Unconventional and extraordinary
Virender Sehwag didn't play by the textbook, but he achieved incredible things over a career that lasted more than a decade

Virender Sehwag is one of only five openers to score 5000-plus Test runs at a 50-plus average • AFP
Player | Mat | Runs | Ave | 100s |
Mahela Jayawardene | 149 | 11814 | 49.84 | 34 |
Inzamam-ul-Haq | 120 | 8830 | 49.60 | 25 |
Michael Clarke | 115 | 8643 | 49.10 | 28 |
Virender Sehwag | 104 | 8586 | 49.34 | 23 |
To the uninitiated, Sehwag's batting style seemed quite reckless, but his numbers clearly show a player who knew his strengths and weaknesses and played the percentages well. The three highest Test scores by Indian batsmen are all by Sehwag, who is also one of only four batsmen to make two scores of 300 or more, and one of two batsmen with four or more 250-plus scores (Don Bradman is the other).
Player | 100s | Runs | Average | Runs per 100 |
Don Bradman | 29 | 5393 | 234.47 | 185.97 |
Virender Sehwag | 23 | 3996 | 181.63 | 173.74 |
Brian Lara | 34 | 5889 | 184.03 | 173.21 |
Wally Hammond | 22 | 3685 | 245.66 | 167.50 |
Kumar Sangakkara | 38 | 6344 | 211.46 | 166.95 |
Marvan Atapattu | 16 | 2584 | 215.33 | 161.50 |
Chris Gayle | 15 | 2419 | 172.78 | 161.27 |
Mahela Jayawardene | 34 | 5438 | 181.26 | 159.94 |
Len Hutton | 19 | 2966 | 197.73 | 156.11 |
Javed Miandad | 23 | 3584 | 238.93 | 155.83 |
Sehwag's flat-footed batting technique left him susceptible to the moving ball, and he did have his share of struggles in conditions that favoured seam and swing bowling: in 51 innings when he opened the batting in Australia, England, South Africa and New Zealand, his average dropped to 32.49, with only three hundreds. Exclude Australia, and his average drops further to 21.58, with only three 50-plus scores in 29 innings. In his last four series outside Asia, he averaged 22.73.
Player | Inns | Runs | Average | 100 |
Len Hutton | 131 | 6721 | 56.47 | 19 |
Jack Hobbs | 97 | 5130 | 56.37 | 14 |
Matthew Hayden | 184 | 8625 | 50.73 | 30 |
Sunil Gavaskar | 203 | 9607 | 50.29 | 33 |
Virender Sehwag | 170 | 8207 | 50.04 | 22 |
Graeme Smith | 196 | 9030 | 49.07 | 27 |
Justin Langer | 115 | 5112 | 48.22 | 16 |
Geoff Boycott | 191 | 8091 | 48.16 | 22 |
Herschelle Gibbs | 116 | 5242 | 47.22 | 14 |
Alastair Cook | 202 | 9015 | 47.19 | 26 |
Among all batsmen who have scored at least 3000 runs in the first innings of a team (first two innings of a Test match), Sehwag averaged 62.50, which is second only to Brian Lara's 63.94. He scored 22 centuries in 104 first innings - that's one every 4.7 innings. In the second innings, he had one hundred in 76 attempts: in Adelaide in 2008. His second-innings average of 30.25 is the lowest among the 57 batsmen who have scored at least 2000 second-innings runs.
Player | Inns | Runs | Average | 100s |
Brian Lara | 130 | 8249 | 63.94 | 25 |
Virender Sehwag | 104 | 6438 | 62.50 | 22 |
Kumar Sangakkara | 133 | 7831 | 61.17 | 24 |
Steve Waugh | 166 | 8558 | 60.69 | 30 |
Mahela Jayawardene | 148 | 8719 | 60.13 | 29 |
Sachin Tendulkar | 197 | 11300 | 60.10 | 38 |
Mohammad Yousuf | 89 | 5043 | 60.03 | 20 |
Rahul Dravid | 164 | 9105 | 59.12 | 30 |
Greg Chappell | 86 | 4791 | 58.42 | 18 |
Shivnarine Chanderpaul | 162 | 7931 | 58.31 | 24 |
Despite having a batting style and temperament that looked perfect for limited-overs cricket, Sehwag wasn't quite as prolific as you'd expect in ODIs. He averaged 35.05 in the format, which would have been a perfectly healthy average had been playing in the 1980s and '90s, but in the 2000s the best top-order batsmen had pushed their ODI averages into the 40s, or even higher. Given Sehwag's natural ability to take on bowlers and score all round the wicket, he should have averaged higher, especially given his tendency to notch up huge scores in Tests.
Player | Inns | Runs | Average | SR | 100s | Bat index* |
MS Dhoni | 196 | 7259 | 51.85 | 88.22 | 8 | 45.74 |
AB de Villiers | 128 | 5175 | 48.82 | 93.14 | 13 | 45.47 |
Michael Hussey | 157 | 5442 | 48.15 | 87.16 | 3 | 41.97 |
Sachin Tendulkar | 248 | 10625 | 46.80 | 85.92 | 28 | 40.21 |
Andrew Symonds | 161 | 5088 | 39.75 | 92.44 | 6 | 36.74 |
Matthew Hayden | 143 | 5847 | 45.32 | 80.82 | 10 | 36.63 |
Virender Sehwag | 245 | 8273 | 35.05 | 104.33 | 15 | 36.57 |
Michael Clarke | 204 | 7307 | 45.10 | 78.36 | 7 | 35.34 |
Adam Gilchrist | 230 | 7959 | 35.69 | 98.72 | 11 | 35.23 |
Ricky Ponting | 297 | 11212 | 42.15 | 82.23 | 25 | 34.66 |
Out of 18 Indian batsmen who have more than 3000 Test runs, only three - Tendulkar, Dravid and Gavaskar - have a better average than Sehwag's 49.34, and have more hundreds than his 23. Laxman follows with an average of 45.97, while Mohammad Azharuddin has 22 centuries. Clearly, as a Test batsman, he is among the very best that India have ever had.
S Rajesh is stats editor of ESPNcricinfo. Follow him on Twitter