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July 16, 2008Posted by Anantha Narayanan on 07/16/2008 in
The best performance in a single Test
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To seek an answer, this article looks at single player performances in a Test match.
Important note: Jeff, Rahul Bose, Sriram et al have mentioned about the bias towards bowling performances, which is true. The consensus is that the 25% upwards valuation of batting performances is too low. Jeff has even suggested 50%. After experimenting with a few figures, I have settled on 40% as the upwards valuation parameter. Since I am unlikely to do a follow-up, I have modified the values and table in this article itself. This means a 55% contribution in batting moves up to 77% which translates to just over 15 wickets. Looks like a very fair normalizing situation.
From this time I have made a significant change. In order for all readers to view my own response to the readers' comments, these responses will be appended at the end of the article. Even though this will make the article longer, this is the best way of addressing what are often overlapping comments. Pl see at the end of the article for these counter-responses.
Let me emphasise that this is not a look at the best all-round performances, although allrounders will be prominent in the lists. I have looked at a method of bringing batting, bowling and fielding performances to a common platform and analyse the results. I will also make due allowances for the fact that bowlers can, on their day, monopolise the team bowling performances, while batsmen cannot. I have also looked at the relative contribution of a player in a Test match rather than the absolute numbers.
Certain criteria have been laid down. Consider the following matches:
Hence I will consider only matches in which 20 wickets have fallen. The limit of 20 wickets has been decided after a lot of deliberation. 20 wickets represents two completed innings and there is a fair chance that the match would have gone a reasonable distance. There would be either two completed innings or a third innings. In addition matches in which over 1000 runs are scored are also included to make sure that the really high-scoring matches will be considered.
Just to pre-empt readers who rush to print, let me add that 1769 out of the 1879 Test matches fall under this category. This works out to a very satisfactory 94%.
The only match in which fewer than 20 wickets have fallen and there has been a result is Test # 1483 in which only 16 wickets were lost. This was the Test match with the contrived result and I have left the match in with a lot of reluctance.
Of course, if there is a match with the following [imaginary] scorecard, it would not be included. I can live that. I am sure any reader could.
Now for the difficult task of normalising batting and bowling points.
First the batting. Let us use the batting as the base and assign a point for each run scored. Fairly easy. The only problem is that the batsmen do not have an opportunity to play as much of a dominant role in an innings or match as the bowlers do. The table given below is an eye-opener. The best performances by players as a proportion of their team's performances are outlined below.
Highest share of team performance - Batting
Innings: A.C.Bannerman 165 (245 all out) - 67.3%
Match: Tharanga 165 & 71 (316 & 120) - 54.1% (Both innings played)
Highest share of team performance - Bowling
Innings: Laker & Kumble 10 (out of 10) - 100%
Match: Laker 19 (out of 20) - 95%
Next the bowling. Here only the wickets captured have been considered. Overs bowled is another factor. However, if the batting team score is 400 all out, it is difficult to give any weight to a spell of 40 overs for no wicket against 40 overs for eight wickets. It is quite possible for a bowler to monopolise 100% of his team's bowling effort. Hence no adjustments, similar to the batting adjustments, are done. I will wait for the reader responses to decide whether to give a small weightage, say 10%, to the overs bowled.
It is interesting to note that a bowler has captured 10 wickets or more (50% of or more of the bowling effort), in 361 of the 1879 Test matches.
Look at the following two matches.
Hence while computing the value of a wicket the bowling and batting figures, for a single match, in terms of runs are equalised. In other words, the value of a wicket in the first match is approximately equivalent to 7 runs and in the second, 46 runs. This will make sure that the proportionate allocation for bowlers is done equitably.
First, the batting and bowling points for a single match are equalised. Then the proportionate allocation takes place.
Now for fielding. Since run-out records are available for very few matches, that is not taken into account. Each catch taken or stumping effected by a player is alloted 20% of the value of a wicket. This figure of 20% is not arbitrary. It has been determined that an average of around 5-6 catches are taken in a match and the total allocation for fielding per match is around a single wicket value, which is very reasonable.
It must be remembered that all calculations are within a single Test match only to determine the contribution of the 22 players involved. Since all these contributions are reduced to % values, there is no chance of wide variations. A batsman scoring 50 out of 100 and another, 250 out of 500 are considered equal. Similarly for bowling.
Finally a recognition that winning is [if not everything] something. Hence the winning team's player points are increased by a nominal 5% and drawing team's player points are increased by 2%.
Summary:
Match # 1380, India vs England, 1980.
Match total: 785 runs & 30 wickets. Per Wkt points - 26.166.
England: 296 all out and 98 for no loss. (Batting points - 394)
India: 242 all out and 149 all out (England: Bowling points - 20 * 26.166 = 523)
Total England points: 394 + 523 = 917.
Ian Botham
Batting: 160 points (114 runs).
Bowling: 340 points (13 wkts).
Fielding: 0.
Total: 500 points. Indexed by 5% for win. Total: 525 points.
% of Team total: 525/917 = 57.20%, which reflects Botham's outstanding contribution.
I want to emphasise that the batting and bowling equalisation takes place only at the match level and not at the team level. This is done to make sure that the overall match conditions are reflected in this analysis. It is also done to ensure that there are no way-out allocations in completely one-sided matches. An example is given below, the match which can be billed "Brian Lara vs Sri Lanka".
Match # 1572, Sri Lanka vs West Indies, 2001.
Match total: 1306 runs for 29 wickets. Per Wkt points - 45.03.
West Indies: 390 all out and 262 all out (Batting points - 652)
Sri Lanka: 627 for 9. (West Indies: Bowling points - 9 x 45.03 = 405).
Total West Indies points: 652 + 405 = 1057.
Brian Lara.
Batting: 491 points (351 runs).
Fielding: 0.
Total: 491 points. No indexing since West Indies lost.
% of Team total: 439/1057 = 46.48%, which seems very fair.
Note that the West Indian bowlers get less points since they captured only 9 wickets. That allows the batsmen like Lara [and Andy Flower against South Africa] who fought valiantly to get their due.
Now for the tables. Only the Top-10 are listed below.
No Year MtId For Player RunPts WktPts FlPts Total (Team) % Cont
(Runs) (Wkts)
1.1980 0874 Eng Botham I.T 160(114r) & 340(13w) 0f 525p ( 917t) 57.20 Won
2.1899 0059 Saf Sinclair J.H 154(110r) & 143( 9w) 0f 297p ( 529t) 56.08 Lost
3.2001 1562 Zim Flower A 477(341r) & 0( 0w) 11f 489p ( 903t) 54.12 Lost
4.1964 0568 Aus Simpson R.B 193(138r) & 105( 4w) 5f 310p ( 580t) 53.40 Draw
5.1883 0011 Eng Bates W 77( 55r) & 262(14w) 0f 356p ( 668t) 53.25 Won
6.1985 1029 Nzl Hadlee R.J 76( 54r) & 592(15w) 8f 709p (1342t) 52.83 Won
7.1974 0734 Eng Greig A.W 242(173r) & 304( 6w) 10f 568p (1078t) 52.68 Draw
8.1962 0523 Nzl Reid J.R 283(202r) & 88( 3w) 0f 370p ( 705t) 52.53 Lost
9.1956 0428 Eng Laker J.C 4( 3r) & 474(19w) 0f 502p ( 958t) 52.40 Won
10.1952 0352 Ind Mankad M.H 358(256r) & 192( 5w) 0f 550p (1074t) 51.26 Lost
...
15.2000 1513 Pak Saqlain Mushtaq 45( 32r) & 392( 9w) 0f 445p ( 924t) 48.23 Draw
29.1966 0608 Win Sobers G.St.A 244(174r) & 261( 8w) 0f 530p (1152t) 45.97 Won
Legend: r-Runs, w-Wkts, f-Fielding pts, p-Player pts, t-Team pts.
Botham's performance is closely followed by Sinclair's all-round performance. Remember South Africa lost the match.
The purely batting back-to-the-wall effort, albeit in a losing cause, by Andy FlowerAndy Flower's great batting performance is now in third place, followed by Simpson's all-round performance. Then come the (predominatly bowling) performances by Bates and Hadlee. Greig's all-round performance is followed by John Reid's batting effort, Lakers's 19-wkt haul and Mankad's predominantly batting effort at Lord's.
There are 3 bowling performances, 4 all-round performances and 3 batting performances in the top-10, restoring the balance between batting and bowling. We have got 6 specialist performances in the Top 10. It will take a truly great specialist performance to get into the top-10/top-20, which is true of Laker's or Hadlee's or Andy Flower's performances.
There are 4 wins, 2 draws and 4 losses. Again no one should have a complaint.
Saqlain Mushtaq just edges Imran Khan's great match-winning effort against India in Lahore for the best Pakistan' performance. Let me add that I myself feel that Imran Khan's 14-wicket haul against India is a far superior performance. However, having laid down parameters I cannot trample over them, just because I do not agree with the results. Sobers' all-round efforts are the best by a West Indian.
Just for information, Gooch's 333 plus 123 at Lord's during 1990, which is the highest compilation of runs in a match, pegged in at around 36.5%.
To view the complete list, please click here.
The brief scores for the concerned matches are given below. Only the concerned players' performances are shown.
==================================================================
Test # 874. India vs England.
Played on 15,17,18,19 February 1980 at Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai.
England won by 10 wickets.
India: 242 all out (Botham I.T 22.5 7 58 6)
England: 296 all out (Botham I.T 114)
India: 149 all out (Botham I.T 26.0 7 48 7)
England: 98 for 0 wkt(s) (Botham I.T dnb)
==================================================================
Test # 59. South Africa vs England.
Played on 1,3,4 April 1899 at Newlands, Cape Town.
England won by 210 runs.
England: 92 all out (Sinclair J.H 12.0 4 26 6)
South Africa: 177 all out (Sinclair J.H 106)
England: 330 all out (Sinclair J.H 31.2 8 63 3)
South Africa: 35 all out (Sinclair J.H 4)
==================================================================
Test # 1029. Australia vs New Zealand.
Played on 8,9,10,11,12 November 1985 at Woolloongabba, Brisbane.
New Zealand won by an innings and 41 runs.
Australia: 179 all out (Hadlee R.J 23.4 4 52 9)
New Zealand: 553 for 7 wkt(s) (Hadlee R.J 54)
Australia: 333 all out (Hadlee R.J 28.5 9 71 6)
==================================================================
Test # 11. Australia vs England.
Played on 19,20,22 January 1883 at Melbourne Cricket Ground.
England won by an innings and 27 runs.
England: 294 all out (Bates W 55)
Australia: 114 all out (Bates W 26.2 14 28 7)
Australia: 153 all out (Bates W 33.0 14 74 7)
==================================================================
Test # 428. England vs Australia.
Played on 26,27,28,30,31 July 1956 at Old Trafford, Manchester.
England won by an innings and 170 runs.
England: 459 all out (Laker J.C 3)
Australia: 84 all out (Laker J.C 16.4 4 37 9)
Australia: 205 all out (Laker J.C 51.2 23 53 10)
==================================================================
Test # 131. South Africa vs England.
Played on 26,27,29,30 December 1913 at Old Wanderers, Johannesburg.
England won by an innings and 12 runs.
South Africa: 160 all out (Barnes S.F 26.5 9 56 8)
England: 403 all out (Barnes S.F 0)
South Africa: 231 all out (Barnes S.F 38.4 7 103 9)
==================================================================
Test # 1423. England vs Sri Lanka.
Played on 27,28,29,30,31 August 1998 at Kennington Oval, London.
Sri Lanka won by 10 wickets.
England: 445 all out (Muralitharan M 59.3 14 155 7)
Sri Lanka: 591 all out (Muralitharan M 30)
England: 181 all out (Muralitharan M 54.2 27 65 9)
Sri Lanka: 37 for 0 wkt(s) (Muralitharan M dnb)
==================================================================
Test # 734. West Indies vs England.
Played on 6,7,9,10,11 March 1974 at Kensington Oval, Bridgetown.
Match drawn.
England: 395 all out (Greig A.W 148)
West Indies: 596 for 8 wkt(s) (Greig A.W 46.0 2 164 6)
England: 277 for 7 wkt(s) (Greig A.W 25)
==================================================================
Test # 568. India vs Australia.
Played on 17,18,20,21,22 October 1964 at Eden Gardens, Calcutta.
Match drawn.
Australia: 174 all out (Simpson R.B 67)
India: 235 all out (Simpson R.B 28.0 12 45 4)
Australia: 143 for 1 wkt(s) (Simpson R.B 71)
==================================================================
Test # 1562. Zimbabwe vs South Africa.
Played on 7,8,9,10,11 September 2001 at Harare Sports Club.
South Africa won by 9 wickets.
South Africa: 600 for 3 wkt(s)
Zimbabwe: 286 all out (Flower A 142)
Zimbabwe: 391 all out (Flower A 199)
South Africa: 79 for 1 wkt(s)
==================================================================
Test # 1513. Pakistan vs England.
Played on 15,16,17,18,19 November 2000 at Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore.
Match drawn.
England: 480 for 8 wkt(s) (Saqlain Mushtaq 74.0 20 164 8)
Pakistan: 401 all out (Saqlain Mushtaq 32)
England: 77 for 4 wkt(s) (Saqlain Mushtaq 10.0 2 14 1)
==================================================================
Test # 352. England vs India.
Played on 19,20,21,23,24 June 1952 at Lord's, London.
England won by 8 wickets.
India: 235 all out (Mankad M.H 72)
England: 537 all out (Mankad M.H 73.0 24 196 5)
India: 378 all out (Mankad M.H 184)
England: 79 for 2 wkt(s) (Mankad M.H 24.0 12 35 0)
==================================================================
Test # 608. England vs West Indies.
Played on 4,5,6,8 August 1966 at Headingley, Leeds.
West Indies won by an innings and 55 runs.
West Indies: 500 for 9 wkt(s) (Sobers G.St.A 174)
England: 240 all out (Sobers G.St.A 19.3 4 41 5)
England: 205 all out (Sobers G.St.A 20.1 5 39 3)
==================================================================
2. This analysis emphasises only the relative contributions of players and not the absolute contributions. However readers may be interested in knowing who has compiled the highest absolute points on the basis of the parameters used in the analysis. Hence I have given below the top-10 players based on absolute values. Please remember that this table has no real intrinsic value.
Year MtId For Player RunPts WktPts FlPts Total (Team) % Cont
(Runs) (Wkts)
2004 1680 Ind Kumble A 0( 0r) & 839(12w) 0f 855p (2034t) 42.05 Draw
1976 0781 Win Holding M.A 45( 32r) & 754(14w) 0f 838p (1945t) 43.09 Won
1997 1374 Slk Jayasuriya S.T 476(340r) & 319( 3w) 0f 811p (1803t) 44.98 Draw
1990 1148 Eng Gooch G.A 638(456r) & 57( 1w) 23f 754p (2070t) 36.45 Won
1998 1423 Slk Muralitharan M 42( 30r) & 669(16w) 0f 746p (1464t) 50.98 Won
1985 1029 Nzl Hadlee R.J 76( 54r) & 592(15w) 8f 709p (1342t) 52.83 Won
2001 1572 Slk Vaas WPUJC 32( 23r) & 630(14w) 0f 696p (1555t) 44.76 Won
1983 0945 Pak Imran Khan 164(117r) & 484(11w) 0f 680p (1542t) 44.11 Won
1955 0406 Win Atkinson D.S.t.E 335(239r) & 323( 7w) 0f 671p (1667t) 40.24 Draw
2001 1558 Aus Warne S.K 0( 0r) & 576(11w) 21f 627p (1688t) 37.13 Won
Counter-responses:
1. I am aware that the increase of batting value by 25% without a corresponding increase in total will be mathematically inaccurate since the sum of allocations will exceed 100.If I increase total by 25%, the whole effect will be lost. However I am ready to live with this mathematical inaccuracy to achieve a parity between batting and bowling in cricketing terms.
2. Alan Davidson's stupendous all-round performance in the famous tied test during 1961
fetched him a high 41.85% which puts him in the top-75. It should be noted that there were other players who also contributed, especially O'Neill.
3. Without denying Laxman's contributions at Kolkatta in 1981, there were great supporting roles by Dravid and Tendulkar.In reality Harbhajan's performance was equal or greater. Laxman's contribution pegs at just below one-third while Harbhajan's at 34.65%.
4. The fielding allocation of 20% is justified by the following numbers.
Total no of wkts captured in 1879 tests: 57495 (30 .6 wkts per test)
Total no of Ct/St in 1879 tests: 34609 (18.4 Ct/St per test)
This works to 6 Ct/St per completed innings. The exact weightage would be around 16.6%. I have given 20% since the Run outs are not covered. This seems eminently fair.
5. Botham's equally great all-round performance at Headingley during 1981 pegged in at 44.64% and is in the 21st position.
6. Sehwag's 309 at Multan was indeed a match-winning effort. However it must be remembered that there were other major contributors (viz) Tendulkar, Kumble and Pathan et al. In reality Sehwag's 319 at Chennai comes in higher. It must be remembered that I have not considered playing away, support, bowler quality etc. That will be another day.
7. There is merit in linking the Cricinfo scorecard. However it must be remembered that I have put in a customized potted match summary, this time emphasizing the concerned player performance. It is possible I could do both.
8. A good comment has been raised re Hanif Mohd's 337 getting a contribution value of only 37%. The following numbers will justify this allocation.
Total points allocated: 1220 (incl draw bonus of 2%), out of which Batting is 800 and Bowling 420. This itself proves that the batsmen have got twice the valuation in this match. The batting allocation thus works out to 67%.
Out of this, Hanif Mohd, who scored 354 runs gets a contribution value of 37% (incl the 25% extra). Five other batsmen, especially in the second innings, helped draw the match and they have to be given credit. It can be seen that the bowlers are not given any undue allocation.
A fun way of listing excellent performances. How much difference do fielding performances actually make to the list? I think they might be overvalued. In general, I'd rather you placed accuracy (in the form of the complexity to which you alluded in your post-script) above readability.
Man this is complex. But commend the effort, some reasonable results. Though I think it still has a bias towards bowling performances.
Interesting stuff. Quick suggestion - could you please link the matches in question to the scorecard on cricinfo? Perhaps, to make things easier, somebody could write a script that will automatically translate T#0196 to the 196th test match, O#123 to the 123rd ODI, 2#30 to the 30th 20-20 international and so on. This will ease some of your workload :)
By this reckoning, which would be Sachin's best match? How about in a winning effort? I don't want to fan the flames here, btw.. just curious :)
Thanks for the interesting column!
Just a minor bone to pick. Your assumption of only 5-6 catches in a match is not valid, in my opinion. Not having done the stat analysis, my own guesstimate would be around 5-6 catches per COMPLETED INNINGS. This might skew with your calculation of 20% weightage for catches and may just bring about different results. May I point out that fielding points dont seem to prominently feature in your top 10 list. If my suggestion is taken into account, perhaps a wicket-keeper or slip-catcher may have featured in the list? Just a thought, be curious to know your views
Alan Davidson's all round performance in the Tied test of 1960 should rate highly on any scale of measuring an individual's contribution to a Test. Your current schematic is highly skewed towards bowlers. A bowler with a 10WM is assured of at least 50% of bowling points. A batsman with a 100 in each innings is not. The difference is that one is a bounded universe (20 w in a match) and the other is not.
hi, i liked your approach. i would also like to add that, for example, botham never got to bat in the 2nd innings. which means he has lost the oppurtunity score more points. should there be a factor for that as well. please consider.regards, vijay
Good try, but the fact that in calculating the % controbution of a player, the runs he scores have a different weight in the numerator (1.25 times his match score) andn the denominator (1 times his total score, as reflected in the team total) makes the approach flawed. I would be interested to know what made you pick 25 percent as the extra weightage for individual scores...i presume there must have been some reasoning. All said and done though, good effort. It's far easier to pick holes. Do you work with Cricinfo? I am in the political bureau at The Telegraph, but, as you can possibly make out, am passionate about the funny old game.
cheers
I am not sure if you can always quantify players contribution to a test match and compare that with other test matches. To me VVS Laxman's contribution in eden gardens was the single most valuable one which not just changed that series from head to tail but I beleive the whole team mentality against the mighty australians changed. So, not to see that contribution even in top ten makes me wonder if we could ever quantify the contribution and compare.
Hmm....I think you can be as objective as you want, but this is a very subjective question. You cannot take into account the tradition, the rivalry, etc. into account. India vs. England rivalry are definitely no comparison to India vs Pak and in 2004, during India's tour to Pakistan, Sehwag made 309 on a fully loaded Pakistani bowling attack in Multan! India won the match and the series. Prior to that, India had never won a test match in Pakistan and lost 2 out of the past three tests in India! Now you can't put that in objectivity! That innings changed the way India play test matches against Pakistan....and I am a Pak cricket fan...by the way!
Interesting analysis. Only, I would like to see some sensitivity analysis done on these. For instance, if you hadn't hiked up Botham's score by 5%, Sinclair's would have been the best performance. So, even within the top 10, all assumptions you have made (e.g., hiking up batting points by 25% etc.) will be crucial.
Anyways, good analysis..I liked it.
Loving the stats analysis!
just wondering: i read somewhere that Gooch's unbeaten 154 vs West Indies (Headingly '91) was the highest ranked innings ever.
Does this figure at all in your analysis? If not, is there any way of using a simliar method to find out the 'best' individual performance? Not necessarily over a whole match, but maybe one innnings or one bowling spell or something?
Great analysis, hard work but most enjoyable. I'm just not sure it means what you think it means. These are not the greatest performances but the standout performances. Your measure of taking wickets partly includes how difficult they were to capture in the match conditions, but does not include any measure of how good the batsmen were. Although I am a New Zealander, if I see Dale Steyn rattling off another 10-wicket bag against New Zealand on home turf, I will be less impressed than if someone takes ten from sides including Richards, Border or Bradman. Your analysis also rules out great performances by two or more players. Hadlee took so many wickets, and Lara and Flower scored so many of the runs, not only because they were brilliant, but because there was not a player of similar calibre operating at the other end. Conversely Malcolm Marshall, Steve Waugh, Wasim Akram, Gordon Greenidge, Sachin Tendulkar were backed up by other legends they couldn't outshine.
Nice work. I would also like to know if Kapil Dev, Sunil Gavaskar, Sachin tendulkar fare in this calculations. Do you have one for ODIs too. I would like to see where Cairns, Beven, Hooper are on the list
You have mentioned that you have another analysis based on Wisden 100 fomula.Please give me the Wisden 100 list (offcourse updated since 2001). I liked that list though there was a hue & cry from Indian media over Tendulkar's exlcusion. (Rightly excluded)
Great work. I am a huge fan of Sir.Ian Botham ,oops soory not huge even more than that. Infact even today my only player of complete allround ability is Sir Ian Botham. And I am really happy that his performance in the Bombay test sits on the top of the individual performances. But where is the IMMORTAL TEST of Headingly - 1981. Guys out there , there is this DVD of this Famous test buy it and watch it, you will all feel too good to have this DVD. Sir Ian hats off to you.
The analysis is good. However I feel that reducing great innings and bowling performances to mere numbers is not being fair to them. Maybe you should explain to all the readers about the alternate method of evaluating innings and bowling performances. Then only will innings such as Laxman's or Botham's and some great bowling performances will get their due.
Nice work! How about consolidating the number of times a player features in this list, 'weighting' their performances or something and coming up with an MVP list for each country over the years? That list would make for fun reading (and evoke a little bit of controversy as well!)
Neat analysis, but I still think it's skewed against batsman. Look at Hanif Mohammad's 337 against WI - a mere 37% contribution. Sometimes, statistics lie.
While the analysis itself is very well done, there is room for improvement by fine tuning the paremeters. The 20 wicket cap on the one hand looks well-thought out. However there is an element of subjective conclusion in this as well as the fielding allocation. I agree that the article is already very long. But more insight may be needed.
Pt 3 in your counter-responses section has a typo. The test in question was played in 2001 not 1981
what about Wasim Akram´s Adelaide test in 1990 with the performance of (52+123) 178runs and (5/98+1/29) 6 wickets and a catch.
I don't see Sachin Tendulkar featuring in the list at all! ... Bradman, Lara only three times! while we have a lot of Anil Kumble.
I think the system still plays down the batsmen performances despite the 25% markup on runs.
This may be fair enough as bowlers really are the ones who win test matches for their teams, but its arguable.
Batsmen have a harder time dominating the scores because they tend to work in equitable partnerships. for example Laxman and Dravid, Greenidge and Haynes, Hayden and Langer etc. Bowling partnerships are different in the regard that one usually takes the fruit of other's efforts, for example Gough taking a lot more wickets with bowled and LBW, while Caddick on the other end is doing half the work with his short stuff. Muralitharan also preys a little on the excellent containing job by Vaas and company.
I think your reference to Imran Khan's great match-winning effort against India is to test 945 at Faisalabad, in which he took 11 wickets (11 for 180) in the match, not 14 wickets, and he also scored 117. Are you sure that Saqlain Mushtaq's perfomance is the best for Pakistan, better than this performance?
I think this analysis is interesting, but I wonder if it might be possible to factor in the quality of the opposition in some way? And I don't feel the home-away factor can be ignored. Perhaps there could also be some weighting between spin and seam for the bowling, eg if the conditions are spin-friendly but a seamer gets 10 wkts, that must affect the analysis? But perhaps it is too complicated to factor these things in.
Andy Flower's "score" doesn't give additional credit for the fact that he kept wicket in the match - and that he was probably on the field as batsman or wicketkeeper for all but a dozen or so overs of the match ! In fact, should some sort of statistical recognition be given to wicketkeepers in this process ?
The innings that stands out in any test match is the magnificent innings of 281 stroked by Very Very Special Laxman. The man with the midas touch dared the Aussie Juggernaut when they were going full guns and along with Rahul Dravid who hit a gritty 180*, he ensured that the aussies had a taste of their own medicine when there bowlers were cartered to all parts of the ground when his magical willow drove the ball to all the parts of the ground and sent the aussies on a leather hunt. Even though Harbhajan Singh took a hat trick and picked up 8 wickets in the second innings, it was VVS's special innings that saved india from the blushes of an innings defeat and ensured a victory.
Ananth
Won't you please refrain from using underline formatting? This is the internet, stuff that is underlined looks like it is a hyperlink to somewhere.
kind regards
monkey fuel
Thought provoking stuff as usual.
However, I do feel that batting performances have been underweighted. Just look at the complete list to see how few entries there are for players who don't bowl (as opposed to players who scored negligible runs)
Why did you use 25% as the figure to upweight the batting? If (as you correctly state) no one has ever scored more than 2/3rds of a teams runs in an inns, then should we not apply 50%? (ie the missing 1/3 is 50% of the 2/3 that batsmen can realistically expect. Or if you take the match figure, then up weight by closer to 80%?
Or maybe a better way is not to look at these extreme cases, but take more of an average? Ie ave contribution by top scoring/wkt taking players in an inns?
An excellent article
Would it be possible to see how often the 'man of the match' adjudicator agreed with your system?
The Win-Draw-Loss weighting seemed a bit on the low side to me. Emotionally a contribution to a match struggles to be truly great if the team lost. It would be interesting to see what difference a higher 'Win' adjustment would make.
I felt that the 11 wicket haul by Charles Marriott of England in 1933 was a great effort. Wonder where it figures !
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This was Marriott's lone test in which he captured 11 wickets. England won by an innings. The runs per wkt was a low 20, this being a low-scoring match. Marriott took 55% of the bowling contribution which works to just below 30%. The batsmen Bakewell, Ames, Barnett and Nichols shared the spoils along with Marriott, Nichols and Clarke amongst the bowlers.
No problems with your list or with who makes it and why. Sometimes though one player, although his was not the only good performance of his winning side, was nevertheless the player without whom they could not have won.
Such it was with Bruce Edgar in test #924 versus Australia. In the 1st innings he scored 161 out of 387 (8th out) and in the 2nd was within 6 runs of seeing it through till the end when NZ won by 5 wickets.
Considering Best ever performance in a test match.I would say the one and foremost incident examplewas that of VINOO MANKAD great Indian allrounder.His feat against mighty English Team in Lords Tesat in 1952 was second to none. Dr.Shrikant Desai.India
For once I feel your statistical analysis has failed to produce a credible 'result'.
Common sense will immediately call to mind Vinoo Mankad, Gary Sobers, Ian Botham, Brian Lara and Richard Hadlee as instances where a lone individual completed 'dominated' the proceedings to the exclusion of the efforts of the other 21 individuals.
I would suggest it is almost impossible to statistically capture all the relevant inputs to give a 'true' answer to this the particular equation. But thanks for your continuing efforts - very nice and usually surprisingly insightful as well
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Y Anantha Narayanan has over 35 years of IT background. Over the past 15 years, he has been concentrating on Cricket analysis and software development. He has been involved with StumpVision, Wisden, Hallmark Software and his own site www.thirdslip.com during this period.
David Barry was cricket-starved when teaching English in France, and study of cricket stats was his only way to stay sane. He is now back in Brisbane, Australia, and working towards a PhD in Physics. He once played for the worst team in the G-division of Muscat's cricket league.
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Rajesh Kumar A product of Delhi's Shri Ram College of Commerce, Rajesh Kumar pursued cricket statistics at an early age before joining a nationalised bank, where he served for over two decades. He opted for a VRS nine years back, and hasn't regretted that decision. Apart from being a regular contributor to the Wisden Cricketers' Almanack over the years, Rajesh brought out five World Cup editions for Australia's Peter Murray. He has assisted Bill Frindall from 1980 till his death in January 2009 for the publications of various editions of The Wisden Book of Test Cricket, The Guinness Book of Cricket Facts and Feats, The Wisden Book of Cricket Records, Limited-Overs International Cricket and Playfair Cricket Annual.
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Ric Finlay Having just taken early retirement as a Mathematics teacher in Hobart, Ric Finlay now fully devotes his time to recording cricket, both past and present, for the popular CSW cricket database, along with his colleague David Fitzgerald (www.tastats.com.au). His interest in the game is inversely proportional to his ability as a player, but he did once score a century after being dropped at 3 and running out three of his team-mates. His first memory of international cricket is the 1962-63 MCC tour of Australia, described as one of the most boring ever. Totally fascinated, he was instantly hooked, and has never looked back. Author of three books on cricket of a historical nature, he has provided statistics and scored for radio and television cricket coverage since 1983.