Matthew Hayden's record

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Dileep Premachandran on why Matthew Hayden has never really got his due ..

Dileep Premachandran

October 10, 2003

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Matthew Hayden: not for him the Fancy Dan image or manufactured sound-bite
© Getty Images


The cricket-hype-machine cries wolf more often than the boy ever did. As a result, even the canny enthusiast finds it hard to separate baloney from reality. That cry-wolf phenomenon may well explain why Matthew Lawrence Hayden has never really got his due, despite having been the world's pre-eminent batsman since 2001.

Adam Gilchrist is easier on the eye than perhaps any other batsman in recent memory, while Sachin Tendulkar and Ricky Ponting possess a greater array of strokes. Rahul Dravid has a more pleasing technique, and the upright elegance of Michael Vaughan has its admirers, as does Inzamam-ul-Haq's power and finesse. And there's there Brian Lara, the genius who raises his game for the big occasion, whether that be a tussle against Muttiah Muralitharan or a joust against the Aussies. But if statistics are a guide to separating the wheat from the chaff - and they do a fair job of that in cricket - then Hayden is a country mile ahead of everyone else.

Starting with that breakthrough series in India in 2001 - where he made 549 runs without ever being troubled - Hayden has made 3000 runs - Perth epic excluded - from 31 Tests, at a staggering average of 65.22. No one else has managed even 2500 runs - Tendulkar is next in line with 2395, marginally ahead of Ponting (2381), Vaughan (2316), Dravid (2292) and Lara (2271). The next best average among those with over 2000 runs is Lara's 63.08, from ten fewer matches.

More importantly, Hayden dominates the opposition in a manner not seen since Sir Donald Bradman's heyday. He has 13 centuries - and 9 fifties - from those 31 matches, comfortably clear of Ponting (10 from 30) and Tendulkar (7 from 26). In his second avatar, he has scored 50 or more almost every other innings - not quite Bradmanesque, but significantly more impressive than his more celebrated peers.

No statistics can reveal however the bravery and strength that went into one of the defining innings of our age, his 119 against Pakistan - who replied with 53 and 59 - in oven-like conditions in Sharjah last year. In 50 degrees Celsius temperatures where bowlers and batsmen alike wilted, Hayden batted for over seven hours - even finding the time to bait Shoaib Akhtar when he wasn't creaming him past point or midwicket. It was the sort of innings that no one else could have played, one man's Herculean strength and bloody-mindedness coming together to script cricket's version of The Triumph of the Will.

Had he been a will-o-wipsy shotmaker like David Gower, Hayden might have been acknowledged as the finest around, and elicited the sort of paeans usually devoted to Tendulkar, Lara, Vaughan and company. Instead, he is the quintessential Aussie, a follower of the hard yakka tradition who's fond of a beer, his fly-fishing rod and surfboard - not for him the Fancy Dan image or manufactured sound-bite.

When we chatted during the ICC Knockout Trophy in Colombo last year, I asked him to make sense of the tremendously rich vein of form that he had been able to mine. His answer was revealing. "Hitting the cricket ball well is sort of addictive," he said, flexing the tendons on those massive forearms. Today, he took that addiction to unprecedented levels, and it wasn't just the crowd at the WACA that were transported to an unforgettable high.

Since February 1, 2001

M R Avg H F HS
Hayden 31 3000 65.22 13 9 203
Lara 21 2271 63.08 6 11 221
Gilchrist 31 2070 60.88 7 9 204*
Tendulkar 26 2395 58.41 7 11 193
Dravid 29 2292 53.30 6 11 217
Ponting 30 2381 56.69 10 6 206
Vaughan 27 2316 51.47 9 3 197
Inzamam 18 1633 62.82 6 3 329

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Dileep Premachandran Associate editor Dileep Premachandran gave up the joys of studying thermodynamics and strength of materials with a view to following in the footsteps of his literary heroes. Instead, he wound up at the Free Press Journal in Mumbai, writing on sport and politics before Gentleman gave him a column called Replay. A move to MyIndia.com followed, where he teamed up with Sambit Bal, and he arrived at ESPNCricinfo after having also worked for Cricket Talk and total-cricket.com. Sunil Gavaskar and Greg Chappell were his early cricketing heroes, though attempts to emulate their silken touch had hideous results. He considers himself obscenely fortunate to have watched live the two greatest comebacks in sporting history - India against invincible Australia at the Eden Gardens in 2001, and Liverpool's inc-RED-ible resurrection in the 2005 Champions' League final. He lives in Bangalore with his wife, who remains astonishingly tolerant of his sporting obsessions.

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