| Series | Countries | Live Scores | Fixtures | Results | News |
Features
|
Photos | Blogs | Statistics | Archive | Video & Audio | Games | Mobile | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
Australia's weakness against off spinners and Dravid's bizarre run of scores
October 15, 2004
Perhaps numbers never do reveal the full story, but they tell a large part of it. Every Friday, The Numbers Game will take a look at statistics from the present and the past, busting myths and revealing hidden truths:
Feasting on fifty wickets
There wasn't much cheer for the Indians in the Bangalore Test against Australia, but one performance which would have given them hope of a comeback was Harbhajan Singh's 11 for 224. It wasn't the most inexpensive ten-for in a match, but his displays - especially the 6 for 78 in the second innings - were cause for optimism. With an incredible haul of 48 wickets from six Tests plus one innings (stats up to the end of Australia's first innings in the Chennai Test), Harbhajan is well on his way to becoming only the second bowler to get to the 50-wicket mark against them in seven Tests. The only other player to perform that feat was Tom Richardson, England's fast bowler in the 1890s. In a career which lasted only 14 Tests - all against Australia - Richardson ended with 88 wickets at a shade over 25.
The Australians are traditionally supposed to have a weakness against offspinners, and, not surprisingly, there's another of that ilk who had more than his fair share of success against them - Erapalli Prasanna needed only nine Tests to take 50 Australian scalps, exactly as many games as Robert Peel, a left-arm spinner who represented England in the 1880s and 1890s and ended with quite incredible stats of 101 wickets from 20 matches at 16.98.
Talk of offspinners succeeding against the Australians, and it's impossible to ignore the exploits of a certain Jim Laker, who accounted for 19 of them in a single game, at Manchester. That match - incidentally his tenth against Australia - helped catapult his tally against them from 38 in nine games to 57 in ten. Laker, though, is clubbed together with a host of other bowlers who achieved the feat in ten Tests, among them being Anil Kumble, Kapil Dev, Malcolm Marshall, Joel Garner and Muttiah Muralitharan.
| Fastest to 50 wkts v Aus | Tests | Wickets (at end of the Test) | Ave |
| T Richardson | 7 | 53 | 22.23 |
| R Peel | 9 | 54 | 12.78 |
| E Prasanna | 9 | 51 | 26.63 |
| SF Barnes | 9 | 50 | 20.96 |
There have been other instances of bowlers getting to 50 wickets against other teams in less than seven matches. Sydney Barnes, who took an amazing 189 wickets from 27 matches, took ten-fors in each of his first five Tests against South Africa, at which time his tally against them stood at 61. The South Africans would have been particularly pleased with the fact that he didn't torment them for long - he only played seven Tests against them, taking 83 wickets at a freakish average of 9.85.
While Barnes was incredibly consistent against South Africa, Harbhajan's wickets against Australia have come in spurts - 39 of his wickets against them came in three matches. He averages an impressive 24.25 against them, but those figures would have looked even better had he stayed away from the Brisbane Test in 2003-04. Visibly hampered by a finger injury, Harbhajan returned dismal figures of 1 for 169 in what was arguably the lowest point of his international career. (Click here for Harbhajan's match-by-match performance against Australia.)
| Fastest to 50 wkts v other teams | Against | Tests (wickets at end of the Test) |
Ave |
| SF Barnes | South Africa | 5 (61) | 10.18 |
| CTB Turner | England | 6 (50) | 10.18 |
| Waqar Younis | New Zealand | 7 (56) | 14.30 |
| Wasim Akram | New Zealand | 7 (50) | 15.56 |
| Murali | South Africa | 7 (50) | 21.96 |
| Murali | West Indies | 8 (53) | 19.60 |
| Richie Benaud | India | 8 (52) | 18.38 |
| Waqar Younis | Zimbabwe | 8 (50) | 19.00 |
| Murali | Pakistan | 9 (56) | 24.23 |
| Colin Croft | Pakistan | 9 (50) | 19.56 |
| Waqar Younis | Sri Lanka | 11 (55) | 19.20 |
Of failures at home
When Rahul Dravid got a duck in the first innings of the Bangalore Test, it was the first time that he had failed to open his account in 34 home Tests, but the second time in three innings that he failed to get off the mark - he had run out for 0 in the second innings at Lahore as well. (In between those two ducks, though, was that monumental 270 in the third Test at Rawalpindi, giving Dravid the rather bizarre run of 0, 270, 0 in his last three innings.)
Dravid's feat of not scoring a duck in his first 33 home Tests has been bettered only by five batsmen. Leading the way is Javed Miandad, who avoided the ignominy entirely in the 60 matches he played in Pakistan - all his six zeroes came overseas. Alec Stewart figures in the list as well, while Mark Butcher has so far escaped the naught in 34 home games.
| Batsman | First home duck in Test no. |
| Miandad | 60* |
| Mark Taylor | 51 |
| Alec Stewart | 43 |
| Aravinda de Silva | 39 |
| Mark Butcher | 34* |
S Rajesh is assistant editor of Wisden Cricinfo.
Stats editor Every week the Numbers Game takes a look at the story behind the stats, with an original slant on facts and figures. The column is edited by S Rajesh, ESPNcricinfo's stats editor in Bangalore. He did an MBA in marketing, and then worked for a year in advertising, before deciding to chuck it in favour of a job which would combine the pleasures of watching cricket and writing about it. The intense office cricket matches were an added bonus.

Watson should remain at the top of the order
Ian Chappell: His batting skills are too good for him to be saddled with a frontline bowler's job too
You may not get many homegrown cricketers in Canada but you can get a homegrown bat. By Liam Herringshaw
'I did not have a lethal weapon'
Sarfraz Nawaz mastered the art of swing - conventional and reverse - by trial and error, and formed a formidable partnership with Imran Khan
Aakash Chopra: Why the idea of having those in the top order take turns at playing is flawed
Someone, please explain the D/L method
Michael Jeh: India's target at the MCG didn't make sense
Afghanistan's remarkable rise achieves new heights
Afghanistan cricket will reach a new high when they take on an ICC Full Member for the first time
Which teams are the worst travellers?
A look at how Australia, South Africa and England have fared in Asia, and vice versa
Plays of the Day from the second ODI of the CB series, between India and Sri Lanka at the WACA
Unravelling the mystery of Ajmal
The ICC have explained the science behind the offspinner's action after a TV interview caused confusion
Plays of the Day from the third ODI of the CB series, between Australia and Sri Lanka at the WACA
Which teams are the worst travellers? (142)
A look at how Australia, South Africa and England have fared in Asia, and vice versa
Pakistan rewarded for smart rebuilding (137)
After the events of 2010 Pakistan cricket could have withered away, but due to a combination of determination and desire they are now flourishing
Unravelling the mystery of Ajmal (114)
The ICC have explained the science behind the offspinner's action after a TV interview caused confusion
India beaten in battle of strategies (101)
The plan to go in with a spin-strong attack is fraught with risk in Australian conditions, as India were made to realise at the MCG
Does rotation work for India? (94)
Why the idea of having those in the top order take turns at playing is flawed
Access your Indian Rupee earnings from anywhere in the world.
ICICI Bank Money2India brings " locked exchange rate" and a free gift
on registering and transfer of USD 250 and above.
FREE copy of Playfair with Wisden pre-order
At Cricshop.com