A rare draw after a 150-plus deficit

A look at the key numbers coming out of Australia’s determined effort to draw the Ranchi Test

Bharath Seervi20-Mar-20172008 The previous time an overseas team saved a Test after facing deficit of 150-plus runs in the first innings in India – England in Mohali, after India led by 151. In this Test, Australia suffered a first-innings deficit of 152 runs. The only other such fightback in the last 10 years was by Pakistan in Kolkata in 2007, after a deficit of 160 runs.3 Number of Tests saved by Australia after a deficit of 150-plus runs in India. Both those recoveries had come more than 30 years ago – in Delhi in 1979-80 and in Mumbai in 1986-87.7 Instances of visiting teams playing out the fifth day in India to save the Test having batted 75 or more overs on the final day. Australia batted 92.4 overs on the fifth day of this Test to secure a draw. The last such instance was by South Africa in Chennai in 2008.

Visiting teams playing out the 5th day in India after a first inns deficit (75+ overs on 5th day)
Team 1st-inns Deficit 5th day score 5th day overs Innings score Year
New Zealand 172 212/2 92 212/2 1955
New Zealand 275 231/2 82 252/2 1999
Zimbabwe 227 265/3 85 503/6 2000
New Zealand 160 224/5 89 272/6 2003
Pakistan 160 257/6 83.4 214/4 2007
South Africa 87 200/4 76 331/5 2008
Australia 152 181/4 92.4 204/6 2017

2004 The last time Australia batted 100 or more overs in their second innings in India – 133.5 overs in Chennai. Since then, in 14 matches before this Test, Australia had got all out on 11 occasions in their second innings in India. This time they played out 100 overs while losing only six wickets.Handscomb had a control% of 94 and Marsh 87 on the final day•ESPNcricinfo Ltd38 Number of consecutive innings without a century partnership for the fifth wicket for Australia before this Test. They had century stands in both innings in this match for the wicket. The last century partnership for Australia for this wicket was also against India in the 2014-15 Border-Gavaskar Trophy, between Joe Burns and Shaun Marsh at the SCG.2 Instances of Australia having century partnerships for the fifth wicket in both innings of a Test, both against India. The first was in Perth in 1977-78 where Bob Simpson was involved in both the stands. This match involved four different players for the stand: 191 between Steven Smith and Glenn Maxwell in first innings and 124 between Peter Handscomb and Shaun Marsh in the second. These two partnerships are also two of the three longest stands of this series in terms of balls.94 Handscomb’s control percentage in his unbeaten 72 off 200 balls. His control was better than even Pujara and Smith’s innings in the match. Before this innings, his highest score in the series was only 24 and the most balls he faced was 67. Here, he had control percentage of 90 and above against each of the four India bowlers. His partner Marsh had a control percentage of 87 in what was his second fifty of the series.78 Wickets for R Ashwin in this 2016-17 season – the joint-most by a bowler. He equalled Dale Steyn’s tally in the 2007-08 season. The next on this list is Ravindra Jadeja with 67 scalps this season. Ashwin and Jadeja have one more Test to set a new record of this.9/178 Jadeja’s figures – his second-best match figures. He picked 5 for 124 in the first innings and 4 for 54 in the second. He delivered 93.3 overs, which is themost by him in his 29-match career. His previous most was 70 overs in three separate matches, including his debut against England in Nagpur 2012-13.

Rabada's star is born but too many passengers

South Africa had the leading run-scorer and wicket-taker in the four-match series against England but lost the series because there were not enough contributions from the rest

Firdose Moonda27-Jan-2016

9

Kagiso Rabada (22 wickets at 21.90)The most successful bowler in the series was the also the youngest member across both squads but accepted responsibility as though he was born for the role. Rabada took three five-wicket hauls, including a match return of 13 for 144 to rack up the second-best figures by a South African after Makhaya Ntini. He won the Centurion game in little more than 90 minutes on the final morning and finished as the highest wicket-taker overall, despite sitting out the first game. As if that was not enough, he showed staying power with bat in hand too.

7

Hashim Amla (470 runs at 67.14)It is unusual for a captain who abandons a sinking ship to be highly rated but Amla’s mid-series stepping down was the best thing he could have done for himself and the team. Once he made the decision before the Newlands Test he freed up so much he scored a match-saving double hundred before announcing his decision. He topped that up with a century and a 96 at Centurion to lead the run charts overall and even seemed more animated in the field after removing the arm-band.

6.5

Stephen Cook (140 runs at 70.00)After loud calls for a specialist opener, Cook was included off the back of two domestic centuries in two games for the final Test and immediately proved his backers right. He scored a century on debut and batted with the confidence of a man in form. He was assured at the crease and in the field and his experience solidified South Africa at the top. At 33, he could be South Africa’s Chris Rogers.Morne Morkel (15 wickets at 29.73)In the absence of Dale Steyn and Vernon Philander, Morkel had to step up as the spearhead for this series and did so, albeit in a supporting role. Morkel was exceptional in creating pressure and allowing Rabada to reap rewards at the other end. His pace was consistently in the upper 140s, he used the bouncer well and he bowled aggressively with the new and old ball to provide both captains with a degree of certainty in an attack in transition.Dean Elgar started strongly but could not quite sustain his form•Getty Images

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Dean Elgar (284 runs at 47.33; 2 wickets at 56.00)For the most of the series, Elgar held firm in a frayed top two which gave him a level of seniority he has not had before. His century in Durban, where he carried his bat, was the first by a South African batsman in six Tests since January 2015 but he did not continue in that vein. In three of his other innings he got starts without converting before he faded away in the next three. His off-field defence of team management will go some way to supporting his leadership credentials which could see him come into contention when the Test captaincy is discussed this winter.Temba Bavuma (248 runs at 49.60)The home side had their first feel-good moment of the series when Bavuma became the first black South African batsman to score a century. That he did in a must-save game, in front of his home crowd at Newlands only made it more special. Bavuma’s breakthrough innings was a win for transformation and a sign that South Africa’s middle-order does not have to rely on misfiring older players. He has the right mix of caution and quick run-scoring, which was on display again in Centurion and is a sharp fielder at short leg.Quinton de Kock (143 runs at 143.00; 11 catches)From being left out of the squad initially to scoring an important maiden Test century in the final match, this was the series in which de Kock grew up. His run-a-ball hundred in Centurion pushed South Africa to a match-winning first innings total and showed his ability to marshal the tail and lengthen the line-up. He still has some work to do behind the stumps but took several sensational catches as well.Uncertain future? Much changed for AB de Villiers during the series and he ended it with three ducks•Getty Images

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Dane Piedt (10 wickets at 45.50)His returns do not suggest that he had a very good series but Piedt has probably done enough to nail down the specialist spinner spot ahead of Simon Harmer. He has all the variations and uses them with confidence but needs to work on his control. He was stubborn with the bat and enthusiastic in the field which makes him a good all-round package.

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AB de Villiers (210 runs at 30.00)He started the series as the wicketkeeper and ended it as the captain which serves to illustrate how topsy-turvy this time has been for de Villiers and how wide the implication was for his team. They heard rumours of him considering early retirement in Durban, which he played down by asking for a lighter workload. In Cape Town, he was relieved of the gloves but at the end of the game asked to stand in as skipper for the next two Tests. In his first pre-match press conference as leader, de Villiers once again spoke about a packed schedule which was far from the inspiration South Africa needed. Runs left him by the end of the series and he racked up three ducks in a row but some certainty had returned. He hinted at long-term captaincy ambitions towards the end. Whether he has the tactical acumen to make it remains to be seen.Dale Steyn (4 wickets at 20.00)Steyn seemed to be back with a searing performance in the first innings in Durban when he had England 12 for 2. He was bowling quickly, aggressively and with all the same intent he has always had but it was shortlived. He left the field in the second with a shoulder problem and did not make an appearance in any of the other Tests.

3

Chris Morris (98 runs at 32.66; 4 wickets at 63.25)Touted as the solution to the all-round problem, Morris proved more of a bowler who bats than a genuine No.8. He scored an important half-century in Cape Town but barely delivered with the ball. Given some time, he may yet develop into the type of player South Africa want in their Test set-up.Dane Vilas (34 runs at 17.00; 5 catches)Vilas’ international career was resurrected when he was called in as an emergency replacement for de Kock for the Wanderers Test but it was doused just as swiftly. Despite an impressive showing behind the stumps, Vilas did not produce with the bat and with de Kock’s century in Centurion, he is unlikely to be able to force his way back in.JP Duminy was recalled for the final Test but could still find his place under scrutiny•Getty Images

2

Faf du Plessis (127 runs at 25.40)As one of South Africa’s senior-most batsmen, du Plessis was expected to make up for the lean patch in India by leading the way at home. However, he struggled to get out of the rut and tried to compensate for that by occupying the crease but it dug him into a deeper rut. Du Plessis’ defensive tactics seem to have stalled his game and he was dropped for the Centurion Test.Stiaan van Zyl (69 runs at 13.80; 3 wickets at 23.00)After a lean tour of India, van Zyl was given a chance to see if he could open at home but he did not take it. The scars from the subcontinent had not healed, he still seemed unsure of where his off stump was and on the occasion when he found it, he ran himself out. Van Zyl showed glimpses of the domestic form that got him picked for South Africa but his self-belief has taken a knock and he was dropped for the final Test.JP Duminy (73 runs at 24.33; 1 wicket at 28.00)Like du Plessis, Duminy needed to take on the responsibility of scoring runs but did not. He was dropped after Durban, went back to Cobras and scored a career-best unbeaten 260 and then recalled for the final Test where he failed again. Duminy’s issue seems to be that he does not understand his role in the line-up or with the ball. His offspin was barely called on and, with other players performing well in the middle-order, he is becoming surplus to requirements.Hardus Viljoen (1 wicket at 94.00)A wicket with his first ball in Test cricket to remove the England captain, after a four off the first ball he faced from the England spearhead James Anderson, gave him a little place in cricket history but it was a false dawn. Viljoen could not find the balance between raw pace and control and the rest of his Wanderers performance fizzled out. He was an unlucky to play in an attack with three other bowlers who all did the same thing and may benefit from more varied team-mates if he gets another chance.Kyle Abbott (2 wickets at 87.00)The ghosts of the 2015 World Cup are still haunting Abbott, who has not been the same bowler since he was left out of the semi-final XI. He took his only wickets of the series in Durban and struggled with a hamstring niggle for the rest of the series. He recovered in time to play in Centurion, where he kept it tight, but was not penetrative enough, and was then re-injured so he could only play a limited part in the game.

When the MCG was a sea of blue

This was Eden Gardens and another half of an Eden Gardens on top of it. This was Wankhede Stadium with another Wankhede Stadium on top of it

Abhishek Purohit in Melbourne22-Feb-2015Shikhar Dhawan charges out to Imran Tahir and drives wide of long-off. MCG roars. Dale Steyn tears to his right, bends to try and pick it up one-handed, but fails to. Dhawan and Virat Kohli seize the chance to take a second run. MCG roars louder.A few overs later, Dhawan pushes Steyn to the off side for a single. The tension builds as David Miller hunts the ball down, but his throw misses. MCG roars. The batsmen pinch another run off another overthrow. MCG roars louder.An incensed Steyn steams in and bowls the next ball short. Dhawan whips it fine for four. MCG roars. The giant screen shows a close-up of Steyn’s face as he swears away in frustration. MCG roars louder.Four tiers of stands at the largest cricket ground in the world. Encircling the players, with barely an opening in between. You crane your neck upwards to look at the top row of the highest stand, which appears to touch the hanging, heavy cloud. You look down to the first row right at the edge of the outfield. Indian flags waving all around in frenzied uniformity. There is the odd South African one, but it seems as much at home as the South African team does in the face of such an overpowering, partisan crowd on what was supposed to be neutral territory. No wonder Alan Donald called this a home game for India.This is Eden Gardens and another half of an Eden Gardens on top of it. This is Wankhede Stadium with another Wankhede Stadium on top of it. But this not Kolkata or Mumbai. This is Melbourne.And there are Indians everywhere at the MCG. Indian citizens. Persons of Indian Origin. Staying across the breadth of the world. Hailing from different parts of a vast country. There was even an India flag with ‘Bhuj’ and ‘Kutch’ written on either side of the Ashok Chakra in the middle, showing clearly which part of which state in the country the fans came from. Speaking multiple tongues. Telugu in the row in front. Marathi in this one. Punjabi in the one behind. Hindi to the left. English with an Australian accent to the right.Meanwhile, Dhawan wants to turn Steyn to leg. The ball balloons to short third man instead. All of them stop the small talk and stand up to scream for the single India take.Kohli pulls a half-tracker from Imran Tahir straight to midwicket. MCG is stunned, then falls silent, before people start standing up again. Some to applaud Kohli for what seemed set to be many more than 46. Some run right to the edge of the boundary barriers to welcome Ajinkya Rahane. Somebody calls for people to sit down in the front rows because he cannot see what is happening. Nobody listens. This is their day out at the cricket at the MCG. Indian style.

Shikhar Dhawan finally punches a boundary to get the hundred and the explosion of sound scorches right through you

Dhawan is on 99. People have been aware of the approaching landmark for a long time now. The noise is deafening with only a single needed. Dhawan plays three successive dots. The build-up to each ball is so intense you can feel it rush into your skin. He finally punches a boundary to get the hundred and the explosion of sound scorches right through you.It is one of the days when being a billion-plus helps. You can fill out almost any ground anywhere in the world where your team is playing. Even the massive MCG is simmering with that expectant murmur so typical of Indian grounds throughout, waiting for anything in favour of India. Anything to erupt. It is taken for granted that there will be lots of Indian fans creating an atmosphere at an India limited-overs match, even outside the country. But the fact that it happens, again and again, is wonderful and should be celebrated, not least for the energy it provides and the spectacle it creates.How must it have felt to be a South African fan in those towering columns of blue? How much pressure must that impassioned mass have put on the South African players? AB de Villiers felt all the support was definitely a boost for India but that his team tried not to let it affect them. But it is a rare day when South Africa fumble so much on the field, and allow so many singles and twos.What did it mean to MS Dhoni and his men? Dhoni started by saying he was glad he had been asked about the crowd. “The attendance was 86 or 87 thousand (86,876). Let us give the benefit of doubt – 20,000 to the South African fans,” Dhoni said. “To get over 50,000 people in Australia… the atmosphere that gets created. It starts from the warm-ups and after the national anthem, it just multiplies.”The kind of support we are talking about… even when we are playing in India, some of the stadiums do not have that kind of capacity. Even when they are full, they are close to 40,000. Today we are seeing in Australia more than 50 to 60,000 people supporting us. Definitely we need to give a lot of credit to them. It is really heartening to see people coming from all over.”Just imagine the atmosphere if they make the World Cup final here on March 29, someone said after India had won. Just imagine.

The best after the Don? That's a toughie

Introducing the next theme in our series: the second-finest batsman ever (after you know who)

Mark Nicholas18-Mar-2013A few days after Ricky Ponting hung up his boots, an Australian paper suggested he was the nation’s next best batsman after Sir Donald Bradman. He might be. So might Allan Border, Greg Chappell, Neil Harvey, Stan McCabe or Victor Trumper. The editor of these pages (Sambit Bal) was enamoured of the argument and wanted to extend it to the next best after Bradman, full stop. He called me.Whoah! I have no more idea than the next man. Had Bradman not averaged 99.94 – say 59.94 was his hypothetical number – we would debate him along with everyone else: some making a case for substance, others for style. These arguments are entirely subjective. There is no wrong or right, just opinion. Unless it is Bradman, of course; then the bets are off.Sambit banged on about these past 20 years and the place not just of Ponting but of Sachin Tendulkar, Brian Lara and Jacques Kallis in the batting pantheon. I sort of hate him for this but then again, it is the stuff of idle talk among all cricket lovers, so muggins here agreed to open the can of worms. Then the other day Brendon McCullum said that Alastair Cook was the best since Bradman. Ye gods, everyone’s at it.Figures have to feature in the criteria because they are the one constant, but these alter with time, laws, equipment, opponents and conditions. Comparing Trumper or Ranjitsinhji to Kevin Pietersen is impossible, other than to say they all liked a dash. Trumper could invent, Ranji could improvise, Pietersen does both, but the requirement and ambition in 2013 are very different. Barry Richards drove over extra cover and Mushtaq Mohammad played the reverse sweep, but they were the pioneers of their day. Now, if you bat at No. 7 in T20 cricket and can’t pull those rabbits from your hard hat, forget it.Bradman said he would have Iiked to have played the one-day game, and given his general rate of scoring, we can safely assume he would have been damn good at it. Doubtless, he would have cracked T20 too. Not many have been at the limit of their talent in all three formats. Pietersen has, but does this make him the best after Bradman? Probably not.Tendulkar, then? Or Michael Hussey? Both have records in all three formats that suggest a thorough understanding of the distance of the match and the requirement of the team within it. From there comes the second and key criteria, the ability of the player to bat in a fashion that wins matches for his team. Runs themselves are a necessity: runs made when specifically needed, or in difficult circumstances, assume much greater value. How do we measure this? We can’t, not through the ages anyway. Some form of Moneyball algorithm might soon unravel the modern player but, thankfully, the many misty years that have seen cricket evolve from a game of top hats, curved bats and underarm bowling to the kaleidoscope that it has become today do not allow us such forensic detail.Bradman’s chaser may be Trumper or Ranji. Or McCabe, who made a double-hundred at Trent Bridge that Bradman said he could not have played himself. Or Sir Jack Hobbs, he of 197 first-class hundreds; Sir Leonard Hutton, Neil Harvey or Hanif Mohammad. Perhaps it really is Walter Hammond, whose weight of shot and resulting performances are thought by those who saw him to have been unmatched – except by Bradman.West Indians will say that George Headley was more than just the “Black Bradman”, and that Everton Weekes could thrill a crowd like no other, not even Denis Compton. Maybe we should simply go to the and bury ourselves in the records. Graeme Pollock, Headley and Herbert Sutcliffe are the only cricketers, other than the Don, to have averaged more than 60. The first two played 23 and 22 matches respectively; are these enough to prove a man’s place in the pantheon? Given the merit of the attacks faced, is Kenny Barrington’s 6806 runs at 58.67 any less outrageously good than, say, Sutcliffe’s 4555 at 60.53? And so on and so on.

In a private conversation that I was asked not to reveal during his lifetime, Sir Donald told me that he suspected Barry Richards and Graeme Pollock would have become the greatest right- and left-handed batsmen of all time had they been allowed full careers

It seems inconceivable to me that a man nominated the best after Bradman spent his career beneath a helmet. One of the Don’s more notable achievements was to average 56 during the Bodyline series in 1932-33. The method of the bowling and the field settings that accompanied it brought the great man to earth and won England the series. Bradman wore the traditional green cap of Australia and was thus exposed to physical danger from Harold Larwood, while at the same time being unable to score runs in various areas of the ground because the law permitted a leg-side field with limitless positions behind square.Those who played against West Indies circa 1976 were confronted by multiples of the same physical danger. None of this is to decry the achievements of those who came after the introduction of helmets. Far from it. Achievement comes within the parameters of the moment. But protection changes technique and expands options. As Kerry Packer famously said to Justin Langer: “Son, if we hadn’t invented helmets, you’d be dead.”Bradman really only played against one team, England. Outside of Bodyline, uncovered pitches were his greatest threat. The modern game takes you to all corners. Murali in Colombo; Akram in Karachi; Marshall, Garner and Corporation at the Kensington Oval are all severe tests of character. It has become a merry-go-round, shunting players from airplane to hotel room in a way that players of the past could not conceive. The schedule gnaws away at enterprise and enthusiasm. Stamina is almost as relevant as skill.The best batting I have seen came from Tendulkar, during the 1998 series against Australia in India, the series when he plotted for Shane Warne and then mauled him. The series when he tore the Australians to shreds. These performances confirmed a suspicion conceived a few years earlier by Lady Jessie Bradman, that the Indian boy batted like her husband. Tendulkar’s straight lines and startling ability to slay Goliath were first evident against Imran Khan, Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis and Abdul Qadir in 1989. It is a miracle that we can still watch it today, if in a diminished form.The best single innings I have seen is by Brian Lara, again against Australia – one year after Tendulkar’s tour de force – when he made 153 unbeaten in a chase at the Kensington Oval. Lara played a number of truly great innings, not least in that series, and more of them to wrestle control single-handedly than Tendulkar. He also broke the world record twice. You need a Bradman-like mind to do that. But Lara played in a weaker team and his effect was often lost.Kallis plays in a strong team but on some devilish home pitches – the Wanderers and Kingsmead, notably. He is technically close to perfect and averages more than Hutton, so what’s not to like? Not much. Perhaps a lack of personality in his batting? Or the notion of safety before seduction? But did Bradman seduce? Was his appeal in the sheer relentless nature of the performance that spoke for an emerging people, or in its theatre, which showcased their nation?Ponting became the most feared batsman in the world but did not have to play against his own high-class attack. The bulk of his brilliance – 2003 to 2008 – came during a period when the others countries went quiet. No Ambrose or Walsh, for example, or Allan Donald. Not much Wasim Akram. Relatively, Ponting’s dominance was unchallenged. It is why he so rates the match-saving 156 at Old Trafford in 2005. England, for once in his career, had a gun attack and the series was at stake. Anyway, all of these amazing batsmen wore the hard hat. It may not be your criterion but for the purpose of this analysis, it is mine. So rule out Martin Crowe, Rahul Dravid and Kumar Sangakkara as well. Sorry.My cricket addiction started in the mid-1960s. It started with Ted Dexter, John Snow and Sir Garfield Sobers. Watching with near tragic commitment and reading, listening, impersonating and playing until lights out, I came to see the 1970s as a golden age. The finest batsmen I set eyes upon were – in a batting order, for the sake of it – Sunil Gavaskar, Barry Richards, Viv Richards, Pollock, Greg Chappell and Sobers. Easily, to be honest, a no-brainer. Others could do marvellous things, Gordon Greenidge and Clive Lloyd among them, but these six men captured the essence of my dream, whether as underdog or bully, and occasionally there was a moment of both for all of them. Only Tendulkar and Lara have stepped in their footprints since.Because all were at, or near, their best in a ten-year period between 1968 and 1978, it is fair enough to compare and calibrate. The bats, though becoming heavier, were of a type. The dial of world cricket was giving similar opportunity to all except the South Africans, whose breakaway performances in World XIs and strong first-class cricket gave us a clue to the depth of their talent. One-day cricket was an embryo with which they could all experiment. World Series Cricket would have been a useful sorting office but there were no Indians, no Sobers and no Pollock.Once during WSC, against the Australians at Gloucester Park in Perth, the two Richardses went through the gears together, and it is hard to imagine a better dovetail of strokeplay. Viv’s ability to overwhelm an opponent is pretty much unparalleled. His walk to the wicket was a show of its own – has any sportsman made such an entrance! – and his presence, an aura that still exists today, gave him a headstart. The best Viv Richards innings feel like the very best innings by anyone: inflammatory, inspirational, irresistible.Barry had everything, except a place in the record books. Apartheid denied him that. He was a flawless, almost magical, batsman with an original mind and an arrogance that allowed him to flirt with his audience, sucking them into his unique gifts but too often spitting them out with a careless parade. In a private conversation that I was asked not to reveal during his lifetime, Sir Donald told me that he suspected Barry Richards and Graeme Pollock would have become the greatest right- and left-handed batsmen of all time had they been allowed full careers. He saw a lot of Richards during his summer with South Australia – the summer in which he made 300 in a day in Perth against a fine Western Australian attack that included the young Dennis Lillee – and enough of Pollock during World XI matches and so forth.Pollock was really something. An executioner – albeit a graceful one, with an insatiable appetite for runs, and more runs. South Africans flocked to watch him at work, and then, as the Castle lager took over, licked their lips at the wreckage of his victims. ” [four runs],” the Afrikaans commentators would exclaim. “Pollock… !” and they would rejoice, for he was their worship. As the Pollock stance became wider and the Pollock bat became heavier, the method stayed the same. Keep it simple, stupid, he seemed to say, rock back and forward and thump it for four. Disbelieving bowlers were left stranded in their follow-through by cover drives and pulls that scorched the earth. It is hard to look beyond Graeme Pollock.Sobers: hands as fast as snakes and feet that danced•PA Photos/Getty ImagesUnless you look to Sir Garfield. He was a shadow when I caught him at Lord’s in 1973 – the bomb-scare match – but imagine the thrill of Garry Sobers in the flesh. He made 150. Thanks Garry. Rohan Kanhai made a tasty hundred too.We went home and suddenly West Indies were beating England in their back garden. We pushed up our collars, rolled our shoulders and thrashed back-foot drives without a care in the world. This was the thing about Sobers; it was as if he had not a care in the world. Bradman said that Sobers’ 254 at the Melbourne Cricket Ground was the best innings he saw, better even than McCabe’s. That will do for me. Sobers was genius. He had hands as fast as snakes and feet that danced. There was a lot of Sobers in Lara, another with genius, and there are not many, Viv Richards perhaps. That is what Geoffrey Boycott thinks – that Sobers, Richards and Lara had genius, no one else. I defer to Geoffrey occasionally.There was something of an emperor in Greg Chappell. Though his walk to the wicket was brisk, his head was held high and seemed to survey the vulnerability of the enemy. The strokes were from the classics – upright and surprisingly powerful. There was an on-drive to die for and uncanny placement through point and the covers. Everything about Chappell was precise and serene. The one surprise came when he was out. It seemed so unlikely. He made light of weakness and confronted strength with a visible strength of his own. He was brought down once, by West Indies, but even in that dogfight there was elegance. To average close on 54 in the Golden Age, and to do so without having the West Indians as your own, is to pass the exam with honours.Finally then to Sunny, whose degree in batsmanship surely had honours of its own. Sunil Gavaskar CBE (Courageous Batsman Extraordinaire). This was a man who carried the cliché with him – the hopes of (nearly) a billion people – and did so before it was fashionable. The haughty Poms, the arrogant Aussies and those terrifying islanders from the Caribbean were all the same to Gavaskar, who tucked in behind the ball and relied on sound technique and exquisite judgement to make 34 Test match hundreds. His defiance spoke for new India: “We will not be bullied, we will fight them on the fields of Mumbai, Kingston, Melbourne and Manchester and we will never surrender”. His occasional attack brought delirium. It is true that in the middle chapters of the Gavaskar story protection came from a skullcap, but the legend was formed by then and by a still head, set bare.So who is it to be, this mythical best after the Don? It is tempting to say that Bradman himself was right about the two South Africans, but the hypothesis itself is not enough to go on. Barry has been my own favourite batsman – only Sachin nudged him for me. Tendulkar might well be the perfect answer – liked as he was by Lady Bradman, and for the many miles he has covered without compromise. It is truly remarkable that he defied Imran Khan in the late 1980s, Shane Warne in the late 1990s and Dale Steyn in 2011. Sachin could be the man but for the lid.I go for the majesty of Sir Garfield Sobers, for his ability to make cricket a thing of beauty and joy; for breaking the world record score as a young man and playing with the same instincts as an older man. And for scoring more than 8000 runs at an average of nearly 58 when he had all those late nights from which to recover – never mind that he bowled quick, quick, slow, and caught flies. Yup, It’s Garry. There is no going back. I just hit the “send” key.

Amla, Gambhir the surprise omissions

An analysis of the batting selections and major omissions from the ICC ODI team of 2011

Madhusudhan Ramakrishnan12-Sep-2011Strong World Cup performances for India and Sri Lanka have ensured that they have six representatives in the ICC ODI Team of the Year. While the selection of most players from the two teams is quite understandable given their contributions to their teams’ success in the World Cup, a few choices have raised questions. In the period considered for the awards (August 11, 2010 to August 3, 2011), five players scored over 1000 runs with Hashim Amla leading the run tally. Amla, who is in the shortlist for the ODI player-of-the-year award, had a phenomenal year, scoring 1091 runs with five centuries at an average of 60.61 and strike rate of 98.64. In 14 matches against top teams, he averages over 55 with a strike rate of 97.36. With such an outstanding record, it is rather surprising to see Amla missing from the team. Although the selection or omission of certain players cannot be purely based on numbers, evaluating the context of their performances can provide a better perspective.Tillakaratne Dilshan had a superb World Cup where he was the highest run-getter. Dilshan scored 500 runs with two centuries and two fifties including a century in the ten-wicket win in the quarter-final against England. However, he had a very bad run after the tournament scoring just 23 runs in six innings. Even though Dilshan had such success in the World Cup, his overall average in the period against the Test-playing teams (excluding Zimbabwe and Bangladesh) was just 30.70. Virender Sehwag started off brilliantly in the World Cup scoring 175 against Bangladesh but his form tapered off as the tournament went on, and he managed to score only one half-century in the next seven matches. Despite the fact that he played only 12 matches in the period, Sehwag does make a case for himself with a stunning strike rate of 117.13. AB de Villiers, who has scored 870 runs with four centuries at an average of 56.68 and strike rate of 99.67 guarantees his selection in the middle order.Shane Watson had an ordinary World Cup by his own recent standards. In January 2011, he set up a successful chase of 295 against England in Melbourne with an unbeaten 161, the then highest score by an Australian batsman in an ODI chase. He eclipsed his own record by smashing 185 against Bangladesh in Dhaka in April. With an average nearing 60 and a strike rate over 111, it is surprising to see Watson slotted in at No. 5 in the batting order instead of the opening spot where he has proved to be most dangerous.Kumar Sangakkara has also scored over 1000 runs in the same period, but has a much lower strike rate of 78.34. In ODIs against Test-playing teams, he averages 51.05 but has a strike rate of 75.26. His best performances include the 71 in the tri-series final against India in 2010 and a century against New Zealand in the World Cup. Yuvraj Singh, who was named player of the tournament in the World Cup, clearly makes the team purely based on the strength of his performances in the tournament. MS Dhoni had a very poor time in ODIs and saw his average and strike rate drop considerably during the period. He, however, scored a crucial match-winning 91 in the World Cup final which ensures his place in the ODI team of the year.

Batting stats of players in the ODI team of the year (period from August 11 2010 to August 3 2011)

PlayerMatchesRunsAverageSR100/50Tillakaratne Dilshan2685835.7588.813/2Virender Sehwag1262957.18117.132/2Kumar Sangakkara25104955.2178.341/7AB de Villiers1890756.6899.674/4Shane Watson1995559.68111.172/6Yuvraj Singh2370146.7377.631/6MS Dhoni1945432.4269.730/2Along with Amla’s omission, Gautam Gambhir’s absence is also debatable. Gambhir, who narrowly missed out on a century in the World Cup final, scored 722 runs in the period at an average of 60.16 and strike rate of 95.00. Michael Clarke also stakes a strong claim for selection in the middle order with 800 runs at an average of 61.53. Mahela Jaywardene, who was below-par in 2010, has been in form since the start of the World Cup. He has scored four half-centuries and three centuries including an unbeaten 103 in the World Cup final. After a poor home series against Pakistan, Jonathan Trott has been remarkably consistent in 2011 scoring two hundreds and seven fifties. He has been dismissed below 20 on only four occasions this year and averages 54.88 in matches played in 2011 (till August 3, 2011).

Batting stats of other top batsmen in the same period

PlayerMatchesRunsAverageSR100/50Hashim Amla20109160.6198.645/6Gautam Gambhir1472260.1695.002/4Jonathan Trott24106448.3679.402/9Michael Clarke2080061.5384.292/5Mahela Jayawardene2687043.5089.593/4

Two up, four down

Ireland and Scotland fared well, while Bermuda, Kenya, Canada and Netherlands plumbed the depths

Will Luke04-Jan-2009


Among Scotland’s highs was defeating Lancashire in the Friends Provident Trophy
© PA Photos

Ireland

Ireland may continue to leak their best players to England, but out of all the Associate nations they seem the most organised, and 2008 proved to be a promising year all round. However, like Scotland, their involvement in the Friends Provident Trophy has been a learning curve and not much more, though the two sides’ inclusion in a major domestic tournament causes green-eyed envy from the likes of Kenya, who are virtually ignored by their nearest neighbours South Africa.Ireland’s greatest achievement was their third successive victory in the ICC Intercontinental Cup, the biggest event in Associate cricket. As Kenya’s coach, Andy Kirsten, told Cricinfo in August, “It’s the closest to a Test match they’ll get” – albeit without the intensity. Nevertheless, Ireland have shown promise in all areas.With several players unavailable, such as Niall O’Brien, who has county commitments, the coach, Phil Simmons, was forced to pick young and cruelly inexperienced players such as Paul Stirling. He inevitably struggled, but the fact he has already played 19 matches for his country suggests Simmons and Ireland aren’t afraid to tip young players into the deep end. However, they will continue to miss the class of O’Brien and other county-contracted players as they look to qualify for the 2011 World Cup next year.

Scotland

The end-of-year news that three Scotland players were turning professional lent seasonal cheer to Scottish cricket, and 2008 was a mixed year north of the border. It began well, though.A tense two-run win over Lancashire in the Friends Provident Trophy in May demonstrated their determination to succeed in a professional tournament of quality teams and players.They cruised past the two worst Associates, Bermuda and Canada, with ease thanks to the growing development of their slow-left-armer, Ross Lyons. They finished a respectable fourth in the Intercontinental Cup and only trailed Kenya – apparently the leading Associate, though their crown is fast slipping – by 14 points.The highlight of the season ought to have been their match against England at The Grange. And it was, briefly – particularly for Gavin Hamilton who cracked 60 – until Scottish drizzle deemed it a dribbly draw. It was the sixth ODI out of ten held in Scotland to be a no-result. No amount of funding can fix the weather up north, but pleasingly Scotland’s prospects are far brighter.

Bermuda

A miserable and depressing year for Bermudan cricket. Allegations of drug use, syringes found in players’ dressing rooms and poor behaviour helped to tarnish an equally poor year in terms of results. They finished bottom of the Intercontinental Cup table with 26 points, behind the UAE and Canada. Their developmental side even lost to Argentina, one of the next generation of Affiliates hoping to make the next step up to Associate level. Given Bermuda’s experience, victory in the World Cricket League Americas tournament should have been secured comfortably, but they lost that too. Domestically, their season ended in a complete shambles when some teams (and even umpires) failed or forgot to turn up.They are grouped with Kenya, Netherlands, UAE, Denmark and one other in next year’s ICC World Cup Qualifier, and for all the optimism of Gus Logie, their coach, it is very difficult to see how 2009 will be much different. Their women’s side fared similarly poorly, reaching a comedic nadir when they were dismissed for just 13.

Kenya

The past year has not been easy for Kenya. They won just a single ODI, against Zimbabwe – a fine win, but once again it was Steve Tikolo who brought them victory, cracking a superb 102. Aside from that, they lost to Netherlands, Ireland (twice), and suffered two other heavy defeats to South Africa to cap a disappointingly poor year. So disappointing, in fact, that in November, Cricket Kenya launched an investigation into the decline in form and the management structure in an attempt to reverse their fortunes.In September, a virtually full-strength side was humiliated by a Pakistan XI in Mombasa, a match that followed Kenya’s dismal tour of Europe. The northern hemisphere’s traditionally soggy summer didn’t help, of course, but the results were consistently poor. In addition to being beaten by a club side, there were allegations by an opposition team of dissent and poor behaviour, and Kenya then failed to qualify for the 2009 World Twenty20 when Ireland rolled them for an abject 67 in Belfast.Whatever could go wrong did go wrong; even the former KCA Chairman, Sharad Ghai, offered his two pennies with a predictably vitriolic attack on the domestic structure, though his comments were laced with bitterness, since he was ousted in 2005.The one bright spot came with the appearance of Seren Waters, a prodigiously talented batsman who made 41 on his debut, followed by 74 in a full ODI against South Africa. It seems inconceivable, however, that he won’t pledge his future to England; Surrey have already offered him an “emerging players” contract.


Kenya’s Seren Waters is one to watch out for
© Martin Williamson

Canada

A mixed bag of a year, where little or no progress was made on the pitch but bigger strides were made administratively. The board signed a huge deal with Scotiabank, sponsoring men and women players alike over three years. An encouraging sign for the future, particularly with Canada’s keenness to professionalise their administrative set-up – if not yet their cricketers, though that could happen sooner rather than later. Furthermore, cricket became officially recognised by the government, and over the next few years the sport ought to receive a slice of public funding, though like in many Associate nations, the game remains a minority-interest, and particularly in Canada’s case, is played mostly by first and second-generation immigrants.On the field, the T20 Canada tournament was mostly a logistical success – bar the odd missing visa or two – but Canada were far and away the weakest, finishing bottom. Even Zimbabwe managed to thrash them, as befits their – understandably questionable – status as a Full Member, leaving Canada with more questions than answers. Still, they signed a five-year deal to host similar events in the future, and only time will tell whether they can begin to challenge their own before taking on the heavies. Foundations are being made behind the scenes and, for now, that is a positive step forward.

Netherlands

Of all the Associates, Netherlands are the ones most likely to be looking over their shoulder at the progress being made by the likes of Namibia and Afghanistan. Results have been poor for some time, but crucially, this year the board came under increasing pressure with a steady decline of players, which Andre van Troost, their former bowler-turned-chief executive, must tackle first.The lack of interest in cricket in the country is a serious concern for their status as an Associate, and having finished fifth in the ICC Intercontinental Cup – some 34 points behind fourth-placed Scotland – van Troost and his board have a lot of ground to make up. Compared to Ireland and Scotland, Netherlands simply don’t play enough games against quality opposition. Britain’s Associates are keenly involved in one-day county cricket, for example, and there would be little expectation that Netherlands could challenge even a second-division county side. With the World Cup Qualifiers taking place in just six months’ time, Dutch cricket has an awful lot to do to catch the others.

Why Arsenal's pre-season friendly against AC Milan went to penalties despite Gunners' Bukayo Saka-inspired 1-0 win – explained

Arsenal kicked off their summer tour with a 1-0 triumph over AC Milan in a tightly-contested friendly held at the National Stadium in Singapore. The encounter, which marked the first pre-season fixture for both clubs, saw Bukayo Saka net the only goal of the game, giving Mikel Arteta’s side an early boost in their preparations for the upcoming campaign. However, the game still went to a penalty shootout.

Arsenal played first friendly vs MilanSaka scored to hand Gunners 1-0 winHowever, Milan edged them in shootoutFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

The breakthrough came eight minutes into the second half on a hot and humid evening, with temperatures still hovering at around 30C at kick-off despite an evening start. Arsenal substitute Jakub Kiwior played a crucial role in the move, swinging in a pinpoint cross to the back post, where Saka met the ball and nudged it over the line. Despite the win in normal time, the night took an unusual turn as both sides participated in a post-match penalty shootout – a pre-agreed arrangement designed to test their penalty takers.

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After five penalties each, the shootout was tied at 2-2. Martin Zubimendi and Mikel Merino converted their spot-kicks for the Gunners, while goalkeeper Kepa Arrizabalaga stood tall with three impressive saves, all diving to his left. As the shootout moved into sudden death, both sides continued to hold their nerve. Max Dowman, Leandro Trossard, and Josh Nichols found the net for Arsenal, matched strike for strike by Milan. However, the stalemate was finally broken when Marli Salmon failed to convert his effort, sending the ball wide of the target. Milan capitalised on the miss to clinch a 6-5 victory in the shootout.

DID YOU KNOW?

While Arsenal’s latest signing, Christian Norgaard, was the only summer recruit to feature in the starting line-up, it was 17-year-old Ethan Nwaneri who stole the spotlight in the first half. The promising midfielder, who is expected to commit to a new four-year contract with an optional fifth year, showcased maturity and creativity beyond his years, drawing praise for his vision and composure.

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Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT FOR ARSENAL AND MILAN?

With the first test of their pre-season now behind them, Arsenal turn their attention to their next fixture against Premier League rivals Newcastle United. The two sides are set to meet again at the Singapore National Stadium on Sunday, offering Arteta another opportunity to assess his squad’s readiness. AC Milan, meanwhile, will head to Hong Kong, where they will face English champions Liverpool.

Gabriel Xavier vibra com sequência entre os titulares

MatériaMais Notícias

O zagueiro Gabriel Xavier voltou a ganhar cada vez mais espaço na defesa titular do Bahia nesta temporada. Depois de terminar 2022 em alta, o defensor figurou entre os onze iniciais em cinco dos últimos seis jogos e tem sido um dos destaques na zaga do Tricolor de Aço.

Após perder a pré-temporada por conta de uma lesão muscular, o jovem de 21 anos comemora as oportunidades recebidas pelo técnico Renato Paiva.

– Essas oportunidades que tenho tido estão sendo muito importantes para a minha evolução, ainda mais vindo de uma lesão e de não ter jogado nenhuma partida no ano. Eu estava precisando dessa sequência e vou seguir trabalhando para continuar nessa mesma pegada – disse o zagueiro.

Agora, o próximo compromisso do time tricolor é diante do CRB pela Copa do Nordeste. Gabriel enxerga o jogo de suma importância para a evolução da equipe, já pensando nas finais do Baianão contra a Jacuipense.

– Infelizmente já estamos fora da Copa do Nordeste, mas o nosso pensamento como equipe não muda, queremos ganhar para continuar no nosso processo de evolução de equipe, e com certeza chegarmos bem para os dois jogos das finais que iremos ter – frisou.

Bahia e CRB se enfrentam nesta quarta-feira (22), às 21h30 (de Brasília), na Arena Fonte Nova, pela oitava e última rodada da fase de grupos da Copa do Nordeste. Pela final do Baianão, o Tricolor tem pela frente a Jacuipense, no domingo (26), às 16h, pelo jogo de ida da decisão do Estadual.

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Após goleada histórica, Goiás se torna o time da Série A com mais gols em 2023

MatériaMais Notícias

Você se lembra da última vez em que assistiu uma partida de futebol do seu time com mais de dez gols? Bom, se você é torcedor do Goiás, não faz muito tempo assim. O Esmeraldino goleou o Goiânia neste fim de semana, no primeiro jogo das quartas de final do Campeonato Goiano, por 8 a 3 e deu um passo importante para avançar na competição. Com isso, se tornou também o time da Série A que mais vezes balançou as redes neste ano até agora.

Comandada pelo técnico Guto Ferreira, a equipe chegou à marca de 31 gols marcados na temporada, três a mais do que o Cuiabá, segundo no ranking, e quatro em relação ao Flamengo, o terceiro. Destaque principalmente para o centroavante Nicolas, que já anotou sete tentos e disputa a artilharia do futebol brasileiro em 2023.

TIMES DA SÉRIE A COM MAIS GOLS EM 2023

1º – Goiás – 31 gols em 13 jogos
2º – Cuiabá – 28 gols em 9 jogos
3º – Flamengo – 27 gols em 13 jogos
4º – Athletico-PR – 25 gols em 11 jogos
5º – Grêmio – 24 gols em 10 jogos
6º – Fortaleza – 23 gols em 12 jogos
7º – Palmeiras – 22 gols em 12 jogos
8º – São Paulo – 20 gols em 11 jogos
9º – Vasco – 17 gols em 9 jogos
Internacional – 17 gols em 9 jogos

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Por acesso na Série B, Vasco enfrenta o Sampaio Corrêa podendo encerrar um tabu de 35 anos

MatériaMais Notícias

Vencer para subir. Esse é o objetivo do Vasco no jogo contra o Sampaio Corrêa, nesta quinta-feira, em São Januário, pela 37ª rodada da Série B. Com a vitória, o Cruz-Maltino chegaria aos 62 pontos e garantiria o acesso, já que não poderia ser alcançado pelo Ituano, que tem 54 e é o 5º colocado.

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A trajetória como mandante do Vasco na Série B enche de confiança o seu torcedor de que o acesso não será adiado. Dos 59 pontos, 42 foram conquistados no Rio de Janeiro, onde o time tem um aproveitamento de 78%. De quebra, é o único invicto da Série B dentro dos seus domínios, seja ele São Januário e Maracanã, estádio que o Cruz-Maltino mandou os seus jogos contra o Cruzeiro (1 a 0) e o Sport (0 a 0).

+ Vasco depende de uma vitória para subir; confira a classificação

Esse será o 22º e o último jogo do Vasco em São Januário na temporada e pode representar, além do acesso, o fim de um tabu histórico de 35 anos. Foi em 1987 o último ano que o Cruz-Maltino não foi derrotado em São Januário. Naquela temporada, o time até perdeu como mandante no Campeonato Brasileiro para Atlético-MG e São Paulo, mas os jogos foram disputados no Maracanã, o que era comum na década de 1980.

Até em anos históricos o Vasco foi derrotado em São Januário. Liderado por Edmundo, o Cruz-Maltino terminou invicto como mandante e campeão no Brasileiro de 1997, mas perdeu para o River Plate, por 2 a 0, na Supercopa da Libertadores. A campanha do título Brasileiro de 2000 começou com uma derrota para o Sport, por 2 a 0, em São Januário, com Romário em campo.

+ Apesar das críticas, Série B atual do Vasco é semelhante às edições de 2014 e 2016

O torcedor carregou o Vasco nas costas, ou melhor, em São Januário, estádio conhecido por ser um território hostil, desde 1927. A invencibilidade somada ao acesso é o título simbólico que a torcida merece por jamais ter abandonado o time durante a Série B. Vale lembrar que os ingressos se esgotaram em 16 dos 19 jogos do time como mandante.

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