take it seriously. I wonder how good he would have been if he applied himself. I only remember him in interviews sporting an impressive pair of mutton chop whiskers

          Mike Selvey (England bowler) played with Evans in a fun game when Evans was 56 -

          "My experience was an education. Late out-swing just whispered into his gloves. I slipped in a full-length in-swinger on leg stump - the most difficult to take - and there he was, down the leg side as if by telepathy, flicking the bails away as the batsman changed feet." Selvey said he had never seen a better display of wicketkeeping.

          https://www.espncricinfo.com/cricketers/godfrey-evans-12543

          image.png

          nzzpN 1 Reply Last reply
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          • dogmeatD dogmeat

            Except that Gilchrist would never get a look in my WorldXI because you wouldn't need his batting so you pick the best keeper. Taylor or Healey IMO.

            Wicketkeeping really changed with the demise of uncovered wickets. Whilst still a specialist position it didn't put the same emphasis on tidiness behind the stumps and progressively the keepers batting ability became more and more important.

            Godfrey Evan's is apparently the best gloveman ever, but despite ability as a batsman he didn't take it seriously. I wonder how good he would have been if he applied himself. I only remember him in interviews sporting an impressive pair of mutton chop whiskers

            Mike Selvey (England bowler) played with Evans in a fun game when Evans was 56 -

            "My experience was an education. Late out-swing just whispered into his gloves. I slipped in a full-length in-swinger on leg stump - the most difficult to take - and there he was, down the leg side as if by telepathy, flicking the bails away as the batsman changed feet." Selvey said he had never seen a better display of wicketkeeping.

            https://www.espncricinfo.com/cricketers/godfrey-evans-12543

            image.png

            nzzpN Online
            nzzpN Online
            nzzp
            wrote on last edited by
            #1604

            @dogmeat I'm voting for him just for those mutton chops

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            • MN5M Online
              MN5M Online
              MN5
              wrote on last edited by MN5
              #1605

              Gilly for me despite those amazing chops. The extra runs are a cherry on the top whatever perceived weakness he may have had as a keeper ( again, no stats for this discipline of the game compared to the other two )

              Was thinking about all rounders, touching on what @barbarian said and while an all time team as relatively weak as what NZ would put out would have three ( Cairns, Vettori, Paddles ) there isn't probably room for one in a genuine World XI when you factor in six of the best batsmen ( ideally one or two of whom can bowl a bit just in case ) a keeper and four of the best bowlers ( one or two who can hold a bat pretty well )

              dogmeatD 1 Reply Last reply
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              • MN5M MN5

                Gilly for me despite those amazing chops. The extra runs are a cherry on the top whatever perceived weakness he may have had as a keeper ( again, no stats for this discipline of the game compared to the other two )

                Was thinking about all rounders, touching on what @barbarian said and while an all time team as relatively weak as what NZ would put out would have three ( Cairns, Vettori, Paddles ) there isn't probably room for one in a genuine World XI when you factor in six of the best batsmen ( ideally one or two of whom can bowl a bit just in case ) a keeper and four of the best bowlers ( one or two who can hold a bat pretty well )

                dogmeatD Offline
                dogmeatD Offline
                dogmeat
                wrote on last edited by
                #1606

                @MN5 you sort of counter your own argument coz Gilly is an all-rounder.

                I reckon if you've got the best 6 batsman you don''t need the extra 20 runs Gilchrest will get you in a match so you take a better gloveman who won't concede a couple or put down that crucial catch, miss the stumping. Not that he was a mug behind the stumps but the best batsmen might only give you one chance in an innings so you want the guy who is more likely to snaffle it.

                MN5M 1 Reply Last reply
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                • V Do not disturb
                  V Do not disturb
                  Virgil
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #1607

                  it wasnt just the runs Gilchrist scored it was the rate he scored them at and the situation he came into bat.
                  Even the best top 6 of all time will have a bad day, i recall many times OZ would be 4 or 5 down for fuck all only for Gilly to waltz in, blast 100+ in no time short and haul OZ to a score of 350-400.
                  Its not like OZ had a terrible top 6 in those days either...
                  Hayden, Langer, Ponting, Clarke etc..

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                  • dogmeatD dogmeat

                    @MN5 you sort of counter your own argument coz Gilly is an all-rounder.

                    I reckon if you've got the best 6 batsman you don''t need the extra 20 runs Gilchrest will get you in a match so you take a better gloveman who won't concede a couple or put down that crucial catch, miss the stumping. Not that he was a mug behind the stumps but the best batsmen might only give you one chance in an innings so you want the guy who is more likely to snaffle it.

                    MN5M Online
                    MN5M Online
                    MN5
                    wrote on last edited by MN5
                    #1608

                    @dogmeat said in Other Cricket:

                    @MN5 you sort of counter your own argument coz Gilly is an all-rounder.

                    I reckon if you've got the best 6 batsman you don''t need the extra 20 runs Gilchrest will get you in a match so you take a better gloveman who won't concede a couple or put down that crucial catch, miss the stumping. Not that he was a mug behind the stumps but the best batsmen might only give you one chance in an innings so you want the guy who is more likely to snaffle it.

                    Well it is the fern so I won't back down on my stance 😉

                    Bowling and batting stats are analysed to death and even then it's sometimes hard to gauge who is better depending on how cherry picked the stats are. Home records/records vs minnows etc can skew these a bit......

                    Wicket Keepers have a number of catches and stumpings but no clear stats on missed chances/byes etc so who is the "better" keeper is largely anecdotal.

                    I remember Gilly being a decent keeper from what I saw and of course his runs speak for themselves not even taking into account the very valid point made by @virgil on how quick he scored them. You could put the house on at least a couple of that Australian top seven getting big hundreds in the 2000s every time they batted and the man at seven played a huge part in this.

                    He gets in my team any day that ends in Y.

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                    • KiwiPieK Offline
                      KiwiPieK Offline
                      KiwiPie
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #1609

                      I think wicket-keepers of yore would turn in their graves at the big lumps who do the job these days. On uncovered pitches and the chance of a wicket turning into a "bunsen burner" your keeper had to be so good to make the grade. Keeping to Warne when he was ripping it was a breeze compared to keeping to Underwood on a drying pitch - he was virtually medium pace and the ball would just take off.

                      I think Knott was the first to be a real athlete and leap to take catches off the fast bowlers and Marsh was the same but against much faster (and often wilder) bowlers on faster tracks. Knott was my Mum's favourite because he used to be doing stretching exercises the whole day of test cricket.

                      MN5M 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • KiwiPieK KiwiPie

                        I think wicket-keepers of yore would turn in their graves at the big lumps who do the job these days. On uncovered pitches and the chance of a wicket turning into a "bunsen burner" your keeper had to be so good to make the grade. Keeping to Warne when he was ripping it was a breeze compared to keeping to Underwood on a drying pitch - he was virtually medium pace and the ball would just take off.

                        I think Knott was the first to be a real athlete and leap to take catches off the fast bowlers and Marsh was the same but against much faster (and often wilder) bowlers on faster tracks. Knott was my Mum's favourite because he used to be doing stretching exercises the whole day of test cricket.

                        MN5M Online
                        MN5M Online
                        MN5
                        wrote on last edited by MN5
                        #1610

                        @KiwiPie said in Other Cricket:

                        I think wicket-keepers of yore would turn in their graves at the big lumps who do the job these days. On uncovered pitches and the chance of a wicket turning into a "bunsen burner" your keeper had to be so good to make the grade. Keeping to Warne when he was ripping it was a breeze compared to keeping to Underwood on a drying pitch - he was virtually medium pace and the ball would just take off.

                        I think Knott was the first to be a real athlete and leap to take catches off the fast bowlers and Marsh was the same but against much faster (and often wilder) bowlers on faster tracks. Knott was my Mum's favourite because he used to be doing stretching exercises the whole day of test cricket.

                        Jeff Dujon must have gone ok too against all those quick bowlers but wouldn't have had much chance to stand up to slow bowlers given they cleaned up like they did.

                        A batting average over 30 for a keeper in that era was bloody good too.

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                        • NTAN Offline
                          NTAN Offline
                          NTA
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #1611

                          image.png

                          Crazy HorseC 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • NTAN NTA

                            image.png

                            Crazy HorseC Offline
                            Crazy HorseC Offline
                            Crazy Horse
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #1612

                            @NTA said in Other Cricket:

                            image.png

                            For such a talented player it seemed like he got hit in the head a lot. Technique issue or bad luck?

                            NTAN 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • Crazy HorseC Crazy Horse

                              @NTA said in Other Cricket:

                              image.png

                              For such a talented player it seemed like he got hit in the head a lot. Technique issue or bad luck?

                              NTAN Offline
                              NTAN Offline
                              NTA
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #1613

                              @Crazy-Horse I'd say one led to the other.

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                              • DuluthD Offline
                                DuluthD Offline
                                Duluth
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #1614

                                alt text

                                Sir Jimmy Anderson

                                MN5M 1 Reply Last reply
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                                • DuluthD Duluth

                                  alt text

                                  Sir Jimmy Anderson

                                  MN5M Online
                                  MN5M Online
                                  MN5
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #1615

                                  @Duluth said in Other Cricket:

                                  alt text

                                  Sir Jimmy Anderson

                                  Sir Jimmy has rather dodgy connotations. I hope they go with Sir James instead

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                                  • 1kiwi1 Offline
                                    1kiwi1 Offline
                                    1kiwi
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #1616

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                                    • mariner4lifeM Offline
                                      mariner4lifeM Offline
                                      mariner4life
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #1617

                                      incredible test career. the guy whose personality and attitude drove India from a talented team to a team who could go to Australia and win. Absolutely beautiful player to watch as well.

                                      V 1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • mariner4lifeM mariner4life

                                        incredible test career. the guy whose personality and attitude drove India from a talented team to a team who could go to Australia and win. Absolutely beautiful player to watch as well.

                                        V Do not disturb
                                        V Do not disturb
                                        Virgil
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #1618

                                        @mariner4life said in Other Cricket:

                                        incredible test career. the guy whose personality and attitude drove India from a talented team to a team who could go to Australia and win. Absolutely beautiful player to watch as well.

                                        For sure, at his peak he was top of the Fab 4.
                                        but fell away badly in his last few years, only averaged 30 for the last 5 years. During his peak he was averaging double that. What stood him out was his form in both England and OZ during that time
                                        He scored 6 x double tons in the period of 18 months then as well, only Bradman did better.

                                        For me though he will go down as a better ODI batsman (probably the best of all time)

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                                        • mariner4lifeM Offline
                                          mariner4lifeM Offline
                                          mariner4life
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #1619

                                          best ODI player of all time. Best multi format player of all time. His peak at test level was as good as anyone.

                                          But his test career in terms of what he means to India is more than numbers.

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