Can you tell me who were the non-strikers when Yuvraj, Gibbs, Shastri and Sir Sobers were busy hitting six sixes in an over? I guess they must have had the best seats in the house! asked Manu Goyal from the United States
What is the most balls faced in a one-day international for a duck? Is it 31 by Runako Morton in 2006? What about in Test cricket? asked Ryan Kelly from New Zealand
My Dad says that Australia once selected a wicketkeeper who'd never kept wicket before - is this true? asked Declan McDonald from Queensland
It is true, although the man in question didn't actually keep wicket in a Test. The player was
Ken Burn, from Tasmania, who was chosen for the 1890 Australian tour as a wicketkeeper, and it wasn't until the team had set off on their voyage from Adelaide to England that he revealed that he hadn't actually kept wicket in his life. Although he had a modest tour with the bat - scoring 344 runs at 10.43 in 21 matches - Burn did play in both the Tests as a batsman. He scored 0 and 19 at Lord's (going in at No. 10 and 11), and 7 and 15 at The Oval. That was his lot in Test cricket, although he did better with the bat for his state, scoring two first-class centuries for them - the second as late as 1907-08, when he was 45 and scored 112 against that year's England tourists
in Hobart.
Who has played in the most World Cup tournaments? asked Akhtar from Pakistan
As
Geoff Boycott's Cricinfo player page reveals, he actually hit
eight sixes in Tests. He even managed one in his 246 not out against India
at Headingley in 1967, after which he was famously dropped for slow scoring. Four of Boycott's sixes came in 1973 - including three in the same game against New Zealand
at Lord's - but after getting out hooking several times that season, notably against the West Indian fast bowlers, he cut out the stroke, which is probably why he didn't hit any more over the boundary.
Many readers thought
Jason Gillespie should be in the frame for his 201 not out as a nightwatchman for Australia against Bangladesh
in Chittagong in April 2006, in what oddly turned out to be his last Test match. Still more thought the palm should go to
Wasim Akram, who made three Test centuries, including a double against Zimbabwe
in Sheikhupura in 1996-97. There were also votes for
Keith Miller,
Garry Sobers, and
Lance Klusener, one for India's
Ajit Agarkar, and an impassioned plea - which, had it come through the regular mail rather than email would almost certainly have had a Lancashire postmark - for
Andrew Flintoff. I was almost swayed by that one, but still wonder if any of them - and
Imran Khan, who had his supporters - were as fast as the Australian pair of
Jack Gregory and
Ray Lindwall who were mentioned last week. There's nothing like a good discussion!
1 Jacob Oram, 2 Mushfiqur Rahim, 3 Chris Rogers, 4 Jehan Mubarak, 5 Hitesh Modi, 6 Andrew Hall, 7 Shivnarine Chanderpaul, 8 Billy Doctrove, 9 Brett Lee, 10 Runako Morton, 11 Chamu Chibhabha, 12 Thomas Odoyo, 13 Charl Langeveldt, 14 Lendl Simmons, 15 Ryan Sidebottom, 16 Brad Haddin, 17 Kieron Pollard, 18 Vernon Philander, 19 Michael Hussey, 20 Jacques Kallis
The winner, who will receive searchable online ebooks of the 2006, 2007 and 2008 Wisden Cricketers' Almanack, plus a year's subscription to the Wisden Cricketer magazine, is Patricia Arthur from the UK. Two runners-up, Premeshan Doraswami from South Africa and Dylan Krasny from Australia, will receive an ebook version of Wisden 2008. Congratulations to them, and many thanks to all who entered.