Indian high-fives and double declarations
Perhaps numbers never do reveal the full story, but they tell a large part of it
Before India's tour to Australia, if someone had suggested that one team would end up with five five-fors in the Tests and the other would get none, you'd probably have bet that Australia would be the first team and India the second. As it turned out, Zaheer Khan, Anil Kumble (three times) and Ajit Agarkar were the only bowlers to nab five-fors in the four-Test series, while the Australians, for only the second time in a home series of four or more matches, failed to achieve that landmark even once.
Home series when Australia's bowlers didn't achieve a single five-for | ||||
Opp
|
Year
|
Opp 5-fors
|
Aus bowlers' runs/wkt
|
Opp bowlers runs/wkt
|
India | 1977-78 |
7
|
28.17
|
33.54
|
India | 2003-04 |
5
|
49.23
|
47.42
|
More encomiums for India's batsmen: at Sydney, they lost only nine wickets in the entire Test, and declared in both innings, a feat which had been achieved on only six previous occasions against Australia. The last team to inflict this humiliation on Australia had been New Zealand, two seasons ago at Perth, but to find the previous instance, one would have to go back to the mid-80s, to an age when Allan Border led Australia and when England used to have a solid hold over their arch rivals.
Two declarations in a single Test versus Australia | ||||
Team
|
Venue & Year
|
1st inns total
|
2nd inns total
|
match result
|
India | Sydney, 2003-04 |
705-7
|
211-2
|
Draw |
New Zealand | Perth, 2001-02 |
534-9
|
256-9
|
Draw |
England | Perth, 1986-87 |
592-8
|
199-8
|
Draw |
England | Trent Bridge, 1964 |
216-8
|
193-9
|
Draw |
England | Trent Bridge, 1956 |
217-8
|
188-3
|
Draw |
England | Old Trafford, 1934 |
627-9
|
123-0
|
Draw |
West Indies | Sydney, 1930-31 |
350-6
|
124-5
|
WI won |
All those runs scored by both India and Australia meant that the series was the fourth-best in terms of runs per wicket. Among all series consisting of at least three Tests, India's tour to England in 1990 - when Mohammad Azharuddin wove his magic with some sumptuous strokeplay and Graham Gooch smashed a triple-hundred and a century in the Lord's Test - was the one in which bat dominated ball the most. Next in line is Australia's tour to India in 1986-87, made famous by the tied Test at Madras, but also the only series in which Kapil Dev went wicketless. India feature in four of the five most batsman-dominated series, a clear indication of their strong batting and weak bowling.
Highest runs per wicket in a series | ||||
Series | Tests | Runs | Wickets | Average |
Ind in Eng, 1990 |
3
|
4640
|
81
|
57.28
|
Aus in Ind, 1986-87 |
3
|
2880
|
55
|
52.36
|
SA in NZ, 1998-99 |
3
|
2981
|
60
|
49.68
|
Ind in Aus, 2003-04 |
4
|
5751
|
117
|
49.15
|
Ind in Pak, 1978-79 |
3
|
3892
|
80
|
48.65
|