Sarwan's record and Ramdin's near-miss
The top scorers for each of the West Indian territories, the top score in a first Test as captain, the most nineties, and more
Steven Lynch
03-Mar-2009
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Did Ramnaresh Sarwan's 291 beat Rohan Kanhai's record as the highest Test
score by a batsman from Guyana? And what are the records for the other West
Indian territories? asked Denis Ramkissoon from Georgetown
That remarkable 291 by Ramnaresh Sarwan in the
just-concluded Test in
Bridgetown was indeed a record for a Guyanese-born batsman in Tests -
but the record Sarwan broke was actually his own, as he also made 261 not
out against Bangladesh in
Kingston in June 2004. That innings eclipsed Rohan Kanhai's highest, 256
against India in Calcutta in
1958-59. As far as the other major West Indian territories go, the highest
score by a Trinidadian is, of course, Brian Lara's 400 not out
against England in St
John's in 2003-04; for Barbados, Garry Sobers leads the way,
with 365 not out against Pakistan in Kingston in 1957-58; Chris Gayle is the top
Jamaican, with 317 against South Africa in St John's in 2004-05; and
Viv Richards is
Antigua's top-scorer, with 291 against England at The Oval in 1976.
Was Denesh Ramdin's 166 in Barbados the highest score by a West Indies
wicketkeeper? asked Jude Franco from India
Denesh Ramdin's innings
against England in
Bridgetown just missed out on being the highest score by a West Indian
wicketkeeper in a Test. Just ahead lies Clyde Walcott, who scored
168 not out against England at
Lord's in 1950. Walcott, who later gave up keeping, also scored 152
against India in Delhi in
1948-49.
Three Australians made their debuts in the first Test in South Africa -
when was the last time Australia had so many debutants in one game?
asked David Ralston from Melbourne
The previous occasion was more than 24 years ago, in the first Test against
India in Adelaide in
1985-86. The three debutants that day were a handy trio: the opener Geoff Marsh, who went on to
win 50 caps, and fast bowlers Merv Hughes, who finished
with 212 wickets, and Bruce
Reid, who took 113.
Carrying on from last
week's question about Don Bradman never being out in the nineties in a
Test, who has been out most often in the nineties? asked Maurice
Edworthy from Cambridge
There are joint leaders in this list at the moment. India's Rahul Dravid was out for the
ninth time in the nineties in Tests early in 2008, against Australia in Perth, joining Australia's
Michael Slater, who was
also dismissed nine times in the nineties. Dravid also had a not-out ninety
to his name, making 10 scores between 90 and 99 in all for him. He shares
that record with another Australian, Steve Waugh, who had two
not-out nineties to go with eight dismissals.
I'm guessing most captains have a toss success rate of around 50%. Which
international captain has the best success rate with the coin? asks
AR Hemant from India
The most successful captain in Tests (given a minimum of 10 matches) is
West Indies' Shivnarine
Chanderpaul, who won 11 of his 14 tosses, or 78.57%. There are three
others tied on 75% - Australia's Lindsay Hassett (18 won out
of 24), Bob Wyatt of
England (12 out of 16), and South Africa's "Nummy" Deane (nine out of
12). In one-day internationals (minimum 20 matches this time) the leader is
another West Indian, Jimmy
Adams, with 18 out of 26 or 69.23%. Just behind is New Zealand's Daniel Vettori, with 31
tosses won out of 45, or a 68.88% success-rate.
Was Younis Khan's 313 against Sri Lanka the highest score by someone
making their debut as captain? asked several people
This is a nice, simple one to finish with, as that recent high-scoring Test
in Karachi wasn't Younis Khan's debut as captain
- he had skippered Pakistan in four previous Tests. The highest score by
anyone in their first Test as captain remains 239, by New Zealand's Graham Dowling, against
India in Christchurch in
1967-68; the only other man to score a double-century on his captaincy debut
is Shivnarine
Chanderpaul, with 203 not out against South Africa in Georgetown in 2004-05.
Steven Lynch is the editor of the Cricinfo Guide to International Cricket (reviewed here). If you want to ask Steven a question, use our feedback form. The most interesting questions will be answered here each week