South Africa's home run, and the McGrath-Warne show
South Africa's utter dominance of the opposition when playing ODIs at home, and 100 Tests together for Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath
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South Africa in South Africa are easily among the most formidable oppositions for any team in one-day cricket. In their last 24 ODIs on home turf, they have lost exactly three. Two of those losses were in successive matches to Australia, but in the very next game after those setbacks, they chased down a small matter of 434 to clinch the series. Their only other loss during this period was to England, but that a mere aberration as South Africa went on to clinch the series.
The impressive aspect about South Africa's domination at home is that they've sustained it over a considerable period of time. The table below includes all ODIs played since 1995, and South Africa's numbers are extremely impressive - 89 wins in 122 games, and a win-loss ratio that is next only to Sri Lanka's. Quite interestingly, Australia have won nearly the same number of games, but they have been beaten eight more times than the South Africans.
Team | Home ODIs | Won/ Lost | Tied/ No result | W/ L ratio |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sri Lanka | 88 | 66/ 17 | 0/ 5 | 3.88 |
South Africa | 122 | 89/ 25 | 3/ 5 | 3.56 |
Australia | 123 | 87/ 33 | 1/ 2 | 2.63 |
Pakistan | 70 | 42/ 28 | 0/ 0 | 1.50 |
West Indies | 87 | 47/ 36 | 1/ 3 | 1.30 |
India | 112 | 62/ 48 | 0/ 2 | 1.29 |
New Zealand | 110 | 58/ 47 | 1/ 4 | 1.23 |
England | 85 | 40/ 38 | 1/ 6 | 1.05 |
Zimbabwe | 92 | 26/ 61 | 2/ 3 | 0.42 |
Bangladesh | 49 | 9/ 39 | 0/ 1 | 0.23 |
In the last 12 years, the only team which has consistently got the better of the South Africans at home is Australia, who have won 12 out of 22 games. India's record is admittedly a dismal one - one win in ten games, but New Zealand and Pakistan have done even worse. If the Indians continue with their shoddy display over the next three games, though, they will slide below both New Zealand and Pakistan.
Opposition | ODIs | Won | Lost | Tied/ No result |
---|---|---|---|---|
Australia | 22 | 9 | 12 | 1/ 0 |
West Indies | 13 | 9 | 3 | 0/ 1 |
Sri Lanka | 15 | 11 | 3 | 1/ 0 |
England | 18 | 13 | 3 | 1/ 1 |
India | 10 | 8 | 1 | 0/ 1 |
New Zealand | 12 | 9 | 1 | 0/ 2 |
Pakistan | 11 | 10 | 1 | 0/ 0 |
Zimbabwe | 12 | 11 | 1 | 0/ 0 |
Canada | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0/ 0 |
Kenya | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0/ 0 |
Bangladesh | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0/ 0 |
Among the current lot of players, Graeme Smith (batting) and Shaun Pollock (bowling) are the ones who have enjoyed home advantage the most. Smith averages seven more at home than he does overseas, while Pollock takes his wickets almost four runs cheaper.
Batsman | Home ODIs | Runs | Ave | Career ave | Difference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Graeme Smith | 41 | 1751 | 46.07 | 38.45 | 7.62 |
Jacques Kallis | 105 | 3708 | 45.21 | 43.79 | 1.42 |
Herschelle Gibbs | 85 | 2813 | 35.16 | 35.10 | 0.06 |
Bowler | Home ODIs | Wickets | Average | Career ave | Difference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Shaun Pollock | 111 | 170 | 20.38 | 24.22 | 3.84 |
Makhaya Ntini | 66 | 105 | 22.51 | 23.01 | 0.50 |
A hundred partnership of a different kind
Glenn McGrath and Shane Warne first played a Test together 13 years back, against New Zealand at Perth, and did little of note. McGrath, making his debut, finished with 3 for 142, while Warne toiled 40 overs for just a solitary wicket in the drawn game. Since then, though, they've both done just a touch better, and in the first Test of the Ashes at Brisbane achieved the rare feat of playing 100 Tests together.
In the 99 Tests that the two have played together, Australia have won 66 - that's exactly two-thirds - and have lost just 16. The table below lists their performances in games they've both played in. Adding up the percentages of team wickets taken by both, it turns out that McGrath and Warne have combined to deliver more than 55% of opposition wickets in these matches. These are outstanding stats, but also indicative of just huge a vacuum there'll be in the Australian bowling attack when the two finally quit the game.
Wickets | Average | Strike rate | % of team wickets | |
---|---|---|---|---|
McGrath | 467 | 21.27 | 50.05 | 27.14% |
Warne | 490 | 24.62 | 55.50 | 28.47 |
Yousuf the run-machine
Last week's column had mentioned that Mohammad Yousuf needed 395 more runs in two Tests to equal Viv Richards's record for the most number of runs in a calendar year. That works out to 197.5 runs per Test, but at Multan Yousuf overshot that target significantly, thanks to his seventh hundred of the year. His match tally of 247 now leaves him with 148 more to get to equal the annual aggregate of 1710. Let the countdown begin.
S Rajesh is stats editor of Cricinfo. For some of the stats, he was helped by Satish Kumar.
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