Warne's winning ways, and Strauss's stunning start
Perhaps numbers never do reveal the full story, but they tell a large part of it
In the midst of all the comments about Glenn McGrath's incredible bowling performance and Pakistan's abject batting display, one significant stat after the Perth Test went almost unnoticed: Shane Warne became the first bowler in Test cricket to take 400 wickets in matches won by Australia.
| Bowler | Total wickets | Wickets in wins | Percentage |
| Warne | 555 | 400 | 72.07 |
| McGrath | 472 | 338 | 71.61 |
| Marshall | 376 | 254 | 67.55 |
| Waqar | 373 | 222 | 59.52 |
| Trueman | 307 | 177 | 57.65 |
| Lillee | 355 | 203 | 57.18 |
| Donald | 330 | 187 | 56.67 |
| Ambrose | 405 | 229 | 56.54 |
How good a batsman is Andrew Strauss? After his matchwinning performance at Port Elizabeth, comparisons are being drawn - not without justification - with Graham Thorpe. The two added 95 in the fourth innings and were undefeated at the end, turning a tense run-chase into a canter. More than the sheer number of runs he scored, it was the situation in which Strauss scored them, and his demeanour at the crease, that tempts the comparison. Both are technically excellent, have a wide range of strokes, are completely unflappable and bring out their best in a crisis. In fact, Thorpe and Strauss have been at the forefront of two of England's last three fourth-innings run-chases: Thorpe had made an unbeaten 104 in the third Test against New Zealand earlier this year.
| Thorpe | Strauss | |
| Debut performance | 6 & 114* | 112 & 83 |
| In first series | 230 runs at 46 (v Aus) |
273 runs at 45.50 (v NZ) |
| After 8 Tests | 469 runs at 33.50 | 810 runs at 57.85 |
| % of team runs after 8 Tests | 11.34 | 17.17 |
The Boxing Day Test is always a special occasion in Australia, but this time it could be extra special: the win at Perth against Pakistan was their 299th Test victory, and given the manner in which that was achieved, there is every indication that they will record their 300th win before the year is done. The table below shows just how far ahead of the rest of the pack they are - and also the amazing rate at which they have notched their last 50 wins.
| Team | Tests | Wins | Win % |
| Australia | 660 | 299 | 45.30 |
| West Indies | 415 | 148 | 35.66 |
| England | 828 | 288 | 34.78 |
| South Africa | 293 | 94 | 32.08 |
| Pakistan | 305 | 94 | 30.82 |
| Sri Lanka | 147 | 37 | 25.17 |
| India | 382 | 81 | 21.20 |
| New Zealand | 317 | 56 | 17.66 |
| Zimbabwe | 75 | 8 | 10.67 |
| Break-up of Aus wins | Tests | Win % |
| First 50 wins in | 112 | 44.64 |
| 51-100 | 87 | 57.47 |
| 101-150 | 133 | 37.59 |
| 151-200 | 157 | 31.85 |
| 201-250 | 104 | 48.08 |
| 251-299 | 67 | 73.13 |