A hundred in your 100th ODI and in your 100th Test
How many players have achieved the feat?
Muttiah Muralitharan is the leading bowler in Tests against India (105 wickets), Bangladesh (89) and Zimbabwe (87) • AFP
Shane Warne finished with a remarkable 195 wickets against England, in 36 Tests. Next come Dennis Lillee (167) and Curtly Ambrose (164); in all, 18 bowlers have taken 100 or more against England in Tests. Warne also dismissed 130 South Africans, ahead of Muttiah Muralitharan (104) and James Anderson and Anil Kumble (both 84). A special mention here for Sydney Barnes, the great English bowler of the pre-Great War era, who took 83 wickets in just seven Tests against South Africa, at the remarkable average of 9.86. Warne also took 103 wickets against New Zealand; Murali comes next with 82.
The South African fast bowler Geoff Griffin's hat-trick came in his second Test, against England at Lord's in 1960. It was a controversial match for Griffin, who had a noticeably bent-armed action: he was also no-balled for throwing in that match (a unique double), and never played another Test.
Gordon Greenidge is the only man so far to complete this particular double. He scored 102 not out for West Indies against Pakistan in Sharjah in his 100th ODI, in October 1988, and later added 149 in his 100th Test, against England in Antigua in April 1990.
It is indeed true: the highest individual Test score that ended with the batsman being run out was Brian Lara's memorable 277 against Australia at the SCG in 1992-93. Lara later named his daughter Sydney, to commemorate the innings. The next highest was also by a West Indian, Conrad Hunte's 260 against Pakistan in Kingston in 1957-58, an innings somewhat overshadowed by Garry Sobers' unbeaten 365, a new Test record (later overtaken by Lara). Next comes Ben Stokes' 258 for England v South Africa in Cape Town in 2015-16. Only seven other Test double-centuries have been ended by a run-out; for the full list, click here.
The sole playing survivor from among those who played Test cricket in the 1990s is Rangana Herath, Sri Lanka's durable slow left-armer. He won his first cap against Australia, in Galle in September 1999, taking four wickets in a rain-affected draw. Herath, who turns 40 in March, didn't really claim a regular place until Muttiah Muralitharan retired, but has now taken 415 Test wickets, second for Sri Lanka behind Murali's 800. He has taken more wickets than any other left-arm bowler in Test cricket, having recently surpassed Wasim Akram's 414.
Steven Lynch is the editor of the updated edition of Wisden on the Ashes