The most celebrated loser
With the loss of the Super Test under his belt, Brian Lara became the cricketer to have played in the most Test losses
Travis Basevi and George Binoy
18-Oct-2005
Some statistics, like Bradman's average and the number of centuries Gavaskar made, are known to pretty much every cricket buff. But The List will bring you facts and figures that aren't so obvious, adding fuel to those fiery debates about the most valuable middle-order bat, and the most useless tailender. If there's a particular List that you would like to see, e-mail us with your comments and suggestions.
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Brian Charles Lara is arguably one of cricket's most celebrated and charismatic players. He held the record for highest Test innings, then lost it, and now has it again. He's probably not the most welcomed person in Durham and he's just 315 runs shy of eclipsing Allan Border's record of 11,174 Test runs. The List has decided to acknowledge another distinction Lara recently achieved, dubious though it may be.
With the loss of the Super Test under his belt, Lara nudged out Alec Stewart to become the cricketer with the highest number of Test defeats, a whopping 55. This unenviable record is likely to stay with Lara for a while because his closest active competition is his team-mate Shivnarine Chanderpaul, with 41 defeats. Given Zimbabwe's appalling run of form, Heath Streak, 11th on The List with 37 losses, would have been your best bet but he's probably played his last international game.
Four Englishmen figure in the top seven courtesy Australia, who handed Stewart 22 of his 54 defeats (20 to Mike Atherton, and 18 to Graham Gooch). Curiously, in the top 20, there are just two bowlers - Courtney Walsh, because of his 18-year career, and Streak because of Zimbabwe's ineptness. Give it further thought and you'll realise that West Indies and England kept changing their bowlers during their 1990s slump, and Zimbabwean bowlers just haven't played enough. Allan Border and Steve Waugh, who played crucial roles in reviving Australia from a terrible run in the mid-1980s , are the only two Australians on The List.
Player | Mat | Lost | Runs | Batting Ave | Wkts | Bowling Ave |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BC Lara (ICC/WI) | 118 | 55 | 4695 | 42.68 | 0 | - |
AJ Stewart (Eng) | 133 | 54 | 2993 | 29.92 | 0 | - |
AR Border (Aust) | 156 | 46 | 2771 | 33.38 | 16 | 33.06 |
MA Atherton (Eng) | 115 | 44 | 2319 | 26.35 | 0 | - |
CA Walsh (WI) | 132 | 43 | 331 | 5.80 | 186 | 25.09 |
GA Gooch (Eng) | 118 | 42 | 2423 | 28.84 | 6 | 46.00 |
DI Gower (Eng) | 117 | 42 | 2581 | 32.26 | 0 | - |
S Chanderpaul (WI) | 88 | 41 | 2686 | 35.81 | 3 | 72.66 |
CL Hooper (WI) | 102 | 38 | 1945 | 26.64 | 42 | 62.26 |
GW Flower (Zimb) | 67 | 37 | 1373 | 18.55 | 14 | 72.92 |
HH Streak (Zimb) | 65 | 37 | 1102 | 17.77 | 116 | 30.74 |
PA de Silva (SL) | 93 | 36 | 1740 | 24.16 | 10 | 40.39 |
SR Waugh (Aust) | 168 | 36 | 2380 | 37.77 | 28 | 41.35 |
RD Jacobs (WI) | 65 | 36 | 1435 | 23.52 | 0 | - |
A Ranatunga (SL) | 93 | 35 | 2163 | 31.80 | 7 | 48.00 |
SR Tendulkar (India) | 123 | 35 | 2558 | 36.54 | 18 | 35.83 |
SP Fleming (NZ) | 96 | 35 | 2038 | 29.11 | 0 | - |
SM Gavaskar (India) | 125 | 34 | 2314 | 35.06 | 0 | - |
DB Vengsarkar (India) | 116 | 34 | 1654 | 25.06 | 0 | - |
Inzamam-ul-Haq (ICC/Pak) | 102 | 34 | 1944 | 29.01 | 0 | - |
You would have noticed an evident relationship between players from the same country in The List. Lara, Walsh, Chanderpaul and Carl Hooper played the majority of their careers during a bad time for the West Indies. As did Stewart and Atherton, Gooch and David Gower, and Streak and Grant Flower.
When a team's linchpin fails, the team often tends to struggle. The superhuman Don Bradman averaged a human 43.27 in the matches he lost. Sachin Tendulkar and Inzamam-ul-Haq average 20 runs below their career averages of 57.25 and 50.13 in defeats.
Player | Span | Mat | Inns | Runs | HS![]() |
Ave | 100 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
H Sutcliffe (Eng) | 1924-1935 | 11 | 22 | 1198 | 176![]() |
54.45 | 4 |
V Sehwag (ICC/India) | 2001-2005 | 10 | 20 | 1063 | 201![]() |
53.14 | 3 |
L Hutton (Eng) | 1946-1954 | 20 | 39 | 1700 | 202* | 50.00 | 3 |
JB Hobbs (Eng) | 1908-1930 | 22 | 42 | 1889 | 154![]() |
46.07 | 6 |
DG Bradman (Aust) | 1928-1938 | 12 | 22 | 952 | 131![]() |
43.27 | 2 |
A Flower (Zimb) | 1992-2002 | 34 | 68 | 2713 | 199* | 43.06 | 7 |
VS Hazare (India) | 1946-1953 | 11 | 22 | 902 | 145![]() |
42.95 | 2 |
BC Lara (ICC/WI) | 1992-2005 | 55 | 110 | 4695 | 221![]() |
42.68 | 12 |
AD Nourse (SAf) | 1935-1951 | 17 | 34 | 1331 | 115![]() |
41.59 | 2 |
CL Walcott (WI) | 1950-1958 | 13 | 26 | 1039 | 155![]() |
41.56 | 4 |
Player | Span | Mat | Runs | Wkts | BBI | Ave | 5 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CTB Turner (Aust) | 1887-1895 | 11 | 1108 | 61 | 7/43 | 18.16 | 7 |
SF Barnes (Eng) | 1902-1911 | 9 | 1086 | 50 | 7/60 | 21.71 | 5 |
RM Hogg (Aust) | 1978-1984 | 16 | 1513 | 68 | 6/74 | 22.25 | 4 |
H Trumble (Aust) | 1890-1904 | 11 | 1098 | 46 | 8/65 | 23.86 | 4 |
GD McGrath (Aust) | 1994-2004 | 20 | 2079 | 87 | 7/76 | 23.89 | 7 |
NAT Adcock (SAf) | 1955-1962 | 11 | 871 | 36 | 5/62 | 24.19 | 1 |
Wasim Akram (Pak) | 1985-2001 | 27 | 2692 | 109 | 6/61 | 24.69 | 7 |
CA Walsh (WI) | 1984-2001 | 43 | 4668 | 186 | 6/61 | 25.09 | 9 |
SM Pollock (SAf) | 1997-2005 | 20 | 2007 | 79 | 6/39 | 25.40 | 4 |
Ghulam Ahmed (India) | 1949-1959 | 10 | 927 | 36 | 7/49 | 25.75 | 3 |
For the pundits: We've looked at the highest percentage of Tests lost for players who've played more than 25 Tests. Understandably, the list is dominated by Bangladesh and Zimbabwe.
Trivia
Bert Sutcliffe did not win a single Test in his 42-Test career
Alok Kapali has lost each of his 16 Tests
Not one of Richie Benaud's five-wicket hauls came in a lost Test
All of Wally Hammond's and Geoffrey Boycott's 22 Test centuries came in matches that England did not lose.
Next week, The List will feature players with the best records in Tests won
If there's a particular List that you would like to see, e-mail us with your comments and suggestions.
George Binoy is editorial assistant of Cricinfo