Draft: The Alphabet Draft

Okay, how about this, it could be either first name or last name.

Users choice.
We should do a coin toss heads for first name tails for last name :D :D
 
Justin Langer


justin.jpg

From his ESPNCricinfo profile:

Justin Langer was perhaps the first Test opener in history to average in the mid-forties yet always be scrabbling for his spot in the side. Or at least that's the perception: in a land of dashers and crashers, Langer was seen as a grafter, a battler, only ever a couple of failures away from oblivion. The reality was somewhat different. Yesteryear's ugly duckling turned into a stroke-playing swan, racking up more Test hundreds than those national treasures Doug Walters, Ian Chappell, Mark Waugh, and Bill Lawry, and scoring an eye-popping 1481 runs in 2004. Always an effective cutter and driver, he indulged in unseemly crossbat hoicks from the first over. Together with his bludgeoning comrade Matthew Hayden, he screwed up textbooks and record books alike, making Greenidge and Haynes look like strokeless stonewallers. It was a miraculous reinvention.

1. :aus: Justin Langer :bat:

@Murtaza96 you are next!
 
Alastair Cook

Alastair Cook: Centuries in debut & farewell Tests: Alastair Cook fifth  batsman to achieve rare feat | Cricket News - Times of India


Alastair Cook was one of the finest openers england ever produced. He scored 33 hundreds in tests and 5 hundreds in ODI's. He scored a century on his debut too. He holds the record of most consecutive matches for a team (159). He retired from international cricket in 2018 in his final test he scored 147 against India at the Oval.

My XI
1.:eng:Alastair Cook:bat:
 
5. Sir Vivian Richards
Arguably the most devastating batsman of all time. How to bowl to him? Get him to the other end, perhaps.

6a2650dd04185179a26db3a4ddaf2d29.gif


  1. ?
  2. ?
  3. ?
  4. ?
  5. Sir Vivian Richards
  6. ?
  7. ?
  8. ?
  9. ?
  10. ?
  11. ?
@mohsin7827
its @ddrap14 's turn after you.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Top