First-Test blues, and chasing small targets
A rare win in the first Test of a series for Pakistan, and how teams fare when chasing a small fourth-innings target
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Team | Tests | Win/ Loss/ Draw | Loss % |
---|---|---|---|
Australia | 15 | 14/ 0/ 1 | 0 |
South Africa | 13 | 6/ 2/ 5 | 15.38 |
India | 10 | 4/ 2/ 4 | 20.00 |
England | 12 | 7/ 3/ 2 | 25.00 |
Sri Lanka | 12 | 4/ 3/ 5 | 25.00 |
New Zealand | 11 | 3/ 3/ 5 | 27.27 |
Pakistan | 12 | 4/ 6/ 2 | 50.00 |
West Indies | 13 | 2/ 7/ 4 | 53.85 |
England's defeat at Multan was unexpected not only because of their golden run and Pakistan's tendency to start a series sluggishly; it's become increasingly unusual for teams to fluff up a modest fourth-innings target. Ten years back, teams would give themselves a fair chance of defending a sub-200 fourth-innings total. Perhaps it is because pitches today are more batsman-oriented, or maybe the pace at which Test matches progress these days ensures that many games don't even last five days, thereby reducing the chance for a wearing wicket to play its part. Whatever the reasons, low targets don't cause the jitters like they once used to.
Winner | Loser | 4th innings target | Margin of defeat | Venue & year |
---|---|---|---|---|
Australia | Sri Lanka | 181 | 16 runs | SSC, Colombo, 1992 |
Pakistan | New Zealand | 127 | 33 runs | Hamilton, 1992-93 |
West Indies | Australia | 186 | 1 run | Adelaide, 1992-93 |
South Africa | Australia | 117 | 5 runs | Sydney, 1993-94 |
West Indies | England | 194 | 147 runs | Trinidad, 1993-94 |
India | South Africa | 170 | 64 runs | Ahmedabad, 1996-97 |
West Indies | India | 120 | 38 runs | Barbados, 1996-97 |
England | Australia | 124 | 19 runs | The Oval, 1997 |
South Africa | Pakistan | 146 | 53 runs | Faisalabad, 1997-98 |
England | Australia | 175 | 12 runs | Melbourne, 1998-99 |
The Glenn McGrath-Shane Warne duo have been doing outstanding work for Australia for many years now, but in the West Indies second innings at the Gabba, something strange happened - for the first time in 155 innings when they played together in opposition all-outs, both bowlers went wicketless. It was also only the fourth time that the two bowlers had a combined haul of less than three wickets in an innings: the other three instances were against India at Melbourne in 1999-2000, and against England at Sydney in 1998-99 and at The Oval in 1997. That's an indication of just how much of a loss it will be for Australia - and relief for all opposition batsmen - when the two finally decide to wind up their career.
S Rajesh is stats editor of Cricinfo. For some of the stats he was helped by Arun Gopalakrishnan in the Chennai office.