That man Kohli again
India's captain dominated the game in 2016 on a number of parameters
Virat Kohli averaged more than 75 in every format in international cricket in 2016 • ESPNcricinfo Ltd
(cut-off: 750 runs in Tests, 600 in ODIs, 350 in T20Is)
Test weighted score 62.46, ODI weighted scored 49.18, T20I weighted scored 155; Total 266.64
Kohli had a dream year in every format, and no other batsman even comes close to what he achieved in Tests, ODIs and T20Is. His average in Tests was 75.93, in ODIs 92.37 (strike rate 100), and in T20Is 106.83 (strike rate 140.26).
(cut-off: 40 wickets in Tests, 25 in ODIs, 20 in T20Is)
Test weighted score 23.90, T20I weighted score 20.77, Total 44.67
Unlike in Tests, where Kohli was head and shoulders above everyone else, in bowling no one player dominated all formats. Ashwin was outstanding in Tests and T20Is, and just about managed to pip Mitchell Starc, who was terrific in Tests and ODIs. In Tests, Ashwin was the leading wicket-taker with 72, which was 15 more than the next best, at an average of 23.90, while in T20Is, he took 23 wickets at 16.17 and an economy rate of 6.30. Starc took 50 Test wickets at 22.58, and 26 ODI wickets at 19.69 (economy rate 4.49).
(cut-off: 750 runs)
Kohli was the fourth-highest run-getter in Tests in 2016, but his average was far superior to the other three who score more runs - Root, Bairstow and Cook. Even when weighted against the top run-getter of the year (1477, by Root), Kohli still managed a weighted score of 62.46, marginally ahead of Bairstow's 58.52.
(cut-off: 750 runs)
Kohli had a higher average, but Smith was the most consistent Test batsman of 2016, with only three scores below 30 in 18 innings. His standard deviation - which is a measure of the average distance from the mean - was an impressive 46.48. That combined with his average of 71.93 gave him a consistency factor (average divided by standard deviation) of 1.55, which was the best among all batsmen who scored 750-plus Test runs in 2016.
(cut-off: 30 wickets)
This one was a close contest between the two leading wicket-takers of the year, Ashwin and Rangana Herath, which Ashwin edged on account of India having played more Tests in the year than Sri Lanka. Herath took 57 wickets in nine Tests at an excellent average of 18.92 compared to Ashwin's 72 at 23.90, but when the wickets weightage was applied, Ashwin's weighted score was 23.90, compared to Herath's 23.91. In an ideal world, this one would be shared by the two bowlers.
(cut-off: 600 runs)
This was another award that seemed to be heading Kohli's way till Warner came along and smashed three hundreds in his last four ODI innings of the year, to finish with 1388 runs - the most by far in 2016 - at an average of 63.09 and a strike rate of 105.47. Kohli had a higher average - 92.37 - but his aggregate of 739 was far lower than Warner's. That he finished in second place despite playing only ten ODI innings in 2016 itself indicates how well he fared in those games.
(cut-off: 25 wickets)
For the second year in a row, Starc was the best ODI bowler. He finished with 26 wickets at 19.69 and an economy rate of 4.49. There were five bowlers who took more wickets than Starc did, but none of them had an average below 24 or an economy rate of under five runs per over. The ODI bowling factor (which is calculated by multiplying the average by runs conceded per ball, and then weighting the score by their wickets tally) for Starc was 17, while the next best was John Hastings' 22.13.
(cut-off: 350 runs)
Kohli's magnificent year extended to the 20-over format as well. Apart from an outstanding IPL, in which he scored 973 runs including four hundreds, he also scored 641 runs from 15 T20Is, at a phenomenal average of 106.83 and a strike rate of 140.26. His batting factor was 155, while the next best was Glenn Maxwell's 60.58.
(cut-off: 20 wickets)
Ashwin and Jasprit Bumrah has strong performances in T20Is in 2016, but both were pipped to the top spot by Rashid Khan, an Afghanistan legbreak bowler who took 23 wickets at 16.13 and an economy rate of 6.28. While his best hauls came against Zimbabwe and the UAE, he held his own against the stronger teams too, returning figures of 2 for 17 in the World T20 game against England, and 2 for 26 against West Indies. Ashwin had a weighted score of 20.77, while Bumrah, the leading wicket-taker in the format with 28, had a score of 20.97.
****
(Cut-off: 750 runs, unless mentioned otherwise)
(Cut-off: ten innings)
In a year of relatively slim pickings for opening pairs, Azhar Ali and Sami Aslam topped the averages among opening pairs who batted together at least eight times. They averaged 43.86 in 16 partnerships, while Martin Guptill and Tom Latham were next with an average of 40.37.
(Cut-off: eight innings)
With 887 runs in 10 stands, Bairstow and Stokes were the stand-out pair of the year. They started the year with a 399-run stand in Cape Town, and then added two more century stands, and one of 99. The three other pairs who were superb in 2016 were Kohli-Rahane (average 71.77 in nine stands), Latham-Williamson (average 70.77 in nine stands) and Khawaja-Smith (average 69.66 in nine stands).
Among players/ teams who played at least five Tests in 2016, Smith's contribution of 21.33% of Australia's total runs off the bat in the year was the highest. He just pipped Azhar Ali, whose 1198 runs was 21.04% of Pakistan's total bat runs in the year. Root was the top scorer of the year, but since so many England batsmen did well in the year, Root's contribution was 16.04% of England's total bat runs, while Kohli's contribution was 18.19%.
Kohli is streets ahead of everyone else in this category too, with 1082 runs at 77.28 in the nine Tests that India won in 2016. Next best is Smith, with 719 runs in five matches.
Warner had won this three years in a row before 2016, but Stokes, striking at 66.76 for his 904 runs, was quicker than anyone else who scored 750-plus runs this year. Two other batsmen scored at 60-plus: Root (60.70) and Kohli (60.41).
(cut-off: 30 wickets)
In 2016, Rabada truly took over from Dale Steyn as the strike bowler in the South African attack. He took 46 wickets from nine Tests, and though his economy rate was relatively high at 3.81, his strike rate of 36.6 was the best among all bowlers with 40-plus wickets in the year. Starc ran him close with a strike rate of 39, followed by Herath's 43.4.
After winning the prize with seven five-fors in 2015, Ashwin went one better with eight in 2016. In fact, only two bowlers - Malcolm Marshall and Muttiah Muralitharan - have taken more five-fors in a calendar year. The next best in 2016 was Herath's five, while Rabada and Yasir Shah had four each.
(cut-off: 15 wickets)
Sri Lanka's bowlers took 150 Test wickets in 2016, of which Herath contributed 57 - that's a percentage of 38, the best among all bowlers whose team played at least five Tests in the year. Two other bowlers took more than 30% of their team's wickets: Ashwin (35.47%), and Rabada (34.59%). No other bowler took more than 28% of their team's wickets.
(cut-off: 750 runs, unless mentioned otherwise)
With a strike rate of 108.61 (857 runs from 789 balls), de Kock led the way in terms of quick scoring, among batsmen who faced at least 600 balls in ODIs in 2016. Three other batsmen had strike rates of 100 or more - Warner (105.47), Alex Hales (101.36) and Kohli (100).
Only two batsmen, among the 15 who faced 600-plus balls, had a strike rate of less than 80 in ODIs in 2016. George Bailey had a rate of 79.21, but the batsman with the lowest rate was Chandimal: though he averaged an impressive 59.63, his strike rate was 77.72.
(cut-off: eight innings)
Amla and de Kock formed a superb opening combination in 2016, scoring 703 partnership runs at an average of 54.07 and a run rate of 5.58 per over. They had two huge stands - 239 against England in Centurion and 182 against West Indies in Basseterre. Two other pairs batted together in eight or more innings and averaged more than 40 - Jason Roy and Hales (average 44.08, run rate 6.51), and Aaron Finch and Warner (average 42.72, run rate 6.20).
(cut-off: eight innings)
The pair which scored the most runs (excluding opening pairs) was also the one with the best average (with a cut-off of eight partnerships). Hales and Root scored 722 runs in just nine innings, at an average of 80.22. This included a stand of 248 against Pakistan at Trent Bridge. In nine partnerships, they went past 60 six times, which is an emphatic statement of how successful the combination was. Next best was Chandimal and Angelo Mathews, with an average of 58.11, while George Bailey and Smith averaged 54.58.
For the second year in a row, Martin Guptill won this one, with a boundary percentage of 63.82, an improvement over his 2015 percentage of 60.44. In 2016, Guptill hit 74 fours and 28 sixes, which is 464 out of his aggregate of 727 runs. Next up was Finch, with a percentage of 61.37, followed by de Kock's 60.68. Hales and Warner followed, ensuring that openers took each of the top five positions. The lowest percentage was 28.05, by Chandimal.
AB de Villiers owned this category from 2012 to 2015, but in 2016 Kohli was the man to beat, achieving a dot percentage of 40.19, the lowest among all batsmen who scored 600-plus runs in the year. Babar Azam came in next at 42.82%, followed by Root (43.71) and Warner (44.98).
Of the 3097 runs scored by India's batsmen in ODIs in 2016 (excluding extras), Kohli's contribution was 739, which means he made 23.86% of India's runs in the year. Three other batsmen contributed more than 20% runs for their teams: Babar Azam (21.99% for Pakistan), de Kock (20.47 for South Africa), and Warner (20.28 for Australia).
Warner was phenomenal when Australia batted first in ODIs in 2016, scoring 786 runs at 87.33, but he was also the leading run scorer in chases, making 602 runs at 46.30. De Kock lost out in terms of aggregate, though he had the more impressive numbers, scoring 595 runs in nine chases, at an average of 74.37 and a strike rate of 123.18.
(cut-off: min 125 overs)
Among the 19 bowlers who sent down at least 100 overs in ODIs in 2016, Rashid had the best economy rate, of 4.12. He was well clear of Starc, who was in second place with 4.49, followed by Mitchell Santner's 4.77.
Boland, the Australian seamer, was one of only two bowlers who bowled 100-plus overs and went at more than a run a ball in ODIs in 2016. In 119.2 overs, Boland conceded 725 runs, an economy rate of 6.07. New Zealand's Matt Henry was the other bowler with an economy rate of more than six: he went at 6.01 per over.
The fast bowlers took the top three spots in this category: Starc was well clear of the others, though, with an incredible dot-ball percentage of 64.71. Hazlewood was almost six percentage points behind, at 58.86, followed by Rabada's 58.20%.
Santner conceded only 32 fours and 17 sixes in the 806 balls he bowled in ODIs in 2016. The percentage of 6.08 is the lowest among all bowlers who bowled at least 100 overs. He edged Rashid Khan (6.09%) and Adil Rashid (6.42%). In terms of percentage of runs in boundaries, Adil Rashid was the best, conceding only 32.12% of his runs in fours and sixes, followed by Moeen Ali (36.31%), and Santner (36.74%).
Maxwell and Guptill were the two batsmen with 170-plus strike rates, among batsmen who faced 200-plus deliveries in T20Is in 2016. Maxwell had the slightly higher strike rate - 174.69 - to Guptill's 171.92. Both had similar averages as well - 48.33 for Maxwell, 49 for Guptill. No other batsman had a strike rate of more than 155.
The only batsman who faced 200-plus deliveries and scored at less than a run a ball was Marlon Samuels, who made 234 runs in 238 balls (strike rate 98.31).
Guptill struck 40 fours and 23 sixes from 228 balls, which works out to an average of a four or a six every 3.6 balls, which was the best frequency among all batsmen. Maxwell was next, with a boundary every four balls. In terms of percentage of runs in boundaries too, Guptill was ahead of everyone else, scoring 76% of his runs in fours or sixes, followed by Mohammad Shahzad of Afghanistan (74%).
Of the 249 balls Maxwell faced in T20Is, only 69 were dots, a percentage of 27.71. He narrowly edged out Root, who had a dot percentage of 27.88. Guptill's dot percentage was much higher at 36.84, which isn't surprising given that he opens the innings.
Guptill and Williamson batted together nine times in T20Is in the year, faced 360 balls, and scored 573 runs, including two century stands and four half-century partnerships. They also scored at 9.55 runs per over, the highest among all pairs that faced 200-plus deliveries.
(cut-off: min 40 overs)
In 55.4 overs, UAE's Naveed went at only 5.24 runs per over, the only bowler among those who bowled at least 40 overs to go at under a run a ball. The next best economy rate was 6.28, by Rashid, followed by Ashwin's 6.30.
Three bowlers went at more than eight an over, of which Wahab's 8.14 was the poorest. The other two were Mohammad Shahzad of UAE (8.06), and India's Hardik Pandya (8.08).
With a dot-ball percentage of 58.08, Naveed, a right-arm seamer, had the best dot-ball percentage in T20Is in 2016. He was far ahead of all the others: the next three in the list - Ashish Nehra, Mohammad Amir and Jasprit Bumrah - all had dot percentages between 47.59 and 47.80.
In the 59 overs Ashwin bowled, he went for only 17 fours and 16 sixes, which means only 9.32% of his deliveries went for boundaries, the lowest among all bowlers. In terms of percentage of runs conceded in boundaries too, Ashwin's percentage of 44.09 (164 runs out of 372) is the lowest.
No team came close to India in Tests in 2016. In 12 matches, India won nine and drew three, with series wins against West Indies (away), New Zealand (home) and England (home). The next best were South Africa, with a 5-2 win-loss record in nine matches, while Sri Lanka were 5-3 in the same number of Tests.
Both England and South Africa had identical 11-5 win-loss records in ODIs in 2016, the best among all teams. England had a superb run at home in 2016, winning 3-0 against Sri Lanka and 4-1 against Pakistan, while South Africa's highlight was the 5-0 blanking of Australia in October. And in the five-match series between the two top teams of the year, it was South Africa who came out on top, winning 3-2 after losing the first two matches.
Zimbabwe lost twice as many ODIs as they won in 2016, but they were miserly in terms of giving away extras, conceding 48 wides and four no-balls, an average of 4.73 per game. Sri Lanka were next with an average of 5.89, while New Zealand were the poorest, giving away 9.78 wides and no-balls per game.
New Zealand had a dominant 8-2 win-loss record in T20Is, and at one stage won six games in a row - three against Pakistan, and one each against India, Australia and Bangladesh. India were next with a 15-5 record, while Sri Lanka had a terrible year in the format, winning three and losing 13.
With only 35 wides and two no-balls conceded in 16 games, Bangladesh's average of 2.31 per match was the best among all teams which played ten or more T20Is in the year. UAE were next with an average of 2.93, followed by New Zealand's 3.50. Zimbabwe, the most disciplined in ODIs, were the worst in T20Is, conceding 78 wides and four no-balls in 12 games, an average of 6.83 per match.
S Rajesh is stats editor of ESPNcricinfo. @rajeshstats