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Dravid ye vidhanga great cricketer oo cheppandi ra..


Dosakai

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2 hours ago, Sachin200 said:

Dravid at crease total runs 32,039 and his contribution 13,288 runs ( 41.47 % )

sachin at crease total runs 30,278  and his contribution 15,470 runs ( 51.09%) . 

what is ur comment on this?

Thus, Sachin Tendulkar’s Test average of 57 while playing with Rahul Dravid (and 50 without Rahul Dravid) is probably an indicator of how the Karnataka batsman helped Tendulkar improve his game. Dravid battled in the middle during difficult phases of Test matches, and it allowed Sachin Tendulkar to come out and play his natural game.

If it weren't for Dravid, Sachin would probably hover around 50s or below. 

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#1: With Rahul Dravid at the crease, the Indian team scored 32,039 Test runs. Given that the entire Indian team scored 89,668 runs, it means 35.6 percent of the total runs that India made in Tests involving Rahul Dravid were scored when the Karnataka player was at the crease. It is the highest % for any Test player. The corresponding percentage for Tendulkar is 29.9.

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9 hours ago, zarathustra said:

Thus, Sachin Tendulkar’s Test average of 57 while playing with Rahul Dravid (and 50 without Rahul Dravid) is probably an indicator of how the Karnataka batsman helped Tendulkar improve his game. Dravid battled in the middle during difficult phases of Test matches, and it allowed Sachin Tendulkar to come out and play his natural game.

If it weren't for Dravid, Sachin would probably hover around 50s or below. 

varini nuvve ga sachin ni virat ki compare chesi kindle chesindi okappudu.

sachins first century came at old trafford that too in second innings and saved test match for india at the age of 16. what is your masterpiece intellect doing at 16??? siggu unte mohaniki inkosari sachin ni migatha players ki compare cheyaku. poramboku nayala. kastha maturity penchu item

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21 hours ago, Dosakai said:

He had a particularly good couple seasons anthe.. rest of the time he was mediocre.

SouthAfrica lo vaadi avg in 20s.. big lol. great player anta.. with great overseas record anta

vaadi bochhu.

even Pujara has better record than Dravid emo overseas (assuming). haha..

Potti ga asalu ee game eh reeks of casteism, elitism dheeni gurinchi endhuku ra...

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On 2/5/2021 at 6:49 AM, Dosakai said:

He had a particularly good couple seasons anthe.. rest of the time he was mediocre.

SouthAfrica lo vaadi avg in 20s.. big lol. great player anta.. with great overseas record anta

vaadi bochhu.

even Pujara has better record than Dravid emo overseas (assuming). haha..

inko 15-20 yrs taruvata nee lanti inko @vankai gaadu ochhi...ee Pujara gaadu waste slowest half century chesadu..body addam pettukuni aadataadu ani db lo post estaadu..

If you look at Alan borders, gavaskars, zaheer abbess', Aravinda desilva's now, you feel the same way..their statistics nor their style of play doesn't look appealing to this generation..

you have to watch them live in their hay days, in the context of that match, conditions, situation to understand their greatness..

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On 2/5/2021 at 3:45 PM, zarathustra said:

I get it, he's instrumental behind helping the Indian team win matches they never thought they would and your hatred for the Indian team is pretty well observed here so not a surprise you would try to belittle Dravid and glorify Sachin even if you aren't the biggest fan of Sachin himself. 

Good attempt, however polls don't lie and you can clearly see who the people have considered the greatest test match player for India. 

even if he hate him as player, why hate his coaching skills? If every one is praising him AND India u-19 is winning tournaments, sending quality players to IPL , one days and tests. 

coaching is separate skill - not all great players become great coaches and vice-versa.  

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3 hours ago, summer27 said:

inko 15-20 yrs taruvata nee lanti inko @vankai gaadu ochhi...ee Pujara gaadu waste slowest half century chesadu..body addam pettukuni aadataadu ani db lo post estaadu..

If you look at Alan borders, gavaskars, zaheer abbess', Aravinda desilva's now, you feel the same way..their statistics nor their style of play doesn't look appealing to this generation..

you have to watch them live in their hay days, in the context of that match, conditions, situation to understand their greatness..

abboh

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On 2/6/2021 at 2:15 AM, zarathustra said:

I get it, he's instrumental behind helping the Indian team win matches they never thought they would and your hatred for the Indian team is pretty well observed here so not a surprise you would try to belittle Dravid and glorify Sachin even if you aren't the biggest fan of Sachin himself. 

Good attempt, however polls don't lie and you can clearly see who the people have considered the greatest test match player for India. 

tenor.gif

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3 hours ago, hunkyfunky said:

even if he hate him as player, why hate his coaching skills? If every one is praising him AND India u-19 is winning tournaments, sending quality players to IPL , one days and tests. 

coaching is separate skill - not all great players become great coaches and vice-versa.  

I hate the chamchagiri culture of Indians. every1 praising someone means they must be brought down. 

Its the law of nature man. sorrrry I didn't make the rules.

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On 2/5/2021 at 8:40 PM, Dosakai said:

great player my ass.. his record in Australia.

Screenshot-from-2021-02-05-20-37-21.png

Stats are like Bikinis. What they reveal is suggestive, while what they conceal is vital.

https://www.thestatesman.com/sports/31258-icc-shares-rahul-dravids-iconic-test-record-1502907854.html

Dravid has faced more balls in tests than anyone in the world. To your point on Cheteswar Pujara being better than Dravid.

https://www.sportskeeda.com/cricket/cheteshwar-pujara-vs-rahul-dravid-a-statistical-analysis

What you have to understand is he was a super partner for several players around him. He has the most number of partnership runs in the world.

https://www.espncricinfo.com/story/which-batsman-has-been-involved-in-the-most-partnerships-in-test-history-1226371

He has played almost at all the positions across the board. He was a selfless cricketer that batted everywhere and anywhere when the team needed him. He opened, kept wickets so that an additional batsman can be played in the 11. He did all this while keeping his head straight. While everyone remembers Sachin for his glorious centuries, several centuries of Sachin had Dravid guarding the other end and taking hits from the fastest bowlers of the world. For every Sachin, there was a Dravid and for every Gill/Kohli/Pant there is a Cheteswar. Both are unique and good in their own ways. There are stars, prodigies and then there are those team players that become the base for the beautiful edifice that the stars stand on. Dravid was one such man. 

I admire Dravid for what he taught me through his game. Not everyone is born with the same natural flair. Some are gifted and there is one gift you can personally cultivate. That is perseverance. With perseverance, you can overcome all the obstacles in your way. He did not have the supremacy of Sachin, nor the flair for Ganguly and Laxman. But, he had one thing. His perseverance and his head in the right place. For all of us mediocre people, he was a role model, I guess. :D Greatness is not denied. It can be achieved inspite of your lack of natural talent. You need keep your head down and toil. The way he has dedicated himself to the grassroot cricket is something that makes him even special. He is a good teacher and the reader of the game. Don't forget he was the only one invited to give the Bradman address from India. 

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1 minute ago, RSUCHOU said:

Stats are like Bikinis. What they reveal is suggestive, while what they conceal is vital.

https://www.thestatesman.com/sports/31258-icc-shares-rahul-dravids-iconic-test-record-1502907854.html

Dravid has faced more balls in tests than anyone in the world. To your point on Cheteswar Pujara being better than Dravid.

https://www.sportskeeda.com/cricket/cheteshwar-pujara-vs-rahul-dravid-a-statistical-analysis

What you have to understand is he was a super partner for several players around him. He has the most number of partnership runs in the world.

https://www.espncricinfo.com/story/which-batsman-has-been-involved-in-the-most-partnerships-in-test-history-1226371

He has played almost at all the positions across the board. He was a selfless cricketer that batted everywhere and anywhere when the team needed him. He opened, kept wickets so that an additional batsman can be played in the 11. He did all this while keeping his head straight. While everyone remembers Sachin for his glorious centuries, several centuries of Sachin had Dravid guarding the other end and taking hits from the fastest bowlers of the world. For every Sachin, there was a Dravid and for every Gill/Kohli/Pant there is a Cheteswar. Both are unique and good in their own ways. There are stars, prodigies and then there are those team players that become the base for the beautiful edifice that the stars stand on. Dravid was one such man. 

I admire Dravid for what he taught me through his game. Not everyone is born with the same natural flair. Some are gifted and there is one gift you can personally cultivate. That is perseverance. With perseverance, you can overcome all the obstacles in your way. He did not have the supremacy of Sachin, nor the flair for Ganguly and Laxman. But, he had one thing. His perseverance and his head in the right place. For all of us mediocre people, he was a role model, I guess. :D Greatness is not denied. It can be achieved inspite of your lack of natural talent. You need keep your head down and toil. The way he has dedicated himself to the grassroot cricket is something that makes him even special. He is a good teacher and the reader of the game. Don't forget he was the only one invited to give the Bradman address from India. 

ok

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