Making_Splinters wrote:Flintoff at his best was one of the great allrounders to play the game. In the 4 year period from the start of 2003 to the end of 2007 he averaged 38 with the bat and 28 with the ball, so not just a 2 year spell.
He had a very slow start to his career when he didn't take his fitness or his cricket seriously, but even from the 2005 ashes to the end of his career he averaged 28 with the bat and 33 with the ball, which is more than decent and certainly not crap.
While Freddie had a pretty good 3/4 year span, you can pick out a period where he averaged 45 with the bat and 25 with the ball. That's what he could do- against tough opposition too. He was perhaps too big/heavy to be a top order batter, but he had a good method, and in India in 06, when I think he got to 50 about 4 or 5 times, he looked pretty classy, well coached. But I reckon the injuries stopped him from reaching his peak as a bat, he hardly played between Test innings. He was injured, or he was rushed back into the side. I think if he had played more, he would have been more consistent.
With the ball, Freddie was extremely unselfish. He bowled most of the attritional overs, and often stayed on just because the rest of the attack (after 06) ceased to function. If there was nothing in the pitch, Flintoff just upped his ration.
A fine slipper. But, with that X-factor in abundance that made watching him so enjoyable, and made his best days so memorable. I don't really like making provisos for why his stats weren't better anymore. He did plenty and he was there on some very special days.
I always say that everybody's right.