Numbers Game

Why it pays to open in Sri Lanka

The strength of Sri Lanka's spin attack has meant opening partnerships have yielded more runs for overseas teams than those in the middle and lower orders


Virender Sehwag smashed a century even as the middle order struggled on the opening day in Galle © AFP
 

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Usually the prospect of facing up to the new ball, and a pair of fresh bowlers, isn't an inviting thought, but when in Sri Lanka, that might be the best option for batsmen to score runs. In India's first three innings on their current tour, the openers have clearly had the best time, while the rest have largely struggled. Gautam Gambhir made significant contributions in both innings in the first Test, while he and Virender Sehwag amassed 167 for the opening wicket in Galle before the middle order crumbled again. With Muttiah Muralitharan in the bowling attack on pitches which invariably assist spinners, putting together partnerships against the older ball and with fielders around the bat has mostly been a daunting prospect for even the top batsmen.

The table below lists partnerships for the opening wicket, and for the rest of the order, for overseas teams in each country. Bangladesh is a huge favourite with overseas opening batsmen, thanks largely to the home team's innocuous new-ball attack, and so is Zimbabwe - in both countries opposition openers average more than 50 for the opening wicket. In India, too, opening partnerships are much more profitable than those down the order, but the numbers for Sri Lanka show just how difficult it is for opposition batsmen down the order in that country: their average stand of 24.35 is easily the lowest among all countries.

Opening and other stands for overseas teams in Sri Lanka since 2000
Host country Opening - P'ships Ave p'ship 100s/ 50s Others - P'ships Ave p'ship 100s/ 50s Diff in p'ships
Bangladesh 39 66.02 10/ 8 250 43.29 22/ 49 22.73
India 71 46.84 6/ 23 568 32.56 40/ 78 14.28
Zimbabwe 36 53.05 5/ 8 252 38.78 21/ 43 14.27
West Indies 83 47.24 12/ 12 620 33.58 46/ 82 13.66
Sri Lanka 90 37.60 7/ 18 751 24.35 25/ 76 13.25
Pakistan 56 39.34 6/ 5 450 32.44 28/ 67 6.90
England 118 37.88 8/ 18 922 31.31 51/ 133 6.57
South Africa 93 30.78 6/ 9 756 27.05 33/ 91 3.73
New Zealand 64 32.33 4/ 7 495 29.97 30/ 52 2.36
Australia 99 29.68 4/ 12 851 27.69 38/ 109 1.99

Gambhir and Sehwag have done a fine job in the series so far, and the story was similar on India's previous tour to Sri Lanka, in 2001, when SS Das and Sadagoppan Ramesh, the openers, consistently got the team off to fine starts, only for the rest of the line-up to botch it up. In India's previous match at Galle, Das and Ramesh added 79 for the first wicket, but the team was bundled out for 187. In the third Test, opening partnerships of 97 and 107 yielded innings totals of 234 and 299.

England pairs dominate the rest of the list: during each of their three tours to Sri Lanka in this decade, England's openers have played their part well, averaging more than 40 per stand each time. England, though, ended up losing two of those three series. (For a list of openers who have scored the most runs in Sri Lanka during this period, click here.)

Successful overseas opening pairs in Sri Lanka since 2000
Pair Innings Runs Average p'ship 100/ 50 p'ships
Das-Ramesh 6 351 58.50 1/ 2
Cook-Vaughan 6 316 52.66 2/ 1
Atherton-Trescothick 6 292 48.66 1/ 1
Trescothick-Vaughan 6 263 43.83 0/ 3
Hayden-Langer 6 241 40.16 0/ 1
Gambhir-Sehwag 3 228 76.00 1/ 0

Brian Lara had enormous success against the Sri Lankan spinners, especially Muralitharan, in 2001, and it's hardly surprising that he figures prominently among middle-order pairs that have had maximum success in Sri Lanka: with Ramnaresh Sarwan he added 538 runs in five innings for an average of 107.60, while Carl Hooper and Lara combined to add 422 from six (average 70.33). (Click here for the complete list.)

Sri Lanka's spinners and the pitches there have been particularly troublesome for lower-order batsmen. The table below looks at partnerships for the last five wickets for overseas teams in each country, and the numbers tell the story: Sri Lanka is the hardest place for these batsmen to string together partnerships. In 396 stands, only 33 have gone past the 50-run mark, and just seven past 100.

Partnerships for wickets 6 to 10 for overseas teams in each country since 2000
Country P'ships Runs Average p'ship 100/ 50 p'ships
Bangladesh 118 3972 36.44 8/ 21
Zimbabwe 129 3315 26.30 3/ 18
West Indies 314 7821 26.07 10/ 36
New Zealand 250 6063 24.84 9/ 19
India 294 6964 24.43 12/ 26
England 478 10,220 21.88 5/ 58
Pakistan 232 4831 21.47 4/ 20
South Africa 395 8185 21.20 6/ 39
Australia 456 8887 20.10 6/ 42
Sri Lanka 396 7135 18.53 7/ 26

And it turns out that India's lower order has struggled more than that of most other teams in Sri Lanka - partnerships for wickets six to ten average a measly 14.93, which is only marginally better than the corresponding numbers for West Indies and Bangladesh. In 34 stands, only twice have Indian pairs managed partnerships of more than 50.

Partnerships for the last five wickets for overseas teams in Sri Lanka since 2000
Team P'ships Runs Average p'ship 100/ 50 p'ships
Pakistan 19 488 27.11 2/ 1
New Zealand 14 315 26.25 0/ 1
Australia 29 707 25.25 1/ 4
South Africa 65 1535 23.98 2/ 6
England 75 1413 20.18 1/ 6
Zimbabwe 30 481 16.03 0/ 2
India 34 493 14.93 0/ 2
West Indies 50 708 14.16 0/ 3
Bangladesh 80 995 12.43 1/ 1

Click here for the list of most successful lower-order overseas pairs in Sri Lanka since 2000.

Brian LaraVirender SehwagGautam GambhirSri LankaIndiaIndia tour of Sri Lanka

S Rajesh is stats editor of Cricinfo.