War
Chairman of Selectors
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2010
- Online Cricket Games Owned
Interestring thread, thanks War for starting up
Here goes my list:
Gautam Gambhir: Though he's been shoddy since last better part of last 2 seasons, I'd never thought he would turn out to be the kind of success he was across 3 different formats for India. As much as test match wins are attributed to opening batsmen, Gambhir had a significant role to play in India's march toward test no.1 ranking during 2008-09-10, during which phase, he was awarded ICC test player of the year. Willing to fight it out in spite of lacking a typical left-hander's finesse, he was equally adapt against pace & spin. Most importantly showed his big match temperament by top-scoring in both the ICC tournament finals he has played. Definitely not someone I had imagined him to be when I first saw him being cleaned up regularly by Aussie and Pakistan bowlers during 2004-05 when he started out. Even though he averages close to 42 in ODIs in 2012, his decline has coincided with that of Team India's in general.
Hashim Amla, Alistair Cook, AB De Villiers: I've had almost similar thought about these 3 gentlemen as I had about Gambhir. Never saw the spark initially, which now shines through brightly in these cricketers these days across formats, across roles, both home & away.
Cook has adapted staggeringly in ODI format and blends traditional English traits quite well with modern day tactics in test matches.
Amla has amazing patience, willingness to occupy crease and hunger for runs in test matches & these days he has turned a new leaf in shorter formats too.
& AB, is there anything on the cricket field he can't do..although doesn't bowl, he is as good a dynamite all-round cricketer as the cricket world has ever seen.
Tilakratne Dilshan & Mohammed Hafeez: For people who were considered just another bit-&-pieces player when they started out for their teams, especially in shorter format, both their career graphs have been touching quite significant highs over the last couple of years.
Dilshan turned his career inside out when he was sent to open ODI innings in CB series in Australia in 2007-08 series. He grabbed the opportunity in both hands, became a regular opener in all formats & even went on to captain his team in test matches. His recent exploits in test match as an opener has been quite surprising, never expected a player like him to score big hundreds in England against Anderson, Tremlett, Broad in 2011 & more recently against Australia in Australia. Add to that, he has been recently used in a similar role to that of former SL great Aravinda De Silve in 1996 world cup. Against England in 2011 CWC quarter finals, he opened bowling, tied up Strauss before eventually castling him. And I was almost dreading a SL win when he brilliantly caught Kohli off his own bowling in the 2011 CWC final before MSD turned the tables.
Similar for Hafeez, started out as a middle-order batsman in Pakistan national team who could bowl part-time off-spin. But his current nickname "The Professor" goes well with his current exploits. Opens batting, sometimes opens bowling, even though his bowling is pretty much part-time given the all-round quality of Pakistan bowling unit, he sits pretty high ICC bowlers & all-rounders ranking, captains T20 team, his batting is pleasing to the eyes in test matches as much as it is daring & innovative in T20 format. And, just like Dilshan, his team management has enough confidence on him to ask him to take new red cherry against England in UAE in early 2012 and got Cook out a couple of times too.
"Incredible" is the word for these 2 players!!!
Good choices here for sure.
I personally wasn't surprised by Gambhir, at least current struggles in the last 2 years. I always view his initial success with a pinch of talent especially in tests, because he wasn't really facing quality pace attacks.
But even since Morne Morkel in 2010 starting troubling him with a round-the-wicket attack - most good quick bowlers worldwide have exposed him.
Cook current form especially in odi's was a surprised. I certainly didn't support his recall to the odi set-up & after being on the verge of being dropped just before the 2010/11 his batting in tests in recent years has always been a pleasant surprise for sure.
I always thought Amla & De Villiers looked like good international potential players when i first saw them, so their current success to me was sort of expected.
Agreed for sure on Dilshan & Hafeez, their transformation from bits & pieces players to solid openers across all formats has been a shock. Although i'd say at times especially in tests, both of them can still be suspect to quality bowling.