Sunday, April 8

Is Flintoff overrated as a batsman?

While watching England play these days in the World Cup, I can't help but feel that nothing much is going to happen whenever Flintoff comes into bat. To me, its the start of the English tail, which isn't exactly too great. Agreed, Flintoff is in a big slump as of late, but is he just simply overrated? Raza, who commented on my "Vaughan needs to go" post, is of the opinion that Flintoff is indeed overrated, so I wanted to check out his stats and see what's going on.

Here is Flintoff's run breakdown by year since he made his debut in 99.

Year M Inns NO 50s 100s HS Runs Avg
1999 9 6 0 1 0 50 100 16.67
2000 11 9 1 1 0 84 206 25.75
2001 8 6 1 0 0 46 144 28.8
2002 18 17 1 3 0 52 397 24.81
2003 20 20 6 6 0 *70 631 45.07
2004 14 13 2 2 3 123 633 57.55
2005 18 15 1 2 0 87 490 35
2006 7 7 0 0 0 41 102 14.57
2007 15 14 2 1 0 *72 330 27.5
Overall (9) 120 107 14 16 3 123 3033 32.61

His overall batting average falls from 32.61 to 30.81 if one removes the minnows. Here is his performance in ODI's by opponent.
Versus M Inns NO 50s 100s HS Runs Avg
Australia 21 19 1 1 0 87 519 28.83
India 21 20 1 4 0 99 580 30.53
New Zealand 11 11 1 1 1 106 277 27.7
Pakistan 14 14 2 3 0 84 443 36.92
South Africa 6 6 1 1 0 54 129 25.8
Sri Lanka 10 9 1 1 1 104 222 27.75
West Indies 11 9 1 1 1 123 295 36.88
Overall (13) 94 88 8 12 3 123 2465 30.81

It's pretty consistent and thus doesn't tell us much, but its important to put it up to indicate that its not the opponent that's the problem. What about batting position?
Position Inns NO 50s 100s HS Runs Avg
Opening






No. 3 9 1 0 0 *42 143 17.88
No. 4 11 0 2 0 52 260 23.64
No. 5 40 8 9 3 123 1448 45.25
No. 6 34 3 3 0 84 808 26.06
No. 7 12 2 2 0 64 358 35.8
No. 8 1 0 0 0 16 16 16
No. 9






No. 10






No. 11






Overall 107 14 16 3 123 3033 32.61

Well, he currently bats after Collingwood at number 6, yet even this graph isn't too telling. It does show us, however, that he is uncomfortable against the new ball, which isn't exactly news either. As an aggressive stroke maker one would expect a hard seaming ball to disturb him. He has been tried at one-down with not much success.

So obviously he is in a slump in the past two years, and his confidance is shot, but he had an average of 35+ from 2003-2005, so I can't conclude that he is overrated. His average over 13 innings in 2004 was almost 58, including 3 centuries against New Zealand, West Indies and Sri Lanka. That's no fluke by any stretch of the imagination.

But his position in the lineup is what irks me most. He is no 4 down batsman, and England should get a proper middle order batsman and shift Flintoff down by 1 to 5-down. I wrote something similar a couple of weeks ago, asking for my reader's opinion. The Atheist suggested a change of approach, rather than a change in batting order. Its true, but a change of approach doesn't solve the problem of a weak late middle order. England aren't aggressive enough when they really need to grab the bull by the horns. Nixon and Flintoff just don't have the ability to last 10 overs. And KP can't be expected to do everything with regards to approach, can he? Homer, in my opinion, made more sense and suggested inserting Dalrymple up the order, as he is a grafter, and can buy England some time in the middle and save Flintoff for some big hitting at the end.

Thoughts?

3 comments:

Tim said...

Great stuff Omar. I wrote a similar piece on Flintoff's batting at my blog (http://third-umpire.blogspot.com/2007/04/whats-wrong-with-flintoffs-batting.html)
and came to an identical conclusion. Great minds thing alike, eh?

The Atheist said...

Excellent post, Omar.

It is interesting to note that Flintoff has had most success at number five - a spot which most England fans would be alarmed at if Flintoff got the promotion.

But this is perhaps part of his current lack of form. People see him as a slogger - a few, quick runs and then we're done. He doesn't have the skill of Gilchrist to sustain big-hitting, so he tends to get quick-fire 20s and 30s - as against Bangladesh.

But when Flintoff was "discovered" to be actually quite a good batsman in 2003-2004 it was because he was playing a proper shots, taking time to build an innings and play sensibly.

However, I rather suspect with an opening-batsman heavy side, which likes to construct a steady innings, Flintoff has been given free reign to "express himself". But, funnily enough, I don't think this does his batting any good.

Perhaps we have another closet nurdler?

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