Saturday, 12 July 2014

James Anderson Shines in the Modern Era of No 11.



James Anderson a well composed 81 runs, aside as the highest score by an English No.11 and the third-highest by any in that position. Jimmy Anderson faced 130 balls actually second-most by an English No.11. His partnership with Joe Root produced 198 runs, a world record for the tenth-wicket. They were together for 360 balls, the most by a tenth-wicket pair in Tests, and the only instance of a last wicket pair playing 300 or more deliveries. Moreover; the tenth-wicket pairs from both sides accumulated 309 runs, the most runs scored for the final wicket in a Test. In a rare occurrence, the only other No.11 batsman to score a Test fifty for England is John Snow. He scored an unbeaten 59 against West Indies at The Oval in 1966. John Snow and Ken Higgs shared a final-wicket stand of 128. Jimmy Anderson maiden half-century was only the 2nd instance of a No.11 batsman reaching the mark against India. Wes Hall had made an unbeaten 50 at Port of Spain in 1962. Wes Hall then also took the first five wickets, reducing India to 30/5.
Wes Hall is the only player other than James Anderson to have scored a fifty against India while batting at No.11. © Getty Images

James Anderson had a great day at Nottingham and shines in the sunny day © Getty Images

First Time in Test Cricket History, Two Last Wickets Stands Put up on Century Partnerships



India tour of England, 1st Investec Test: England v India at Nottingham, Jul 9-13, 2014
Pataudi Trophy - 1st Investec Test
Test no. 2128 | 2014 season
Played at Trent Bridge, Nottingham
9,10,11,12,13 July 2014 (5-day match)

This is first time in Test Cricket history, two last wickets has seen put on century partnerships. England started day 4 trailing by 105 with just one wicket remaining. Joe Root and James Anderson stretched their partnership to 198, a Test record for the 10th wicket. Jimmy Anderson who made his first Test Fifty was on full form with Joe Root on a three-figure score before he went after a full and wide ball from Bhuvneshwar Kumar and edged it to the wicketkeeper MS Dhoni. This was Bhuvneshwar Kumar fifth wicket, but it came too much later than he may have expected after he had taken England's eighth and ninth wickets yesterday evening. Root, who had hardly put a foot wrong since walking in early in yesterday's middle session, was unbeaten on 154.

In the first inning Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Muhammad Shami faced 229 balls and beaten all expectations with a stand of 111 runs, the second-highest partnership for the 10th wicket by any Indian pair., the most by a final-wicket pair in England and the only instance when a 10th wicket pair had played more than 200 balls at Trent Bridge. They hold India's record for the most balls faced by the final-wicket pair and are fourth-highest overall. It was the second time the last two batsmen have added more than 100 run at Nottingham. In terms of balls played, the last three 10th wicket partnerships at Trent Bridge have been the three longest at this ground. Even in terms of runs scored, the last two Tests at this ground have now seen the two best 10th wicket stands. Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Muhammad Shami recorded the 3rd instance of Indian batsmen from no.9 or below scoring half-centuries.
Joe Root and James Anderson extended their last-wicket stand to an unbroken 187, a new record in Tests © Getty Images     
Indian Fast Bowling Partner Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Mohammed Shami made lower-order fifties to take India to a dominant position
© Getty Images
 Highest Last wicket Partnership

Sunday, 22 June 2014

Sam Robson Madien Test Hundred



Sam Robson signifies no messing, a straightforward, orthodox sort of player. It’ll sound even more upstanding to those who viewed Sam Robson makes his maiden Test hundred at Headingley against Sri Lanka. Sam Robson is a batsman of few fripperies, earnestly committed to the long haul. He made super 127 runs before Nuwan Pradeep, armed with the 2nf new ball, brought one back to strike his off stump, causing England to stumble to a lead of 62 with four wickets remaining by the close.

Bird's eye view the local wildlife admire Sam Robson's drive, England v Sri Lanka, 2nd Investec Test, Headingley, 2nd day, June 21, 2014 @ Getty Images
Sam Robson reached his hundred shortly after tea, England v Sri Lanka, 2nd Investec Test, Headingley, 2nd day, June 21, 2014 @ Getty Images

Saturday, 21 June 2014

Jarmaine Blackwood Fifty on debut.



Jermaine Blackwood's all-round skills won him a place in the West Indies Under-19 squad for the 2010 World Cup in New Zealand. A half-century on debut from 22-year-old Jermaine Blackwood was the key performance on the third morning, during which West Indies stretched their first-innings lead to 239 in the Trinidad Test.
Jermaine Blackwood cuts off the back foot, West Indies v New Zealand, 2nd Test, Trinidad, 3rd day, June 18, 2014 @ Getty Image


The Youngest and oldest players to be picked as one of Wisden's Five Cricketers of the Year

The annual Wisden accolade, which started in way back 1889, is the oldest individual award in cricket, and perhaps in any sport. Pakistan Mushtaq Mohammad is the youngest player to be picked as one of the Five Cricketers of the Year when he was only 19 when chosen in 1963 for his feats on Pakistan's tour of England the previous year.
The Youngest and oldest players to be picked as one of Wisden's Five Cricketers of the Year @ Getty Image

Most Balls Bowled without a Run Being Scored off Him



At Kingsmead in 1956-57, off spinner Hugh Tayfield bowled 137 consecutive deliveries without a run being scored off him. The South African offspinner ended the first innings of the 3rd Test against England in Durban in 1956-57 with 119 successive dot balls and he finished with figures of 24-17-21-1 and later on he added 18 more in the 2nd innings before finally conceding another run, making a total of 137 dot balls in succession that remains the first-class record. Hugh Tayfield took 8 for 69 in that 2nd innings. Most of Tayfield's dots were delivered to Trevor Bailey who "confronted him, almost regardless of length, with the dead-bat forward stab". Tayfield's record was seriously threatened but not broken in Madras (Currently Chennai) in 1963-64, when the Indian slow left-armer Bapu Nadkarni sent down 131 successive dot balls during the course of his extraordinary analysis of 32-27-5-0 in the first Test against England.
Hugh Tayfield of South Africa bowls against Surrey at The Oval, London, 18th July 1955