PricewaterhouseCoopers launches new World Ratings for One-Day cricket (13 Aug 1998)
Allan Donald and Sachin Tendulkar are the top bowler and batsman in the new One-Day International (ODI) Ratings, published by PricewaterhouseCoopers for the first time today
13-Aug-1998
13 August 1998
Donald and Tendulkar top new ODI Ratings
PricewaterhouseCoopers Press release
Allan Donald and Sachin Tendulkar are the top bowler and batsman
in the new One-Day International (ODI) Ratings, published by
PricewaterhouseCoopers for the first time today.
Donald and Tendulkar - who also top the PricewaterhouseCoopers
Test Ratings - are rewarded for their recent outstanding
performances in the One Day game.
Australian and NZ players prominent in top ten Michael Bevan,
whose Test career for Australia has been mixed, is third in the
ODI Ratings, making him the highest-rated Australian player.
This reflects his fine batting record in the last year.
Ricky Ponting and Mark Waugh also appear in the list of top ten
batsmen. However, Steve Waugh - rated third in the current
PricewaterhouseCoopers Test Ratings - is just outside the top
thirty in the ODI Ratings.
New Zealand is represented by Nathan Astle at 7th in the batting
and Chris Harris at 9th in the bowling.
England's bowling stars feature highly Darren Gough and Angus
Fraser, England's Test bowling stars this summer, both appear in
the latest ODI top ten. Robert Croft's economic bowling is
rewarded by him being placed 13th - 40 places higher than his
position in the Test bowling ratings.
Alec Stewart and Graham Thorpe are England's highest rated
batsmen at 18th and 19th in the batting, while Nick Knight is
climbing rapidly and is now 28th.
Fast scorers boosted in ODI ratings
Batsmen who score their runs rapidly are given extra credit in
the ratings. The best example is Sanath Jayasuriya of Sri Lanka,
one of the fastest scoring batsmen in the world game, who is in
fourth place. Jonty Rhodes also has a good rating, placed 17th
in the batting.
Updates to the ODI Ratings
The ODI Ratings will be updated at the end of the Emirates
Triangular Tournament, which is currently being played in the UK,
and at appropriate times at the beginning and end of series
throughout the winter.
More
PricewaterhouseCoopers launches new World Ratings for
One-Day cricket internationals
1998 PricewaterhouseCoopers is launching new world
Ratings for One-Day Internationals. The global professional
services firm has produced the World Ratings of Test Cricketers
since 1987 and now, reflecting the growth and increased
importance of the one-day game, cricket fans will have the chance
to compare the world's best in the limited overs game.
Roger White, PricewaterhouseCoopers' UK director of marketing
communications, said: "We are entering one of the most exciting
years in international cricket. Tomorrow sees the start of the
Emirates Triangular Tournament, the first of its kind in this
country, while over the next 12 months we will see one-day
competitions around the cricketing world, culminating in the
seventh World Cup, returning to England for the first time since
1983.
"The Ratings have become an accepted part of the Test match scene
and we are certain that this is the perfect time to launch the
one-day version. With our eleven years of Ratings experience we
are confident that the new One-Day Ratings will become the
accepted standard for evaluating individual performance."
The Test Ratings are based on computer-based analysis of
performance which goes beyond the traditional average.
Performance in One-Day Internationals will get the same treatment
- but with some subtle changes which reflect the differing
demands of the shorter game.
Former England captain, Ted Dexter who has worked with
PricewaterhouseCoopers since the World Test Ratings were
introduced, said: "The stars of the one-day game are not always
those of Test cricket. In the first Ratings of one-day batsmen,
Sachin Tendulkar is rated number one - just as he is in Test
cricket. But Australia's Michael Bevan is in third place,
reflecting his reputation as one of the most dangerous exponents
of the one-day game. "Bowlers also demand different treatment in
the computer program. An analysis of 1 for 15 might not look
special in a Test match, but it can win you a one-dayer. By
publishing two separate Ratings we are recognising the increasing
divergence between the different forms of the game and the way
they are played."
Roger White of PricewaterhouseCoopers said: "Cricket is an
increasingly global game and that fits the outlook of the firm.
Similarly, the Ratings have always been about collecting and
analysing information, so the parallel with our day-to-day work
is easy to draw.
"Our association with the Test Ratings has been a happy and
fruitful one for the firm. Now with one-day Ratings we are
delighted to add a new dimension to the discussion and enjoyment
of the game as a whole."
The PricewaterhouseCoopers Ratings can be found at www.pwcglobal.com/cricket