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prabhat k
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Posted on 07-09-08 6:49
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Coming back to cricket.
Probably a topic that's been discussed so often..afterall who is the best batsman of all time. Mind u , I'm not going at just satistics, I'm looking at their contribution to the game, the dominance they had on the cricket field everytime they walked onto the field..and overall...the RARE ELEGANCE AND EXCEPTIONAL TALENT THAT THEY..AND ONLY THEY ..POSSESSED.
Rounding up top 5.
1. Donald Bradman ( Australia) : Never seen him play live coz he retired in 1948. Has an average of 99.94 and 29 hundreds in 52 games. Hit a century in two overs ( 8 ball over) in a local game. Scored 334 in a day and considered the best batsman by almost anyone who knows cricket.
2. Viv Richards ( Antigua, West Indies) : His swagger to the crease and the now famous chewing gum that he chew all the time and the look around him to see where the fielders are placed sent shivers down the spine toeven the best of bowlers. Never wore a helmet, never got hit on the head. Probably the MOST ATTACKING batsman ever to have played the game. Scored century of 56 balls in test cricket. They say Ian Botham (England allrounder ) didn't dare bowl at him on that day. For an attacking batsman as such, average of 50 something in tests and high 40's in one dayers.
3. Brian Charles Lara ( west Indies) : My favourite..by far. Probably there was never ever and there will be never ever other like him in terms of elegance, masterful artistry and extremely eye pleasing strokes all over the park. I can write a book on him. The day he retired I lost interest in cricket. The most famous being the way he mauled Muralitharan in Srilanka where his team lost 3-0. Hit 45 ball century in one dayers but 501 not out against Warwickshire, 375 and 400 not out against England. But the best of all is 277 against Australia in Sydney as well as 153 not out against the same opposition in which West Indies won by one wicket.
4. Sachin Tendulkar ( India) : If u love cricket, and just the sports u would realize how blessed u were to see both Brian Lara and Sachin to play at the same time. Never before the game has seen a more complete player than Sachin. At his peak he was phenomenal. He ruled 1990s. I rate him slightly behind Lara just because Lara is little bit more attacking and he never changed his style. Lara plays with a finesse that looks totally out of the world. But Sachin tendulkar is the perfect role model for any budding cricketer..both on and off the field. His twin centuries in Sharjah against Australia and his attack on Shane Warne are probably the best phase of his career. Warne considers him to be the best he has ever bowled to and admitted to having nightmares of sachin coming down the track and hitting him for a six. Bradman considered Sachin to be the one who reminded him of his own glory days.
5.Inzamam ul Haq ( Pakistan) : He has won games for his country many more times single handedly than any player I can remember, even the great Steve Waugh. He has to be the most underrated batsmen ever but even Imran Khan rated him the best player of fast bowling at the time. Against the spinners he could butcher them at will. His 136 not out against Bangladesh where Pak barely won by 1 wicket is an all time classic for me. There are numerous occasions where he won the ganes for his country from the brink of defeat. Besides that he has to be the most talented batsman Pakistan has ever produced. Both subtle and attacking. Both copy book classic shots and butchering attacks. He was at his best when the team had no chance to win. After he is gone, the good days of Pakistan cricket seems to have gone.
I can write a book on these people if time permits. Have ur say. If u want. It will be most welcome.
Thanks.
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deshbhaktanepali
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Posted on 08-01-08 1:49
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Sehwag decodes Mendis mystery
Jamie Alter in Galle
July 31, 2008
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The stand-out feature was the effortless manner in which Virender Sehwag handled Ajantha Mendis, who was virtually unplayable in Colombo © AFP
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"He is talented, very talented, but has no brains," was Geoff Boycott's on-air verdict after Virender Sehwag's attempt to hook a ball from outside off stump found the fielder at deep square leg and triggered a first-innings collapse at the SSC.
Sehwag's response to a question regarding his approach after his maverick innings - a 15th Test century at a strike-rate of 104.91 - was deadpan. "How can I stop the way I've played?" he said. "Yes, there is pressure if wickets fall and you think 'What if I go for a shot and get out too?' But if that happens you're never going to score runs."
After two batting collapses in the first Test it was imperative that India got a solid start. Sehwag provided that by using a simple mantra: if the ball is there to be hit, hit it. Circumstances rarely affect Sehwag and he put the pedal to the metal. A whip off the pads past midwicket got him started, a wild sweep that was unsuccessfully referred didn't stall him, and when he charged Ajantha Mendis and swung him over cow corner for six, Sehwag was at full throttle.
The stand-out feature was the effortless manner in which Sehwag handled Mendis, who was virtually unplayable in Colombo. The key, in his own simple words, was that here Sehwag "picked him [Mendis] off the track, from where the ball pitched", something only he and and Sachin Tendulkar have managed to do in this series.
When Mendis tossed the ball up on middle and off, Sehwag smothered the spin, and when the bowler drifted on to middle, he went back and turned it fine. If it spun in sharply, Sehwag adjusted his back leg and brought his bat down quickly to kill the ball. Sehwag also picked the two-fingered googly and moved back to cut or punch through the off-side. He failed to beat cover with the drive once but replayed the shot two balls later with more power and placed it to perfection. Mendis' first four overs cost 29.
Sehwag accelerated and yet remained in control with Gautam Gambhir, fleet-footed against spin, in the passenger seat. There were cracks at one end of the pitch and Nuwan Kulasekera asked a few questions but Sehwag steered clear of them. He cut Muttiah Muralitharan's first ball, a doosra from around the stumps, to reach his half-century off 50 balls. His strike rate, like a speedometer, fluctuated from 60 to 98 and beyond. India's 100 came from 115 balls and Sehwag's contribution was 59.
Like Sri Lanka did at the SSC, he and Gambhir ran hard, hustling for the second, and constantly looking for scoring opportunities. Sehwag and Aakash Chopra, another Delhi team-mate, did this effectively during the majority of their 19 partnerships, notably in Australia in 2003-04. Some of today's singles were risky but the intent was obvious and it frustrated Sri Lanka.
In the over before lunch, Sehwag put his arm around Gambhir's shoulder and had a word. Gambhir reached his fifty off the next ball and a beaming Sehwag rushed to congratulate him. When Sehwag dabbed a single behind point to raise the 150 partnership, he punched gloves with Gambhir as they crossed. How many batsmen can power a side to 150 for 0 at lunch? The camaraderie was plain to see.
After a four-hour rain delay, Mendis tested Gambhir with his variation but at the other end Sehwag disdainfully smashed Vaas over cow corner off his second ball after the resumption. Two balls later he played a booming straight drive to reach his century, which he celebrated with a proud wave of the bat to the dressing room and an embrace from his partner. His 15th hundred took only 87 balls with 15 fours and two sixes but the message was deeper.
At the MCG, in 2003-04, India were 311 for 3 but collapsed for 366 after Sehwag was dismissed for 195 at the end of the first day. In Adelaide earlier this year Sehwag scored 151 out of India's 269 in the second innings. Today, Sehwag had driven India to a position of strength at 167 for 0 before four wickets fell in 20 balls for 11 runs. As he had done against England in Galle during the winter, Chaminda Vaas, rejuvenated after the rain delay, struck twice in an over. Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly were dismissed with the score on 178 and the morning's work had come undone.
"I didn't notice any change in my batting after the four-hour break in play," Sehwag said. "Every batsman has his own mindset with which he plays, but I just played my shots." Even as stumps approached, Sehwag relied on his base instinct. Mendis went around the stumps and Sehwag used his feet to smash him down the ground and hit two consecutive fours through cover.
Sehwag had fulfilled his responsibility of providing a sound start but the collapse meant that he had to hold the innings together. His unshakeable approach did not change. "I am not satisfied because there's plenty left in this game," was Sehwag's closing statement. "If I can convert this into a double-century or more tomorrow, get India above 400-500, apply pressure on Sri Lanka, then I will be satisfied."
Crushed in Colombo, India arrived in Galle needing to find a way to bounce back. Only a vivid imagination could have conceived of a fightback without it being led by Sehwag. Like the white breakers of the Indian Ocean, lashing across the rocks in the background of the Galle International Stadium, Sehwag has injected life into a one-sided series.
He has brains alright, and he's used them rather well.
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no_quiero
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Posted on 08-01-08 2:27
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Shewag is defnitely threat to Lara's 9 double and Bradman 12 Double. What about Jaques Kallis. He is better cricketer then Lara , Sachin or Shewag overall and better value. for the team. He has made 9681 runs as a batsman at an staggering average of 56.28. But like Sachin his average is well supported by not outs. But one should not forget his bowling. With 236 Wickets in test matches. He has surpassed Sir Gary Sobers as the worlds premiere all rounder ( in terms of record).
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Devallica
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Posted on 08-01-08 7:31
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no need to give five.
i will just give you one.
MICHAEL BEVAN.
AUssies rule
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deshbhaktanepali
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Posted on 08-01-08 8:44
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devallica...are you saying Michael Bevan is the best batsman ever in the world???
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Devallica
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Posted on 08-01-08 9:34
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That is correct. all other batsmen that you guys are talking about are more about themself, he has won more game in the worst situation. look at his one day average. he knows how to play the game and he put his team ahead than himself.
sorry but its true.
You dont have to hit hundreds to be the best. You have to win the game and he does that with his batting abilities finds the gap get s the run and if you look closely the other batsmen is always a tailender and he knows how to use them.
you dont have to agree. it s my opinion.
aussies rule.
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prabhat k
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Posted on 08-01-08 10:40
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Batsmanship has taken a huge plunge these days. Specially with not many quality bowlers. That's where we see those high averages.
Remember, 90s had all the best bowlers. The best left armer ever- Wasim Akram, most lethal inswinging yorker at his peak- Waqar Younis, The white lightning- Allan Donald, One of the best fast bowling duo- Ambrose,and Walsh, McGrath, Best legspinner ever- Warne, best off spinner- Muralitharan.
All of those are all time greats. Today, u have Brett Lee, and Muralitharan. Rest are good but not as great as those guys.
That's where I think players like Bevan were great. His record against South Africa is awesome. Lara and Sachin played well against those guys and they are very highly regarded by those bowlers.
Well, after Lara, and specially Warne retired, I lost interest in this game. Sachin is shadow of himself, players score runs in docile pitches against substandard bowling attacks, the art and beauty of game is substituted by mindless rule changing and one dimensional batting styles.
The game is still cricket, but it's not the cricket I witnessed in the 90s. Cherish those wonderful games. The 99 semifinal Aus vs SA, the sharjah final and semifinal India vs Aus, Saeed Anwar in Sharjah, Mark Waugh, Azharuddin, Akram.
I can't believe this topic dragged me to sajh one more time.
Yes, Sachin and Lara, at their peak ,were the two of the best batsmen the game has ever seen.
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deshbhaktanepali
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Posted on 03-11-09 11:05
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New Zealand v India, 4th ODI, Hamilton It's very tough for NZ bowlers to stop me - Sehwag Sidharth Monga in Hamilton March 11, 2009 | | Virender Sehwag: "They [the New Zealand bowlers] are bowling into my body, and I'm playing my hook and flick shots to get boundaries. There is no other [effective] way they can bowl to me" © AFP
| | | Only Virender Sehwag can say that he felt sorry for the bowlers, without sounding arrogant when he says it. The arrogance is limited to the time he spends on the field with bat in hand, and he showed plenty of that against New Zealand at Seddon Park today. It's almost like Roger Federer wearing a champion's jacket especially made for him by Nike, while walking out onto the centre court at Wimbledon. Anybody other than Federer would seem ridiculous in that. Anybody other than Sehwag would have sounded absurdly pompous saying that he left the bowlers helpless. "The wickets are good to bat on, and it's very tough for them to stop me," Sehwag said. "They are bowling into my body, and I'm playing my hook and flick shots to get boundaries. There is no other [effective] way they can bowl to me." Imagine being a bowler. Check your limitations first: you can't hit 140kmph regularly, you don't have any help from the pitches, and the grounds are small. You start off with what you think is the best theoretical way to bowl to Sehwag: short and into the body. Sehwag clears his front leg, and pulls it ferociously into the stands over midwicket, sometimes from chest-high. "I played some good shots, especially the hook and pull shots, which I never expected from myself on these tracks," he said. "I don't know how it comes or where it comes from, but I managed to hit the [short] ball." So you try and bowl fuller, looking for some swing. If you are Iain O'Brien bowling your first over in your comeback match, you almost get badly injured - the ball whizzes past your ear for four. If you are Kyle Mills and you manage a perfect short-of-driving length and get some shape away, the bat faces opens a bit and the ball flies over extra cover. If you are Ewen Thompson, making your debut, and dibbly-dobblying onto Sehwag's pads, you get flicked over midwicket and then turned fine of fine leg. The backlift is high, the swing downwards clean and fast, and the ball makes its own way on the field. So you try and slow things down. If you are Daniel Vettori, the canniest left-arm spinner in the world, you get some respect, and even get a forward defensive stroke. But soon enough Sehwag jumps down the track, is beaten in the flight, but still lofts you over long-off to get to his century. And later he says: "That was a mistimed six, the only mis-hit." Sehwag also admitted to edging a ball after reaching his century, that was dropped by wicketkeeper Peter McGlashan. "Before the 100 there was no chance for any bowler." As a unit, you have what you think is a good plan - to not give Sehwag any width outside off. And you succeed, which shows how only six runs came behind square on the offside. But what you think is a weakness is not a frailty after all. The biggest part of Sehwag's resurrection after being dropped from the 2007 World Cup squad has been his improved on-side play. The flicks during his hundred on Test debut in Bloemfontein are back. He has been hooking and pulling murderously. As a result you end up bowling a grand total of 20 dot balls to him. It's obvious the opposition shoulders will droop. But that's not new for Sehwag. "I have felt it a couple of times against Australia and South Africa, and against England also," he says. "So it happens." Just that it happens more often when Sehwag is batting. This is not the first time that it has been on display during this tour. But in the Twenty20s it happened for too brief a while. In the first two ODIs, when he scored match-winning half-centuries, he left the job unfinished. Today he finished his business, and because he came out unbeaten, he rated this as one of his best innings. Sehwag's batting philosophy comes through from one of his old advertisements, where he professes, "The ball is supposed to live outside the boundary, send it there." It is a simple thought that he goes about implementing in his own inimitable way. Just like he hits what he sees, he tells what he sees. He spoke what he saw today, and it didn't sound boisterous. He spoke plain facts. You indeed felt sorry for the bowlers (except that they watched the spectacle from the best seat). They were indeed helpless and they didn't know any effective way of bowling to him. On some days you just can't do anything, except live with it. Sidharth Monga is a staff writer at Cricinfo © Cricinfo Virender Sehwag India Player profile Full name Virender Sehwag Born October 20, 1978, Delhi Current age 30 years 142 days Major teams India, Asia XI, Delhi, Delhi Daredevils, ICC World XI, India Blue, Leicestershire, Rajasthan Cricket Association President's XI Batting style Right-hand bat Bowling style Right-arm offbreak
Batting and fielding averages | Mat | Inns | NO | Runs | HS | Ave | BF | SR | 100 | 50 | 4s | 6s | Ct | St | Tests | 66 | 114 | 4 | 5617 | 319 | 51.06 | 7188 | 78.14 | 15 | 18 | 793 | 64 | 50 | 0 | ODIs | 204 | 199 | 8 | 6552 | 130 | 34.30 | 6445 | 101.66 | 11 | 35 | 899 | 104 | 79 | 0 | T20Is | 12 | 11 | 0 | 223 | 68 | 20.27 | 154 | 144.80 | 0 | 1 | 24 | 10 | 1 | 0 | First-class | 128 | 213 | 8 | 10094 | 319 | 49.23 | | | 29 | 36 | | | 109 | 0 | List A | 274 | 264 | 13 | 8505 | 130 | 33.88 | | | 12 | 52 | | | 103 | 0 | Twenty20 | 36 | 35 | 3 | 831 | 94* | 25.96 | 518 | 160.42 | 0 | 5 | 95 | 36 | 5 | 0 |
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aingnam01
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Posted on 03-11-09 12:35
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prabhat... i have question for u...how do you rate a batsman...u dont even want to go with average..not even with centuries they score and most surprisingly u dont even considered those players who has won more games for the country to be the greatest...so whats your opinion on the greatest..u haven't seen bradman or viv richard play and yet put them on top two..talking about bowlers and batsman...i dont think they had quality bowlers like wasim waqar walsh around those time too...bradmans era was almost the new era of cricket....during vivs time windies was reigning the world..so obviously he had some confident on attacking like gilchrist had when aussies were reigning..that way gilchrist will pass out on vivs...agree with you on lara sachin and inzmam..and yeah talking about inzamam being underrated how about andy flower...isnt he the most talented batsman and also underated considering the fact that he had to play for the underdogs. why you rate ricky ponting as the best..after all he has all the quality that lara has..he is explosive and has always been explosive. what about yousuf youhana...and taking the fact for statistic..just look at the strike rate of lara and tendulkar... and yes even all cricket pundits and people who knows cricket considers michael as one of the all time best in the business
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no_quiero
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Posted on 03-11-09 1:04
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To start with Sehwag is the best Indian batsman every. I don't like Indian team but when I see Sehwag I feel awe and admiration. Arko kura, we cannot select 5 best batsman of all time because we have pretty little kowledge of the past batsman. I feeel Sir Jack Hobbs should be there as well. Jack hobbs could well be second best batsman of all time. I was just going through his record and was really amazed by his feat. Many of his record even sir Bradman could not match, let alone Lara or Tendulkar. He has scored 199 first class hundred. We have seen Sachin playing for last twenty years or so, still he only have 68 first class hundred. Lara I think have 63 first class hundred. This is simply incredible. Over 60,000 runs. At the current rate Sachin needs to play probably next 40 years to get so many runs. Just shows where he stands above everybody. Even great sir Bradman have 117 first class hundred. His test record is also very impressive at an average of 56 considering he played in uncovered pitches. Nowadays it is easier to get 50+ average. Considering his time his current average could well be around 65-70. Herbert Sutcliffe is always the forgotten man - 50+ tests with a 60.73
average ...... but yes even I will concede that Hobbs has stats that
can never be broken .... unless someone makes their debut at 13 and
retires at 49! My ranking..... 1. Don Bradman 2. George Headley (the black bradman) 3. Jack Hobbs 4. Herbert Surcliffe 5. Brian lara/Virender Shewag/Sachin Tendulkar/Ricky ponting.......or any other modern day great.
Last edited: 11-Mar-09 01:11 PM
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deshbhaktanepali
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Posted on 03-11-09 1:19
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Let me remind you guys again, 40 years there was only one form of cricket and was played in hardly 3/4 countries and against similar opponents. The kind of pitches and and weather they faced did not varied alot. In contrary, now the players needs to change their style, techniques and the approach of games every day against every team and against different format of games. A player is expected to change overnight from test match mode to 20/20 mode.
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no_quiero
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Posted on 03-11-09 1:52
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deshbhakta nepali , dont joke. Do you see wickets nowadays. So many runs are scored now easily, blowers are seem to toil hard. Run scoring is ridiculously easy nowadays. Every team has few players with average over 50. This thing was rare 20 years ago. You don't need to go back too long. Just see recent Sri Lanka Pakistan series. Both teams made over 600 runs in both the test. 3 double century in single test including one triple. West Indies- England series was also same. England made 600 runs and west indies replied with 750. Again in next test both England westindies scored over 500 runs. India made 394 in one day match.....and NZ were well set to overhaul that total. Just few years earlier south africa successfully chased 434 in one day matches. Cricket is turning to batmans game mainly due to the kind of modern wicket. Even once the Fast Bowlers paradise of Perth- Western Australia is turning out to be slow and low. Barbados once fastest wicket in the world turned out to be a farce with ordinary batsman scoring hundreds. Secondly , the conditions didnt varied 40 years ago? Those players used to play in uncovered pitches. Uncovered pitches assist bowlers alot. And by then there were no protective equipments and gear that the batsman enjoy now adays. Another thing is that the cricket rule has been greatly modified now in favor of batsman.
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Atlian
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Posted on 03-11-09 3:24
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Well to put things into perspective, i totally disagree with your statement Prabhat. Well there are different forms of cricket these days but back in the days there were ONE DAY & TEST cricket. For both forms of these games one needs different tactical approach or skill set. Ofcourse i will put Don bradman on top of my Test cricketers list without a second thought. I didnt get to see Bradman bat but everybody in the media or any former cricketer acknowledge this so i would defenitely second them. You put Bradman and Viv number 1&2 , i wouldnt mind it at all but dont jump hop LARA ahead of Sachin. Sure Lara is and always will be one of the best if not the best not by any means better than Sachin, being an avid cricket fan and having played the game myself i cant fathom LARA over Tendulkar. And i see you mentioning all the numbers that Lara put up against Muralitharan and Australia but i dont see you mentioning tendulkars accomplishments in such manners. Well let me remind you of one such instance; 2003-2004(In Australia) - Australians setup the fielding positions in such a manner that they wanted to get tendulkar out while have him take his best shot which is cover drive. Tendulkar already knew about this strategy of Australian fielders and bowlers so in this game he ended up scoring 248 without hitting a single cover drive. Well i could go on and on and on. He played under incredible weight of expectations and didnt blink a second under any circumstances. You have to put Sachin ahead of Lara because he is slightly tougher mentally. By the way when Don Bradman saw Sachin bat he told his wife to watch him carefully because it reminded him of his batting style and the exact batting prowess he had. Later on Bradman mentioned all this in his biography and concluded that only Tendulkar could surpass him and Tendulkar is the only player of the current generation to be included in Bradmans Fabulous Eleven. And funniest thing you have Inzamum on number 5, are you kidding. Well he had the tools to be one of the best but dude never played with passion and interest and lacked conditioning. While you put Inzamum number 5, did you forget the likes of Mark Waugh, Andy Flower(Most Underrated Batsman ever), Ricky Ponting(how can you forget him). I am a big South African cricket fan but i give credit to where its due even though i dont like indian team. So my top 5 1. Don Bradman( cant disrespect the Legend) 2. Viv Richards (with him windies were on top) 3. Sachin Tendulkar (One man show for india through the 90's, if only india had the likes of Wasim Akram type bowler to team up with him during that time, sachin would have been even grander) 4. Lara (One of the best Test cricketer world has and will ever see, has always played exceptionally well against South Africa and Australia) 5.Ricky Ponting (Reminds me of Lara, but wont surpass lara)
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deshbhaktanepali
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Posted on 03-11-09 3:48
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"Do you see wickets nowadays.", no_quiero says. Yes I do. But I didn't see what wickets were like 40 years ago. I am only 29 now and started to watch cricket only since I was 9.
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deshbhaktanepali
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Posted on 03-11-09 3:53
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no_quiero here is more for you. Scores were made even 100 years ago. You needed batsman with guts to score runs not just body armour to protect themself.
Played at Sydney Cricket Ground on 14,15,17,18,19,20 December 1894 (timeless match)
Result England won by 10 runs |
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England 1st innings |
R |
M |
4s |
6s |
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AC MacLaren |
c Reedman b Turner |
4 |
12 |
0 |
0 |
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A Ward |
c Iredale b Turner |
75 |
166 |
10 |
0 |
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AE Stoddart |
c Jones b Giffen |
12 |
34 |
2 |
0 |
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JT Brown |
run out |
22 |
28 |
3 |
0 |
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W Brockwell |
c Blackham b Jones |
49 |
143 |
3 |
0 |
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R Peel |
c Gregory b Giffen |
4 |
8 |
1 |
0 |
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FGJ Ford |
st Blackham b Giffen |
30 |
43 |
2 |
1 |
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J Briggs |
b Giffen |
57 |
118 |
3 |
0 |
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WH Lockwood |
c Giffen b Trott |
18 |
40 |
3 |
0 |
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LH Gay |
c Gregory b Reedman |
33 |
71 |
3 |
0 |
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T Richardson |
not out |
0 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
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Extras |
(b 17, lb 3, w 1) |
21 |
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Total |
(all out; 140.3 overs) |
325 |
(2.31 runs per over) |
Last edited: 11-Mar-09 03:54 PM
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freak_alien
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Posted on 03-11-09 8:15
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After seeing Sachin Tendulkars 163 the other day, it still is visible that he hasn't lost the "touch". Sure he doesn't go chasing leather early in his inning these days, but he sure can score those runs. Fast! And that is why he is my number 1 :) :)
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aingnam01
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Posted on 03-12-09 9:53
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i cant believe some people even rate kumar sangakkara, mike hussey and andrew symonds as the best..
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deshbhaktanepali
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Posted on 12-03-09 9:32
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Has there ever been another like Sehwag? Cricket is a non-contact sport, but watching Virender Sehwag bat is as visceral an experience as watching Muhammad Ali dominate the ring in his prime S Aga December 3, 2009 Arguments about Muttiah Muralitharan's declining effectiveness can wait for another time. This was a day instead to marvel at the magnificence of a man who defies any sort of categorisation or pigeon-holing. Cricket is a non-contact sport, but watching Virender Sehwag bat is as visceral an experience as watching Muhammad Ali dominate the ring in his prime. On Thursday afternoon, Sehwag toyed with the greatest offspinner to play the game as though he were some glorified net bowler. He might as well have been, as India overhauled Sri Lanka's total of 393 in 67.5 overs. But for back spasms that restricted him to a more mortal scoring-rate in the last half hour, Sehwag might have become only the second batsman after Sir Donald Bradman to score 300 runs in a day. Each monumental Sehwag innings has left a trail of destruction in its wake. At the MCG in 2003, it was Stuart MacGill's turn to look like a pie-thrower as he galloped to 195 in just five hours. In Multan, Shoaib Akhtar was reduced to feeble sledges. Sehwag's response was just to compare him to a beggar. In Chennai against the best Australian side ever, he careered to 155 on a pitch where few others had managed any sort of fluency. In front of the imposing Galle Fort last year, he dictated the course of a Test with an innings that combined absolute control and appetite for destruction with admirable restraint. Has there ever been another like him? Matthew Hayden could pillage bowlers too, but his strike-rate looks pedestrian next to Sehwag's. Adam Gilchrist scored marginally quicker but how often did he have to face the new ball? Even the King, Sir Vivian Richards, never went after bowlers with such menacing intent, day in, day out.
Traditionally, bowlers have been the game-breakers, setting up victories with inspired spells that reduce sides from positions of comfort to misery. Sehwag scores at such a clip that he can transform a game in the same way. India batted only 79 overs on the second day. Yet they already lead by 50. Even if they feel like batting right through day three, the bowlers have all the time in the world to force a result. Thursday's tour de force brought to mind a remarkable night in Kingston when Richards' hero, Smokin' Joe Frazier, was knocked down five times in the space of two rounds by the giant-fisted George Foreman. Boxing had never seen a puncher like Foreman, just as cricket has never seen a destroyer like Sehwag. In cricketing terms, the only apt comparison would be with Gordon Greenidge at Lord's in 1984. On the final day of that Test, England thought they were in with a more than decent chance of victory. Today, Sri Lanka must have taken the new ball feeling fairly secure. On both occasions, the illusions were rudely shattered. Greenidge cut and drove with awesome power as 342 was reeled in from just 66.1 overs. His contribution was 214 from 241 balls. Quick by any standard, but nothing outrageous for someone who is batting's answer to Usain Bolt. And to think that India started the day with survival on their minds. Sri Lanka's 393 looked decent enough on a pitch where the ball had turned from the first session. Surely, Murali and Rangana Herath would pose serious questions and be far more of a threat than they had been in Ahmedabad and Kanpur. That was conventional wisdom. When Sehwag's batting though, such logic is just bunkum.
At Multan just over five years ago, he pretty much ended the career of one very special offspinner, Saqlain Mushtaq. Saqlain had gone into that series speaking of a surprise ball, the teesra [the third one]. After much discussion in the media box, it was decided that it was the delivery that Sehwag kept whacking over midwicket for fours and sixes.
Murali tried plenty of variations at the CCI, perhaps too many. One moment summed up the uneven nature of the contest. Sehwag was on 248 when Murali pitched one on middle stump. The response was a reverse paddle-sweep, a stroke that few could have imagined leave alone seen. As the ball sped to the rope, past where conventional slip might have stood, Murali just half-flinched and looked away. Even as fatigue took over, the level of improvisation didn't drop. Spotting a slower one from Angelo Mathews, Sehwag quickly decided that a booming drive wasn't the answer. A deftly angled bat and the ball raced away past the vacant first-slip position. For Kumar Sangakkara, the man entrusted with the task of stopping a deluge with a teacup, that was the quintessential dilemma. When remotely attacking fields were set, Sehwag just shifted his feet and cleared the infield with an ease that bordered on contempt. When the fielders then fanned out, he was free to pick gaps at will.
Each time he went aerial, the crowd in the stands appeared to jump as high. It wasn't just bedlam though. Time after time, people turned to those standing next to them, looking bemused. Each expression said the same thing: 'Did you see THAT?' Murali Vijay and Rahul Dravid deserve immense praise for the manner in which they managed the situation. When a man's in such prime form, you need to give him as much of the strike as possible, while making sure that you don't leave the entire run-making burden on his shoulders. Vijay played a superb innings till his little brain fade, and the manner in which he was prepared to take on even Murali said much about his state of mind. As for Dravid, is there a more calming sight in the game than him taking guard? When not defending with the straightest of bats or watching the carnage from the other end, he played some beautiful strokes, especially in the cover-point region. No one's likely to remember them though, blinded as they were by Sehwag's dazzle. There were a couple of near escapes at the end, with a tired heave off Murali flying to third man, and a thick outside edge off Tillakaratne Dilshan evading both Jayawardenes, Prasanna and Mahela. Those were mere dust motes on a pretty perfect picture though. By the close Sehwag had struck 40 fours and seven sixes, and taken an astonishing 78 from the 70 balls that Murali bowled to him. Only Brian Lara, back in that halycon series of 2001, treated him with such disdain. But at least then Murali was picking up wickets by the bushel at the other end. Sehwag's energy levels are remarkable for a man who's hardly the most svelte figure in the game. This was his 12th knock in excess of 150, and the way he paces himself is exceptional. On Thursday, he didn't just have to contend with the sun beating down, but also with extreme humidity. The Arabian Sea is just a six-hit away, but instead of losing focus he only made sure that Sri Lanka lost theirs. "It's not fat," said a friend later. "It's batting muscle." Sri Lanka were so demoralised by the end of the day that it was hard to fathom a route back into the match. When Chanaka Welegedara went off injured with Sehwag in sight of his double-century, the ball was thrown to Nuwan Kulasekara. A cut, flick, glance and midwicket-thump later, he looked ready to cry. As he walked back to his fielding position, he looked every inch the man who'd been asked to take his mate's place in solitary confinement. Sehwag now has five of the 10 fastest double-centuries in history, including three of the first four. This though is a man utterly insouciant when it comes to such landmarks. He could well go on to obliterate Lara's record tomorrow. He certainly has a great chance to put even Bradman in the shade and score a third triple. None of those possibilities is likely to make him lose sleep though. For someone who has reduced batting to its most elemental, only the next ball matters. If it's there to be hit, regardless of whether he's on 299 or 399, he'll go for it. Which is precisely why it's such a bloody privilege to watch him play. Those that passed up a chance to come to Churchgate on Thursday would be best off reading the Mishima guide to seppuku.
Courtesy; www.cricinfo.com
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prabhat k
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Posted on 12-03-09 11:08
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I just happened to log in to sajha probably after a year and was pleasantly surprised to see one of my posts from back in 2008 on cricket. I stopped checking this website completely because of whole lot of senseless racist remarks being going on and I dont think I am going to log back again either coz there is a lot in life to enjoy and care rather than fending off this nonsense stuff. However, I used to be a big fan of cricket..in fact I was in my entire teen age and adult life until the end of 2008. I dont know what happened, but priority changed, taste changed and I just dont follow the game at all. I have lost the interest in the game of cricket completely. It doesnt matter the least whoever the heck is the best batsman ever. No queiro, I remember you. You were fantastic. Deshbhakta, I dont think I know an ounce better than you in cricket. You are pretty knowledgeable and every body else is knowledgeable as well. Good luck guys. Good luck sajha. God bless.
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nepaliinmissouri
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Posted on 12-04-09 12:41
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I'm sure Sir Donald Bradman, Sir Gary Sobers and Sir Vivian Richards must have been extraordinary batsmen in their own rights and their record makes this pretty evident. However, I never had the honor of watching them bat. Of the batsmen that I have watched over the years, I rate the following five as the best of the bests:
1. Sachin Tendulkar 2. Brian Lara 3. Rahul Dravid 4. Adam Gilchrist 5. Ricky Ponting
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dhoti_prasad
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Posted on 12-04-09 8:06
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I don't know about cricket. But who are the top 5 batters in Baseball?
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