Captains in conflict, and the most runs without a wicket
The regular Monday column in which Steven Lynch, the editor of Wisden Cricinfo, answers your questions about (almost) any aspect of cricket
Steven Lynch
17-Nov-2003
The regular Monday column in which Steven Lynch answers your
questions about (almost) any aspect of cricket:
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Shaun Pollock: what's a captain doing with the new ball? © AFP |
I remember during the 1982-83 series between India and Pakistan
Imran Khan quite often bowled the first ball of the match to his rival
captain, Sunil Gavaskar. How often has this happened in Tests?
asks Devendra from Bombay
You're quite right, it is very rare. It happened three times in that
1982-83
series, in the second, third and sixth Tests. And there have only been
seven other instances in Test history - and five of them involve
Pakistan, who are obviously less worried than the other countries
about appointing fast bowlers as captains! The first instance was at Lord's in 1924, when Arthur Gilligan bowled
the first ball of the match to South Africa's captain Herbie Taylor. At Lahore in 1958-59 Fazal Mahmood started to West
Indies' Gerry Alexander, and it didn't happen again until the 1982-83
series mentioned above. Since then Imran Khan started successive
matches in 1989-90 (at Faisalabad and Lahore) by bowling to his
opposite number Kris Srikkanth of India. Then Wasim Akram took over:
at Brisbane in 1995-96 he bowled the first ball of the
match to Mark Taylor, and at The Oval in 1996 he kicked off to Mike Atherton. The last
entry on the list to date came at Centurion last November,
when Shaun Pollock started the ball rolling to Marvan Atapattu.
I enjoyed your interview with Raymond Price last week. I noticed
that when Matthew Hayden made his 380 poor old Price finished the
innings with 0 for 187 - is this a record for someone not taking a
wicket? asks Dominic Wood
I'm sure Ray
Price will be relieved to hear that it isn't a Test record - at Kingston in 1957-58, when
Garry Sobers made his 365 not out, Khan Mohammad of Pakistan toiled through 54 overs and
returned figures of 0 for 259. He wasn't helped by the fact that his
new-ball partner Mahmood Hussain pulled a thigh muscle in his first
over, and another bowler (Nasim-ul-Ghani) broke his thumb after 15
overs. West Indies made 790 for 3 declared in all - Fazal Mahmood
toiled through 85.2 overs and conceded 247 runs, but at least he
managed two wickets. Many years later I bumped into Khan
Mohammad at Lord's, where he used to do some coaching. He smiled
when reminded of that pasting: "Everyone always talks about my 0 for
259," he said. "They never talk about when I got Len Hutton out for a
duck, at Lord's in 1954!"
Has anyone ever shared hundred partnerships for all ten wickets in
Tests? asks Sujoy Ghosh
No-one has managed all ten, but six people have been involved in
century stands for eight of the ten wickets - Colin Cowdrey and Alec
Stewart of England, Australia's Steve Waugh, Dilip Sardesai and Ravi
Shastri of India, and Pakistan's Zaheer Abbas. W
augh, the only current player, is only missing the first and tenth
wickets from his collection - so if he goes in first against India we'll
know he has been reading this. In ODIs the record is seven, by
Sourav Ganguly, who has so far shared in hundred partnerships
for each of the first seven wickets.
In the recent first Test against West Indies at Harare, Zimbabwe's
Numbers 6, 7, 8 and 9 all scored half-centuries - how often has that
happened in Tests? asks Jeremy Gilling
That's a great spot, because it has only happened once before in Test
history - and again it was Zimbabwe that did it. At Harare this time the batsmen were Stuart
Matsikenyeri (57), Tatenda Taibu (83), Heath Streak (127*) and Andy
Blignaut (91). Streak was involved the only other time it happened, too -
in the first Test against Bangladesh at Dhaka in 2001-02.
Then, No. 6 Craig Wishart made 94, Douglas Marillier 73, Streak 65
and Travis Friend 81. The only other time that Numbers 6-11 have
produced four half-centuries between them was at Old Trafford in 1934, when Maurice Leyland (153),
Les Ames (72), No. 9 Gubby Allen (61) and No. 10 Hedley Verity (60*)
all did so for England in the third Test against Australia.
When Australia played West Indies in 1990-91 six different bowlers
took five wickets in an innings during the series. Was that a record?
asks Stephen Vagg
Surprisingly, it turned out to be quite a long way from the record. In the
1909 Ashes series in England no fewer than ten different
bowlers took five-fors - Sydney Barnes, Colin Blythe, Douglas Carr,
George Hirst, Bert Relf and Wilfred Rhodes for England, and Warwick
Armstrong, "Tibby" Cotter, Frank Laver and Charlie Macartney for
Australia. In the 1951-52 Australia-West Indies series nine different
men managed it - Gerry Gomez, Sonny Ramadhin, John Trim, Alf
Valentine and Frank Worrell for West Indies, and Bill Johnston, Ray
Lindwall, Keith Miller and Doug Ring for the Aussies. And there are six
instances of eight different bowlers doing it, in the following series:
Australia v England 1884-85, England v Australia 1905, Australia v
England 1936-37, Pakistan v India 1954-55, England v Australia 1997,
and Australia v England 1998-99.
You've been talking about Andy Ganteaume, who made a hundred
in his only Test innings, but Rodney Redmond played only one Test for
New Zealand, scoring 107 and 56 - why on earth didn't he play
again? asks Chris Elliott from Johannesburg
Rodney Redmond was a tallish, attacking left-hander who was just
as unlucky as Ganteaume. He made his debut in the third Test against Pakistan in 1972-73, and did
indeed hit 107 - in 145 minutes, with 20 fours and a five - in the first
innings (he and Glenn Turner put on 159), and added 56 in the second.
That match, at Auckland, was a peculiar one - Pakistan made 402, a
total New Zealand matched exactly, thanks to a record tenth-wicket
partnership of 151 between Brian Hastings and Richard Collinge.
Redmond took his Test average of 81.50 on New Zealand's
subsequent tour of England - but he struggled to come to terms with
the pitches and with new contact lenses, and John Parker (who had
played in England before) was preferred in the Tests. Overall Redmond
made only 483 runs (28.41) on that tour. He played on for Auckland (he started with Wellington) until 1975-76 but, troubled by indifferent eyesight, was never selected for another Test. He now lives in Perth, Western Australia, but his son Aaron has moved back to New Zealand, where he attended the NZ Cricket Academy and now plays as a legspinner for Canterbury.
Steven Lynch is editor of Wisden Cricinfo. For some of these
answers he was helped by Travis Basevi, the man who built Stats Guru
and the Wisden Wizard. If you want to Ask Steven a question, e-mail
him at
asksteven@cricinfo.com. The most interesting questions will be
answered each week in this column. Unfortunately, we can't usually
enter into correspondence about individual queries.