The longlists for the annual ICC Awards have just been announced. These are meant to recognise cricketing achievements in the period between 24th August 2009 and 10th August 2010. Some of the relevant stats for that period are here: Test batting, Test bowling, ODI batting, ODI bowling.
The winners won't be announced until October but in the meantime here are my suggestions. I've ignored a couple of categories about which I don't know much (Women's Cricketer of the Year and Umpire of the Year) and also invented a couple of my own (T20I Cricketer of the Year, Test and ODI Performances of the Year).
T20I performance of the year
Mike Hussey 60*(24), World T20 SF v Pak, Gros Islet
ODI performance of the year
Sachin Tendulkar 200*(147), 2nd ODI v SA, Gwalior
Test performance of the year
Dale Steyn 7/51 and 3/57, 1st Test v Ind, Nagpur
Associate player of the year
Mohammad Shahzad (Afghanistan)
Emerging player of the year
Mohammad Amir
T20I player of the year
Kevin Pietersen
ODI player of the year
Shane Watson
Test player of the year
Virender Sehwag
Cricketer of the year
Sachin Tendulkar
Sachin managed 1978 more international runs (and 9 more hundreds) than I did during the qualification period, but I have way better ties.
Showing posts with label Mohammad Shahzad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mohammad Shahzad. Show all posts
Thursday, 19 August 2010
Friday, 26 February 2010
Two Brett Lee's, two Shahzads and two-hundred not out
Lee handles the white ball far better than the red
Dennis Lillee greeted news of Brett Lee’s retirement from Test cricket with the following statement:
At any rate, it’s sad to see him struggling with injury as he gives his all on the pitch and is very exciting to watch. Let’s hope he and his pal Freddie Flintoff both recover in time to play in next year’s World Cup.
Dennis Lillee greeted news of Brett Lee’s retirement from Test cricket with the following statement:
"Brett is going to go down as one of the great all-time express bowlers in the world ... 150-plus kph puts a huge strain on the body and it can only take so much. For him to play 76 Tests and take 300-odd wickets doing what he does is a credit to him."Perhaps it takes one to know one, because I can’t for the life of me see how Lee can be considered a Test great. Apart from the first year of his career and a brief period in 2007-2008, he has actually been pretty average. He has never come close to hitting the kind of heights Dale Steyn has reached over the last couple of years. Lee has been over-hyped because he is clean living, photogenic and has happened to feature in some memorable Ashes and Border-Gavaskar battles. People’s perceptions of his effectiveness with the red ball are also coloured by his excellence with the white. Lee's ODI record may be pretty special but his Test record is not especially pretty.
At any rate, it’s sad to see him struggling with injury as he gives his all on the pitch and is very exciting to watch. Let’s hope he and his pal Freddie Flintoff both recover in time to play in next year’s World Cup.
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