#OnThisDay in 2010, India’s Master Blaster took apart the Proteas bowling line-up and registered the first double hundred in ODIs. Truly a superhuman effort
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Series Story: How Sri Lanka surprised the Proteas
Sri Lanka got the better of the South Africans.
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Who is statistically the greatest fast bowler in Test cricket history?
Test Cricket is rife with anecdotes and Write-ups on sensational fast bowlers ranging from the sinewy West Indians to the well-toned South Africans to the intimidating Australians. We have heard of the fearsome foursome from the Caribbean Islands in the 1970s to the methodical Aussies In The early 2000s but who is the Best of them all?
If you were to sit down with your grandchild who queries you on the best ever Test fast bowler, would you be able to come up with one name at the flick of a finger?
While searing spells of fast bowling and eras dominated by bowlers give you a faint picture, statistics tell the tale in a much more well-versed manner, aided by numbers that convey facts better than memory.
We go through this exercise in different steps. The different criteria for best fast bowlers are discussed one by one before the common names are put together and then the best identified based on further dissection.
The obvious – most Test wickets
The apparent criteria to be considered among the best fast bowlers in Test history is to rack up numbers in the wickets column. The list of top 10 wicket takers among pace bowlers in Test history has some very obvious names, some of whom would have crossed your Mind even without glancing at the numbers.
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James Anderson with 575 wickets tops this list now while Glenn McGrath and Courtney Walsh follow him with 563 and 519 wickets apiece. Dale Steyn and Stuart Broad follow with 439 and 437 apiece.
Best fast bowlers by strike rate
Judging a good fast bowler is aided by a peek at his strike rate or the number of balls he takes to pick up a wicket on an average. There are seamers who have racked up some insane numbers including strike rates of 10-15 but to do It over a career spanning a long time takes some doing which is why we have a criterion for a minimum number of wickets. Here we shorten the listen by keeping a barrier of 200 wickets and judge fast bowlers with best strike rates.

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Dale Steyn, the lanky South African sensation, on his last legs but still bursting with zeal and fervor, tops the list with a stunning strike rate of 42.1 taking a whopping 26 five-wicket hauls in his career. This is only surpassed by Sir Richard Hadlee from New Zealand, who has 36-Five wicket Hauls in his career and nine ten-wicket hauls in a match. There are a few other expected names in this list including Waqar Younis, Malcolm Marshall, Allan Donald and Fred Trueman with the nippy Vernon Philander also finding a place.
Best fast bowlers by away conditions
Fast bowlers have perennially exploited helpful conditions at home which is probably why you wouldn’t see too many Asian bowlers in the list of best strike rates for fast bowlers. However, a must-have quality of a great fast bowler is to pick wickets in For this, we set out on finding the best fast bowler outside his home conditions and stumble upon the following list.

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Dale Steyn once again leads the pack with a good strike rate of 43.8, not much different from his career strike rate, and is closely followed by Sydney Barnes, Waqar Younis and Sir Richard Hadlee. Steyn’s incredible feat stretches across to the Asian sub-continent Too, where his numbers as a seamer come just behind Younis and Hadlee in terms of strike rate. In Asia, Steyn has 92 wickets in 22 Tests at a strike rate of 42.9 while Hadlee has 68 in 13 Tests at 42.7. Younis, though, Leads the pack in familiar Asian conditions with a strike rate of 38.2.
Best fast bowlers by quality of opposition
Since fine-tuning the best batting teams across eras and finding how the best seamers against best batting teams in each era can be misleading, we can dig up the best six batting teams in terms of average and sort out the best fast bowlers against these teams To eliminate big questions against minnow batting outfits.

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In Test history as of today, India, Australia, England, South Africa, Pakistan and Sri Lanka are the top six batting teams in terms of average. We dig in to find the best fast bowlers against these teams, sorting the top ten by strike Rate, the best criterion to judge a bowler.
Dale Steyn yet again tops the numbers, bullying his way into each of the four criteria discussed so far. Steyn has 287 wickets cumulatively at an average of 25.77 and a strike rate of 46.5. Hadlee is the other name common to all these lists With Waqar Vanishing once we cut out children teams like West Indies, Bangladesh, Zimbabwe and New Zealand.
The tussle between two names
Only two names make it through to all four lists – Dale Steyn and Sir Richard Hadlee – and clearly our best fast bowler is one of these two iconic bowlers.
Now, there is a difficulty in pinpointing one name here because the two bowled in different eras when batting and bowling conditions were differently aligned.
To pick this out, we put in numbers from the various eras starting from the 1870s to the 2010s. Steyn’s career extends from late 2004 to now while Hadlee was active in the 1970s and 1980s.

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Now, the batting averages in the 70s and 80s era stood around the 32-run mark while in Steyn’s era it is in the range of 32.5 to 34. The corresponding bowling averages in this era are lower in Hadlee’s with numbers around the 30 mark while In Steyn’s it is around 31.
This is a miniscule distinction, nevertheless an important one when you factor in that Steyn topped three of the four criteria we put out. Clearly, batting was easier in Steyn’s era than Hadlee’s while bowling was more work than in the 70s and 80s. In spite Of that, the South African has outstanding numbers which could easily challenge and beat some of the greatest names in the list of best ever fast bowlers.
In terms of longevity and fighting through instruments too, Steyn comes parallel to Hadlee, and while some might hesitate to confer upon the “Phalaborwa Express” the title of ‘greatest ever fast bowler’, statistics say, Dale Steyn is indeed the best of them All.
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Stokes, Buttler rested from England T20 series against West Indies
Ben Stokes and Jos Buttler will be rested for England’s Twenty20 series against the West Indies, selectors announced on Thursday.
Wicketkeeper-batsman Sam Billings and batsman Dawid Malan return to the 14-man squad for the first time since last year’s tour of Australia and New Zealand.
Randy Brooks/ AFP
Stokes and Buttler were both involved in the Test series in the West Indies and are playing in the ongoing one-day international series which ends on March 2.
Jason Roy will miss the series to return home for the birth of his first child after the final one-day international.
England, who lost the recent Test series against the West Indies 2-1, are 1-0 up in the five-match ODI series after beating the hosts by six wickets in Barbados on Wednesday.
England face a packed schedule in 2019, including a World Cup on home soil and a home Ashes series.
England squad:
Eoin Morgan (capt), Moeen Ali, Jonny Bairstow, Sam Billings, Tom Curran, Joe Denly, Alex Hales, Chris Jordan, Dawid Malan, Liam Plunkett, Adil Rashid, Joe Root, David Willey, Mark Wood
Fixtures
1st T20 international – March 5, St Lucia
2nd T20 international – March 8, Saint Kitts and Nevis
3rd T20 international – March 10, Saint Kitts and Nevis
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Sri Lanka’s Embuldeniya ruled out for six weeks with finger injury
Sri Lanka’s newest spin prodigy Lasith Embuldeniya has been ruled out for six weeks, after dislocating his finger on the first day of the Second Test against South Africa.
Rodger Bosch/ AFP
The left arm spinner left the field on Day One with a blood-soaked finger, as he attempted to take Kagiso Rabada’s catch off his own bowling. He underwent a surgery The same evening over the bruised finger. The 22-year-old also did Not come out to bat the following day, with the Lankans batting only until nine wickets.
Embuldeniya’s injury means the Sri Lankan team will be without a frontline spinner for the second innings, with Dhananjaya de Silva being the only part-time spin bowler in the team.
He was instrumental in Sri Lanka’s victory in the First Test, picking up five wickets in the second innings in the game which incidentally only marked his debut.
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Nabi stars as Afghanistan beat Ireland in first T20
Veteran all-rounder Mohammad Nabi starred with both bat and ball as Afghanistan defeated Ireland by five wickets Thursday’s first Twenty20 international.
Nabi and fellow spinner Rashid Khan took two wickets each to restrict Ireland to 132 for six in the northern Indian city of Dehradun.
He then hit an unbeaten 49 from 86 balls in an unbroken sixth-wicket partnership with Najibullah Zadran as Afghanistan reached the target with four balls to spare and take a 1-0 lead in the three-match series.
Manjunath Kiran/ AFP
Afghanistan was In trouble after being reduced to 50-5 but the left-right batting pair of Nabi and Zadran, who made 40, ensured their team’s eighth consecutive T20 win over Ireland.
The 34-year-old Nabi, who was named man of the match, hit five fours and a six in his 40-ball knock while Zadran also took the attack to the opposition bowlers on a seemingly tricky wicket.,hitting five fours and a six in his 40-ball knock while Zadran also took the attack to the opposition bowlers on a seemingly tricky wicket.
Ireland’s pace spearhead Boyd Rankin took two wickets but gave away 39 runs in his four overs.
Earlier Ireland recovered from a precarious 65 for six to bolster their total after electing to bat first in Afghanistan’s adopted homeground
George Dockrell, who made 34, and wicketkeeper-batsman Stuart Poynter, who scored 31, put on an unbeaten 67-run stand.
Khan, the world’s top-ranked T20 bowler, weaved his magic in his very first over, taking two wickets in the space of three deliveries as Ireland slipped to 65 for six in the 12th over.
The batting duo played the Afghanistan spinners with aplomb and then counter-attacked in the last five overs to get 47 runs from the final 30 deliveries. Nabi
The second match will be held on Saturday in Dehradun.
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Late South African strikes spoil Sri Lanka’s day
Three late strikes by South Africa’s fast bowlers on Thursday helped atone for a poor batting performance on the first day of the second Test against Sri Lanka.
Sri Lanka were 60 for three at the close at St George’s Park after bowling out South Africa for 222.
Earlier, Vishwa Fernando and Kasun Rajitha both took three wickets as Sri Lanka followed up their surprise win in the first Test in Durban with a disciplined bowling performance on a slow but well-grassed pitch.
Rodger Bosch/ AFP
Some of their good work was undone after Dimuth Karunaratne and Lahiru Thirimanne gave the Sri Lankan innings a reasonable start, putting on 25 for the first wicket.
Captain Karunaratne was caught behind off Kagiso Rabada for 17 in the 12th over. Duanne Olivier then bowled Oshada Fernando and had Kusal Mendis caught behind.
South Africa, needing a win to share the series, made a poor start after winning the toss, losing three wickets with the total on 15, two of them off successive balls from Vishwa Fernando.
They never recovered fully despite three half-century stands, two of which involved top-scorer Quinton de Kock, who made 86.
Aiden Markram and captain Faf du Plessis put on 58 for the fourth wicket but it was 73 for four when captain Du Plessis was bowled by opposite number, part-time bowler Karunaratne, with the last ball before lunch.
The hosts seemed to be recovering when Markram and De Kock put on 57 at almost a run a ball for the fifth wicket before Kasun Rajitha took three wickets in successive overs.
Markram was leg before wicket for 60 and Rajitha followed up with the wickets of new cap Wiaan Mulder for nine and Keshav Maharaj for nought
The left-handed De Kock went to his third half-century of the series off 51 balls but was dropped on 55 when Dhananjaya de Silva could not hold a high chance at gully off Rajitha.
De Kock and Rabada added 59 for the eighth wicket before De Kock, who was suffering from cramp, was bowled by off-spinner Dhananjaya de Silva, who then had Rabada caught behind before Vishwa Fernando finished off the innings by having Olivier caught behind.
Sri Lankan left-arm spinner Lasith Embuldeniya injured his left thumb trying to take a sharp return catch from Rabada shortly before tea and did not return to the field.
De Kock made 86 off 87 balls with 12 fours. He was clearly struggling soon after reaching his half-century and needed treatment on the field. There was concern that he might have aggravated a groin injury which kept him out of a recent Twenty20 series against Pakistan but he kept wicket without any apparent discomfort and a team spokesman said he had been treated for cramp.
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Black Caps spinner Astle back for Bangladesh Tests
Spinner Nathan Astle will resume his stop-start Test career against Bangladesh after beating Ajaz Patel for a spot in New Zealand’s 13-man squad to face Bangladesh next week, selectors said Friday.
Marty Melville/ AFP
Astle was the only change in the squad that defeated Sri Lanka 1-0 in December to claim an ahead fourth Test series in a row for New Zealand.
Selector Gavin Larsen admitted it was “a tough call” to drop Patel, who was excellent against Pakistan in the UAE.
“It’s great though to have Todd fit again and we’re keen to see what his wrist-spin can offer in New Zealand conditions, and he’ll also bolster the batting,” he said.
Astle, 32, made his Test debut against Sri Lanka in 2012 but since then has played only two more, most recently against England in March last year.
The first of three Tests begins in Hamilton on February 28.
New Zealand: Kane Williamson (capt), Tom Latham, Jeet Raval, Ross Taylor, Henry Nicholls, BJ Watling, Colin de Grandhomme, Todd Astle, Tim Southee, Neil Wagner, Trent Boult, Matt Henry, Will Young.
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Who are Dibbly-dobbly bowlers ?
DIBBLY DOBBLY WIBBLY WOBBLYThis rare breed of cricketers ruled the roost in the ’90s. Watch the full video on the All Cricket App
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Smiling Sri Lankans seek series win
Sri Lankan captain Dimuth Karunaratne said on Wednesday he wanted his players to continue playing with a smile on their faces as they seek to become the first Asian team to win a Test series in South Africa.
Sri Lanka go into the second Test at St George’s Park on Thursday with an unbeatable 1-0 lead in the two-match series after their sensational, Kusal Perera-inspired one-wicket win in the first Test in Port Elizabeth.
Ishara S.Kodikara/ AFP
“We came here to win matches,” said Karunaratne, who was handed the captaincy after Dinesh Chandimal was axed after losing a series in Australia last month.
“I just want to make sure the boys give their maximum each day.”
Karunaratne said enjoyment was a key factor.
“We have to keep our heads clear and play positively,” he said.
“We want to enjoy ourselves. You will see with our boys when they are playing they are smiling and cheering each other. If you are enjoying yourself you will play well.”
The Sri Lankan captain said conditions in Durban and those expected in Port Elizabeth were “much easier” than those in Australia, where they played on fast, bouncy pitches.
Although Sri Lanka were beaten by 206 runs on their previous appearance in Port Elizabeth two seasons ago, Karunaratne said they had played well enough to go into Thursday’s match with confidence.
South African captain Faf du Plessis said his players were “highly motivated” to square the series.
“We were in control for most of the (first) Test, then something brilliant took it away from us,” he said of Perera’s match-winning innings.
“The disappointing thing with a short series is that you only play two matches so for us it is making sure we square up the series.”
The pitch had a good covering of grass but Du Plessis said he expected a “normal” St George’s Park pitch.
“It looks pretty to to we have played against Australia and Sri Lanka in our last two Test matches. Hopefully there will be some assistance for our seamers. We are not expecting a lot of pace and bounce so we’re just hoping there will Be decent carry.”
Du Plessis admitted that Sri Lanka’s inexperienced bowlers, notably Vishwa Fernando and Lasith Embuldeniya, had brought “an element of the unknown and a surprise factor” to the touring team’s attack.
“There has already been a bit of chat to make sure we play the new guys better,” he said.
Du Plessis hinted that all-rounder Wiaan Mulder, who turned 21 on Tuesday, could make his Test debut in place of the injured Vernon Philander.
“I see a role for him for the Proteas moving forward as a batting all-rounder, batting at number six or seven and bowling those extra ten overs that you need.”











