Matches (11)
PAK v WI [W] (1)
IPL (3)
County DIV1 (4)
County DIV2 (3)
Numbers Game

The marauding match-winner

McCullum's talent and ball-striking ability have never been in doubt, but it's only over the last 16 months that he has begun to live up to his potential as a batsman

S Rajesh
S Rajesh
25-Apr-2008


New Zealand have usually won when Brendon McCullum has turned it on © Getty Images
"When I was signed for US$700,000 I was obviously blown away, and having slept on it, it's a great feeling and it's nice to get the recognition." Those were Brendon McCullum's words when he was signed by Kolkata Knight Riders for the IPL, and within an hour of the start of the tournament, he proved the amount was entirely justified. With his audacious 73-ball 158, McCullum became the first batsman to top 150 in a Twenty20 game, and those who have followed his career - especially his recent form - won't be entirely surprised that he has outshone some of the more glamorous big-hitters in the IPL so far.
Throughout the 2007-08 season McCullum has been outstanding for New Zealand, averaging more than 53, at a stunning strike-rate of 109. In 14 games during this period, he has scored half the number of 50-plus scores that he has managed in his entire six-and-a-half-year ODI career. Bowlers have struggled to devise a strategy against a batsman who has made a habit of bludgeoning them from well outside the crease.
McCullum's talent and ball-striking ability have never been in doubt, but it's only over the last 16 months that he has at last begun to live up to his potential as a batsman. Till 2006 his stats were pretty ordinary; since then, the average has almost doubled, while the strike-rate has jumped to more than a run a ball as well.
Brendon McCullum's ODI career
Period Matches Runs Average Strike rate 100s/ 50s
Till Dec 2006 90 1220 21.40 77.65 0/ 4
Since Jan 2007 38 1060 40.76 106.74 0/ 8
Overall 128 2280 27.46 88.92 0/ 12
Despite his ordinary numbers through the first four years of his ODI career, McCullum remains one of New Zealand's best match-winners over the last six years. Nathan Astle and Stephen Fleming have both averaged more in wins, but neither has matched McCullum's scoring-rate, which is higher even than Chris Cairns'.
Best match-winners for New Zealand in ODIs since 2002 (at least 750 runs in wins)
Player ODIs Runs Average Strike rate Ave x SR/100
Nathan Astle 39 1780 59.33 75.93 45.05
Brendon McCullum 69 1330 40.30 107.34 43.26
Stephen Fleming 63 2403 42.15 79.49 33.51
Scott Styris 65 1773 38.54 81.62 31.46
Peter Fulton 26 751 39.52 78.63 31.07
Craig McMillan 52 1387 34.67 87.45 30.32
Chris Cairns 41 776 31.04 95.80 29.74
Lou Vincent 40 1072 31.52 77.34 24.38
In fact, over the last three years McCullum has done enough to be compared to some of the best batsmen in the world, not just in New Zealand. The rate at which he scores has ensured that the team has usually won when he has been among the runs. Since 2005 he averages nearly 52, at a strike-rate of 126, in ODIs that New Zealand have won. In losses, on the other hand, his average plummets to 18, and strike-rate to 77.
Combine the average and the strike-rate (multiply the average by the runs scored per ball), and McCullum's numbers are next only to those of Mahendra Singh Dhoni, who has been stunning in Indian wins.
Interestingly, there's another wicketkeeper in the top five as well - South Africa's Mark Boucher has a 50-plus average and a 100-plus strike-rate as well, which puts him ahead of top-class batsmen like Ricky Ponting and Mahela Jayawardene.
Best matchwinners in ODIs since 2005 (at least 1000 runs in wins)
Player ODIs Runs Average Strike rate Ave x SR/100
Mahendra Singh Dhoni 54 1975 79.00 104.55 82.59
Brendon McCullum 35 1037 51.85 126.00 65.33
Paul Collingwood 31 1065 66.56 86.37 57.49
Yuvraj Singh 54 2147 58.02 92.42 53.62
Mark Boucher 55 1221 50.87 104.35 53.08
Graeme Smith 52 2571 57.13 91.82 52.46
Ricky Ponting 65 3032 57.20 87.30 49.94
Andrew Symonds 64 2103 50.07 99.62 49.88
Mahela Jayawardene 49 2027 53.34 90.69 48.37
Shivnarine Chanderpaul 27 1172 65.11 73.06 47.57
Among wicketkeeper-batsmen, McCullum and Dhoni have been the cream of the crop over the last 15 months. Adam Gilchrist only comes in fourth, after Boucher.
Wicketkeeper-batsmen in ODIs since 2007
Player ODIs Runs Average Strike-rate Ave x SR/100
Brendon McCullum 38 1060 40.76 106.74 43.51
Mahendra Singh Dhoni 47 1450 48.33 85.29 41.22
Mark Boucher 35 695 38.61 100.00 38.61
Adam Gilchrist 40 1256 33.94 101.29 34.38
Kumar Sangakkara 37 1136 33.41 71.35 23.84
The 13 sixes McCullum slammed in his 158 is the record for a Twenty20 innings, and it highlights his penchant for clearing the boundary. The small grounds in New Zealand may have been a factor, but that can only partially explain the fact that McCullum has struck 59 sixes in 1621 deliveries in ODIs since 2005, which works out to a healthy rate of 27 deliveries per six.
The only batsman with a better rate of hitting sixes is Pakistan's Shahid Afridi, who has struck one at a ridiculous rate of 12.3 deliveries. However, Afridi's frenetic hitting has come at the cost of consistency - he has only averaged 24 during this period.
Most prolific six-hitters in ODIs since 2005 (at least 40 ODI sixes)
Batsman ODIs Balls faced Sixes Balls per six
Shahid Afridi 67 873 71 12.30
Brendon McCullum 71 1621 59 27.47
Justin Kemp 71 1704 59 28.88
Sanath Jayasuriya 78 2443 61 40.05
Aftab Ahmed 72 1995 47 42.45
Mahendra Singh Dhoni 103 3451 79 43.68
Andrew Symonds 86 2702 61 44.30
Adam Gilchrist 89 2879 62 46.44
Mark Boucher 85 2058 42 49.00
Herschelle Gibbs 71 2900 56 51.79

S Rajesh is stats editor of Cricinfo