Thursday 7 January 2010

A Test Team of the Decade




I've just read the Wisden's various Test Teams of the Decade, and agree with none of them! So I thought I'd put down mine and my reasons for each player. 


Hayden, Jayasuriya, Ponting, Tendulkar, Lara, Dravid, Gilchrist (wk), Warne (c), Pollock, McGrath, Khan


Having gone through the process I can now see why I agree with none of the teams offered by Wisden! As you might expect there is a lot of convincing arguments for many players in each position and so it does very much come down to personal opinion. 


To quickly rattle through what might be considered as the 'obvious' selections (interestingly all Australian): Ponting, Gilchrist, Warne and McGrath, I'd consider them automatic choices not only because of how good they were during the past 10 years but also because of the success, individually and collectively, that they achieved. I believe these to be beyond reproach in their current positions in any team (with the exception of No.3 where other candidates can bat lower in the order, that is). 


My criteria for selection is based on the following: 




  1. Personal success during the past 10 years
  2. Contribution to team success during the same period
  3. Success in that particular position
  4. Impact made during a significant part of the past 10 years, if not continually throughout that period




My controversial selections begin I suppose with Jayasuriya. When you consider him alongside Justin Langer, Marcus Trescothick, Virender Sehwag or even Stephen Fleming then stronger arguments can be made for most of the other players on that list. However it is the personal contribution that is the principle reason I've included him. The age at which he continued to play at such a high level is remarkable. His leadership throughout the beginning of the century enabled Sri Lanka to progress from a developing team to a strong contender in every series they took part in and his ethic and influence on the team is showing itself in their current success. His One Day career should not influence a test team but it is an impressive footnote. 


Tendulkar and Lara in the middle order I don't think could be surpassed as a combination, no matter what the criteria for selection is. My knowledge of cricketing history does not stretch back beyond the early nineties based on first hand experience, but I'd be hard pressed to think of any others for these positions. I have been privileged to see first hand Tendulkar bat, not so Lara. Ponting at No.3 and Dravid as the extra batsmen at No.6 complement these two perfectly (although Dravid could do with batting higher up the list we it not for Ponting). I remember the England v India series in 2003 when both he and Michael Vaughan were outstanding and Dravid at No.3 really personified his 'The Wall' nickname. 


The start of both Tendulkar and Lara's careers came before this century but that should not be held against them. Gilchrist is I think undisputed at No.7 for the runs he makes, the offensive role he plays in that position and his 'keeping ability. Had it not been for him Alec Stewart had success during this period and would be a close call too. He also inspired a generation of aggressive wicket-keeper/batsmen and that as much as his cricket will be his legacy.


Shaun Pollock and Zaheer Khan are probably the debatable bowling options. Pollock became a good all round option at numbers 8 and 9 for South Africa and his bowling record is worthly of inclusion on its own. Captaincy is another notable asset of his and were it not for McGrath then I believe his reputation would be greater than it is today. 



Zaheer Khan is perhaps my indulgent choice and is primarily due to his series against England in 2003. His left arm conventional and reverse swing from around the wicket to England's left handers is some of the best bowling I have seen. His temperament and focal point of an Indian team full of batting super-stars made him seem even more exceptional.

Notable by their absence are any English players. Vaughan, Trescothick and
Flintoff I would consider to be the best of the past decade (Graham Thorpe mentioned in dispatches). Of these all have their merits and I'm a big fan of Michael Vaughan so he was under consideration, especially for his early decade form and captaincy. All three had their purple patches but also their problems. Maybe I am slightly harder on English players as I tend to be too familiar with them, weaknesses and all?


A final note about the Captain. I've gone for Warne in line with the common belief that he was the best captain Australia never had. I think he would have offered something very different in that capacity. He always appeared to be forward thinking, inventive and not afraid to take risks as a player and captain for Hampshire and I think he'd have been one of the bolder captains of international cricket. I also don't believe there is a natural captain in my team. 

As a nod to the next 10, I expect Pakistan's 
Mohammad Aamer, South Africa's Morne Morkel and England's very own Adil Rashid to feature prominently.

   

No comments:

Post a Comment

Hi, please leave any comments you wish on my blog.

To do so, you'll need to select a profile to log in first. This is really simple. Select from the drop-down below an account type you already have.

If you've never heard of OpenID, you can use it to log in with your Facebook, Blogger, AOL, Flikr, Orange and Yahoo! accounts too.

See this link for more info...