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Arunabha Sengupta
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Last updated : 2012-11-12 17:23:48
Stats across eras 1: Did Sachin Tendulkar have it easier than Sunil Gavaskar?

Figures suggest that the degree of difficulty for Sachin Tendulkar (left) and Sunil Gavaskar on the whole were not too different © Getty Images

 

The general conception is that the bowling quality is on the wane and batsmen in general have it much easier in the middle. However, how does this perception stand up against hard data? Arunabha Sengupta analyses.

 

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In debates that rage in the backrooms and bars, on web forums and beside water-coolers, the general consensus is that batsmen have it much easier today than in the past eras of black and white photographs. Uncovered wickets, fearsome pace bowlers, no helmets, poor quality of bats – the reasons seem to be incontrovertible. On the YouTube, one winces with each scary clip of Michael Holding pummelling the brave, balding Brian Close, of Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson terrorising the ducking, weaving, evading batsmen. All the necessary exhibits are there to make the case of the brave and brilliant past, against the mediocre and magnified present.

 

 

 

 

Cricket is a game where perceptions generally rule over palpability,fallacies over facts. As shown in articles about biased criticism and mythical shortcomings of cricketers, the reality is often vastly different from the reconstruction carried out by our senses influenced by the filtered information fed to us.

 

Cricket is also one of the most scrupulously-documented of sports, with a data bank that is a goldmine waiting to be tapped. Let us utilise it to see how batsmen have gone about making runs since the inception of Test cricket, whether it has become easier with each decade.

 

Span

 

No. of

Players

 

Matches

 

Avg score

of all

batsmen

 

100s

 

50s

 

  No. of

Inns per

100s   

 

 

No. of

Inns per

50+ score

 

1877-1880

52

4

19.6

3

7

53.33

16.00

1881-1890

115

30

17.81

17

60

65.76

14.52

1892-1900

143

30

24.92

39

107

29.05

7.76

1901-1910

120

48

24.2

50

177

37.14

8.18

1911-1920

99

24

26.38

32

98

26.78

6.59

1921-1930

222

64

32.41

122

286

17.91

5.36

1931-1939

258

74

30.51

133

287

18.84

5.97

1946-1950

196

54

33.00

124

221

14.99

5.39

1951-1960

364

173

27.66

246

643

24.61

6.81

1961-1970

333

174

30.91

282

835

22.26

5.62

1971-1980

321

217

30.32

379

935

20.26

5.84

1981-1990

386

267

30.69

458

1070

19.64

5.89

1991-2000

525

367

29.21

570

1565

22.56

6.02

2001-2010

588

461

32.69

974

2106

16.80

5.31

2011-2012

198

53

30.58

98

252

19.99

5.60

 

 

Stable since the 1920s

 

Looking at the table, one can immediately derive some logical and correct conclusions and scratch one’s head as other widely held perceptions seem to disappear in the face of facts.

 

The fourth column is the key here, showing us the average of all batsmen, how the general cricketer scored runs in that decade.

 

We can see at the beginning, starting with the 1877-1880 and through to 1901-1910, low scores were witnessed, gradually stabilising by the 1910s. It is obvious that before World War 1, the pitches were difficult, not standardised, runs difficult to come by.

 

However, once the game established itself, tours turned regular, the administration more professional and scoring gradually easier. By the time Warwick Armstrong took his all-conquering team to England in 1921, cricket had evolved to a highly matured state and since then, we see a surprising stability in the decade-wise run scoring. There are variations, but not by any means very significant ones.

 

In fact, the average scores were the highest during the 1946-50, the period immediately after the Second World War – when Don Bradman bid adieu with a staggering 1903 runs in 18 completed innings, and Frank Worrell, Neil Harvey and Everton Weekes arrived on the scene with huge bangs.

 

In stark contrast, the decade that followed, 1951-60, saw the most difficult period for batsmen. While this was to some extent driven by a poor Kiwi batting side that averaged an atrocious 18 per innings, the reason is more due to a gamut of phenomenal bowlers arriving on the scene together. In the 50s, Ray Lindwall took 144 wickets at 25.52 and averaged 21st in the list of bowlers who had bagged 30 or more - a testimony to the quality of the times. Jim Laker, Frank Tyson, Richie Benaud, Keith Miller, Brian Statham, Fred Trueman, Alec Bedser, Tony Lock, Wesley Hall, Neil Adcock, Johny Wardle, Fazal Mahmood, Subhas Gupte and a lot of others formed a collection of fast and slow bowlers capable of making any batsman struggle.

 

What can surprise many is that the two decades of pace bowling dominance, 70s and 80s, don’t really reflect a drastic difference in the figures. Following the cognitive quirk of availability heuristic, we tend to recall the four pronged West Indian attack vividly because of the terror it struck in our hearts. However, we forget the flat pitches of the sub-continent in the same era where draw after draw were played out with huge scores in front of yawning spectators.

 

The 90s in fact saw a dip in the batting averages, with most of the teams around the world boasting excellent bowling attacks. Australia, Pakistan, South Africa and West Indies all conceded only 25-26 runs per wicket; India, Sri Lanka and England gave away around 30 runs apiece, and contrary to popular belief, it was a more difficult time for batsmen than the twenty previous years.

 

The first decade of the new century has seen an increase in the runs, and also a reduction in the number of required innings for centuries and fifties. All the teams seemed to develop their batting strength while the bowling did not really scale up adequately. The best bowling sides, Australia and Sri Lanka, conceded around 28 runs per wicket.

 

However, the figures do suggest that the degree of difficulty for Sachin Tendulkar, Sunil Gavaskar and Don Bradman on the whole were not too different.

 

Finally, the minnows have played their part in the last 20 years, but they have batted as badly as they have bowled and thus managed to balance things out.

 

(Arunabha Sengupta is a cricket historian and Chief Cricket Writer at CricketCountry. He writes about the history and the romance of the game, punctuated often by opinions about modern day cricket, while his post-graduate degree in statistics peeps through in occasional analytical pieces. The author of three novels, he can be followed on Twitter at http://twitter.com/senantix)

 

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First Published: April 22, 2012, 12:57 pm