Bowlers' nightmare, batsmen's dream
South Africa's fourth successive series win against West Indies was to an extent overshadowed by the run-fest in the final Test in Antigua
Bhavika Jhaveri
04-May-2005
South Africa's fourth successive series win against West Indies was to an extent overshadowed by the run-fest in the final Test in Antigua in a match where several records were created. For the first time, eight centuries were scored in a Test - four from each side - which surpassed the previous record of seven, which had been achieved on three occasions: England v Australia at Trent Bridge in 1938, West Indies v Australia at Kingston in 1955, and South Africa v West Indies at Cape Town in 2003-04.
West Indies' 747 was their highest total against South Africa, while the match tally of 1462 runs for 17 wickets makes this Test the third-highest in terms of runs conceded per wicket.
Match | Venue, Year | Runs per wicket |
Ind v NZ | Delhi, 1955 | 109.30 |
SL v Ind | Colombo, 1997 | 106.36 |
WI v RSA | Antigua, 2005 | 86.00 |
WI v Eng | Antigua, 1994 | 81.93 |
Pak v Aust | Peshawar, 1998 | 81.56 |
Among venues which have hosted at least ten Tests, Antigua also tops the list for the highest number of centuries per match.
Venue | No. of matches | Centuries | Ratio |
St.John's | 20 | 53 | 2.65 |
Adelaide | 63 | 143 | 2.27 |
Galle | 11 | 23 | 2.09 |
SSC, Colombo | 25 | 52 | 2.08 |
Bridgetown | 42 | 87 | 2.07 |
The batsman who made the most of the flat track was Chris Gayle, who went on to make a career-best 317. He became the fourth West Indian to score a triple-century, and the first to do so against South Africa. The earlier highest against them was Don Bradman's unbeaten 299 at Adelaide in 1931-32.
Player | Runs | Year | Venue |
Gayle (WI) | 317 | 2004-05 | St.Johns |
Bradman (Aust) | 299* | 1931-32 | Adelaide |
Paynter (Eng) | 243 | 1938-39 | Kingsmead |
Jayawardene (SL) | 237 | 2004 | Colombo |
Sangakkara (SL) | 232 | 2004 | Colombo |
The 331-run partnership between Gayle and Ramnaresh Sarwan is the highest second-wicket stand against South Africa, surpassing the previous best of 280 between Bill Edrich and Paul Gibb for England in 1938-39 in Durban.
For the bowlers, this was an entirely forgettable game. (Mark Boucher might disagree, though: he became only the ninth wicketkeeper to take a Test wicket.) In all, 19 bowlers were used in the match, 11 by South Africa and eight by West Indies. The only time when this number was exceeded in a Test was when England played South Africa
at Cape Town in 1965, when 20 players bowled.
Bhavika Jhaveri is editorial assistant of Cricinfo