Batsman of the year: In 40 international matches this year, he scored
2,539 runs, over 150 more than anyone else. In 12 months he has
scored four centuries against India, two against Bangladesh, two more
against Pakistan, and one apiece off New Zealand and South Africa. He
also had a 96* against West Indies. He has been prolific in Twenty20,
Test matches and fifty over cricket, and even coined his own shot.
Tillakaratne Dilshan has been all but unstoppable, and as well as
being the year’s best batsman, must also be the game’s most improved
player.
Bowler of the year: Was there one? Top of the Test match tables is
Mitchell Johnson, who has taken 57 wickets at 28.8 each so far.
Worryingly, only one of the top twenty wicket-takers in Test matches
managed to taken them at average of under 25 each, and that was Nuwan
Kulasekara, who took exactly 20, enough only to place him 20th on the
list. The biggest single problem facing cricket is the imbalance
between bat and ball, a bias brought about through bigger bats,
flatter pitches and the seeming impossibility of staying fit as a
fast bowler in the modern game. Looking back on the year, I just
don’t feel that I have seen enough great quick bowling, and with
Muttiah Muralitharan on the wane, there is no shoo-in contender for
this prize any more. In the absence of any outstanding candidate, I’d
plump for Swann, who bowled more deliveries in Test cricket than
anyone except Johnson, and took 64 wickets at 29 each in all forms of
the game. Not bad for a man who, two years ago, was seen by many, The
Spin included, as just another county journeyman.
XI of the year, picked for performances in all
formats of the game and with a strong degree of personal prejudice:
TM Dilshan, V Sehwag, MJ Clarke, AB de Villiers, AJ Strauss, MS
Dhoni, SR Watson, DL Vettori, GP Swann, MJ Johnson, DW Steyn.
Match of the year: Ideally, the game should be watched from a seat at
the ground. Failing that, a sofa in front of the television will do.
But my favourite day’s play of this year though was followed over the
radio. There is something especially magical about Test Match
Special. It seems to make a tense game seem tighter still. On the
fifth day at Cardiff, as Jimmy Anderson and Monty Panesar were
playing out those fraught final 40 minutes, I was in the pub, sat
around a small personal radio plugged into a tinny pair of portable
speakers, listening, along with a group of complete strangers, to Jon
Agnew’s crackling description of the denouement. It was one of those
moments when the country seems to stop. Walking the dog, washing the
car, cooking the roast, all that could wait. The only thing anyone
was interested in, whether they loved cricket or not, was whether
England could bat out the match.
Shot of the year: Something about playing Australia seems to bring out
the best in Chris Gayle. Maligned and mocked through early part of
the English season after his offhand comments about the future of
Test cricket, Gayle set the World Twenty20 alight with his innings of
88 from 50 balls against Australia at the Oval. All Englishmen love
seeing Australia lose, especially in an Ashes summer, and to see them
humiliated is a greater pleasure still. Brett Lee followed a bouncer,
which Gayle had hit out of the ground for six, with a cunning slower
ball. Gayle moved his front foot aside and hit through the line over
long-on, sending the ball high into the air. If this shot was heard
around the world, it was only because of the almighty clatter it made
when it landed. Sky measured it at 105m. “It’s the first time I’ve
hit it so far,” Gayle reckoned afterwards.
Blunder of the year: On the morning of 20 August, Australia decided to
leave Nathan Hauritz out of their team for the fifth Test, on a pitch
which, as every fool knew, was always going to spin. Graeme Swann
took eight wickets in the match, Australia had to cobble together 52
overs from their three part-timers. “In hindsight, a specialist
spinner would have been pretty handy out there,” reflected Ricky
Ponting afterwards. Well duh. This is an especially strong field and
special mention should also go to John Dyson, for his unique
interpretation of the Duckworth-Lewis method, and Kevin Pietersen,
for the premeditated sweep against Hauritz that got him out in the
first innings of the Ashes.
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
“I’d love to, but I can’t” – Chris Gayle responds to a request from a
comely young female photographer that he sit with his knees together
while she took the team’s picture. As Peter Lalor joked in The
Australian, she’s still blushing now.
-guardian.uk.
You must be logged in to post a comment.