AB de Villiers has scored a run or more in all his 77 Test innings to date and holds the
record , having surpassed Aravinda de Silva during the series in England, for the
most innings without a duck. Is the bowlers' equivalent - taking a wicket in all innings or in every match - harder to achieve? It's what we've looked at this week: bowlers who were among the wickets every time they bowled.
Former England fast bowler Fred Trueman and his West Indian counterpart Joel Garner are the only players with over 40 Tests and a wicket in each of them. Trueman, the first to break the 300-wicket barrier, played
67 Tests and took 307 wickets. His worst match figures were during the Ashes Test
at Old Trafford in 1961 when he took 1 for 147 in 46 overs. Garner took 259 wickets in
58 Tests and had less than two wickets in a match only thrice. The 1 for 98 against India in the
1983 Trinidad Test was his poorest haul.
Three bowlers narrowly missed out on the
Trueman-Garner club. Allan Donald, Bishan Bedi and Stuart MacGill struck in all but one Test during their careers. Donald, in fact, equalled Trueman, taking wickets in all his first
67 Tests but went wicketless in his 68th -
in Barbados in 2001. Donald scored 37, his personal best, in that match but bowled only 14 overs, without success, in the first innings and suffered a sore hamstring which ruled him out of the second. He finished with wickets in 71 out of 72 Tests. Bedi did not take a wicket in the third of his
67 Tests , against England
at Headingley. He too was struck down by a leg injury on the first day and was restricted to 15 overs in the first innings and none in the second. MacGill, who played
44 Tests , did not take a wicket
in Kandy in 2004.
Among current bowlers, Lasith Malinga and Sreesanth are the only ones with chances of getting close to Trueman or Garner. Malinga and Sreesanth have taken wickets in all of their 28 and 14 Tests respectively. A succession of injuries has curtailed Simon Jones' career to 18 Tests so far, but he has struck in all of them.
Taking a wicket in every match is no mean feat but doing it in each innings is even harder. Trueman and Garner didn't manage it: Trueman was wicketless in
19 innings , though he bowled fewer than ten overs in 12 of them, while Garner went without reward a
dozen times .
Shane Bond's career was limited to only 17 Tests by injuries but he took wickets in all of the
30 innings in which he bowled. His strike-rate of a wicket every 38.9 balls is the
fourth best in Tests after George Lohmann, Dale Steyn, and JJ Ferris, who is second in the table below.
It's virtually impossible to do a List on bowling without Muttiah Muralitharan emerging on top of a table. He hasn't taken a wicket in every innings, or in all of his matches, but Murali has an astonishingly high percentage of matches in which he has taken wickets, considering he's been on the circuit since 1992. He's taken wickets in 119 out of
123 Tests (96.74%) and in 205 out of 214 innings. In fact, he has been wicketless in only two matches in which he's bowled: the
Dunedin and
Nagpur Tests in 1997. The other two Tests were against India and Pakistan, in Kandy in
1993 and
2000 respectively, and the matches did not progress past the first innings (Sri Lanka were batting) on both occasions due to poor weather.
Murali's also in first and second place in the
table of bowlers with wickets in most consecutive innings. He took wickets in 49 innings between December 4 1999 and June 13, 2002, and in another 52 from July 21, 2002 to April 3, 2006. The two interruptions in the string of
101 innings were in the
Old Trafford Test in 2002, in which Murali bowled only two overs in the second innings, and the
Kandy Test against Pakistan, in which he bowled only 13 in the second innings.
Murali also has the longest streak of matches in each of which he has taken wickets. While Trueman took wickets in all his matches and Donald did so in his first 67 Tests, Murali has taken a wicket in each of his 69 matches since the Galle Test against South Africa in 2000, and will attempt to extend the run when he travels to England in 2009. Incidentally, Shane Warne also began a wicket-taking streak on March 11, 2000, which spanned
64 matches , until he retired after the Sydney Test against England in 2007.