The biggest six-hitters, and the man with most captains
The regular Monday column in which our editor answers your questions about (almost) any aspect of cricket
Steven Lynch
01-Dec-2003
The regular Monday column in which our editor answers your questions
about (almost) any aspect of cricket:
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Chris Cairns: can he catch up with Viv? © Getty Images |
In Test cricket the top man is Viv Richards, with 84. Chris Cairns, the New
Zealand allrounder, is not far behind him, with 72. You can click
here for a full list in our records section. There's a similar table for
one-day internationals, which you can find by clicking here. Andrew Flintoff recently moved past Ian Botham as
England's leading one-day six-hitter, and now has 48 - but he's got a long
way to go to catch the overall leader, Sanath Jayasuriya, who so far has
smashed 182!
Which Test player has played under the most captains? I think Derek
Underwood played under 10 - can anybody beat this? asks David
Williams
Actually Derek
Underwood played under 11 captains - Colin Cowdrey, Brian Close, Tom
Graveney, Ray Illingworth, Tony Lewis, Mike Denness, John Edrich, Tony
Greig, Mike Brearley, Ian Botham and Keith Fletcher. He's one of nine
players to have taken the field under 11 skippers: the others are Mike
Gatting, Graham Gooch, Tom Graveney, Walter Hammond, Moin Khan, Wilfred
Rhodes, Polly Umrigar and Waqar Younis. Two players have had 12 Test
captains - the legendary England opener Jack Hobbs, whose career lasted from
1907-08 to 1930, and Pakistan's Mushtaq Ahmed. But even that's not the
record: Frank Woolley
actually had 14 different Test captains in a 64-Test career that lasted from
1909 to 1934, when he was 47. Back then England had a number of short-lived
amateur skippers, often for tours of places other than Australia, which were
taken less seriously in those days. Woolley's 14 captains were: Archie
MacLaren (1 match), "Shrimp" Leveson Gower (3), Francis Fane (2), Johnny
Douglas (18), Charles Fry (6), the Hon. Lionel Tennyson (3), Frank Mann (5),
Arthur Gilligan (9), Arthur Carr (6), Percy Chapman (3), Jack White (1),
Harold Gilligan (4), Douglas Jardine (2) and Bob Wyatt (1).
Did the New Zealand rugby player Jeff Wilson play Test cricket too?
asks David Salmon
Jeff Wilson,
who scored 44 tries in 60 appearances for the New Zealand rugby union All
Blacks, hasn't played Test cricket - but he has appeared in one-day
internationals. Back in 1992-93, when he was just 19 - he's only 30 now - he
played in four of the five ODIs against Allan Border's Australian tourists.
In the fourth match, at
Hamilton, Wilson's lusty 44 not out from only 28 balls squeaked New
Zealand to a three-wicket victory with two balls to spare. He finished those
four matches with 80 runs at 26.67, and three wickets (45.00). After that,
he had to concentrate on his rugby - though he recently gave that up, and
played a few cricket matches for Otago again last season
What's the highest total made in a Test by a team which ended up losing
the match? asks Tirthankar Kundu
The biggest total that ended up in defeat is a scarcely credible 586, by
Australia against England in the first Test at
Sydney in 1894-95. Syd Gregory's 201 in that innings was the first
double-century in a Test in Australia. It's even more astonishing that the
Aussies lost, since they bowled England out for 325 and made them follow on
- but then England made 437, and bowled Australia out for 166 to pull off an
astonishing victory by 10 runs. It was the first time anyone had won a Test
after following on - and it remained the only occurrence until a similarly
enthralling Ashes match in 1981 - "Botham's Match" at
Headingley. (There has been only one other instance of this - India v Australia at Kolkata in 2000-01, the match in which VVS Laxman hammered 281.) On seven other occasions a team has passed 500 only to lose
the Test: 574 for 8 dec, by Pakistan v Australia, Melbourne,
1972-73; 547 for 8 dec, Sri Lanka v Australia, Colombo
(SSC), 1992-93; 526 for 7 dec, West Indies v England, Port-of-Spain,
1967-68; 520, Australia v South Africa, Melbourne,
1952-53; 519, England v Australia, Melbourne,
1928-29; 510, India v England, Headingley,
1967; and 506, South Africa v Australia, Melbourne,
1910-11.
Who holds the best record when it comes to bowling average
as a Test captain? Pollock and Walsh must be ranked very high I
should think? asks Usman Rahman
Given a qualification of 50 Test wickets taken while captain, Shaun
Pollock actually lies second, with 103 wickets at 21.36 in 26 Tests in
charge. Courtney Walsh
comes in seventh, with 85 wickets at 25.71 in 22 Tests as skipper. But the
top man is Imran Khan,
with 187 wickets at 20.26 in his 48 Tests as captain. His tally of wickets
is also a record for a captain: Richie Benaud is next, with
138 at 25.78 from 28 matches. On average Bob Willis comes in third (77
wickets at 21.59), ahead of Wasim Akram (107 at 23.35), Waqar Younis (67 at
23.47), Bishan Bedi (106 at 24.82), Walsh and Benaud.
Which suffering bowler has taken 0 for 100 or more most often in Tests?
Please tell me it's Andy Caddick! asks Bill Neild
Well, whisper it softly in Somerset, but it is Andy Caddick
- or at least he shares the record. On four occasions Caddick has passed his
bowling century without the consolation of a wicket - 0 for 120 against
Australia at Lord's in 1993, in only his second Test, and 0 for 138 in the
fourth Test of that series at Headingley; 0 for 146 against Australia at the
Oval in 2001; and 0 for 135 against Sri Lanka at Lord's in 2002. The other
man with four none-for-plentys to his name is Chris Lewis, a
sometime bowling partner of Caddick's for England. Since Caddick has played
62 Tests to Lewis's 32, perhaps Lewis should shade the top spot here. Eleven
other bowlers have had the misfortune to end up with three 0 for 100s: the
only current players who might add to their tallies are Mushtaq Ahmed, the
Pakistan legspinner, and Bangladesh's left-arm fast bowler Manjural Islam.
Steven Lynch is editor of Wisden Cricinfo. For some of these answers he
was helped by Travis Basevi, the man who built Stats Guru and the Wisden
Wizard. If you want to Ask Steven a question, e-mail him at asksteven@cricinfo.com. The most
interesting questions will be answered each week in this column.
Unfortunately, we can't usually enter into correspondence about individual
queries.