da 888casino: Adam Gilchrist is the fastest Test runscorer of all time, according to historic scientific research in the new edition of
Wisden Cricinfo staff26-Jul-2005
Adam Gilchrist: the fastest of them all© Getty Images
Adam Gilchrist is the fastest Test runscorer of alltime, according to historic scientific research in the new edition of. It is the first serious undertaking ever attempted to calculate thebatting strike rates of every Test cricketersince 1877. The full list – the Hurricane Hundred – is published in the2004-05 edition of Wisden Australia, which comes out on November 3.Gilchrist comfortably tops the chart with a strike rate of 81.9 runs per 100 balls. Insecond place is Kapil Dev. Today’s heavier bats, smaller boundaries and buccaneeringapproach to batting are reflected in the fact that 30 of the fastest 100 arecurrent players. Four of them make the top 10: Gilchrist, Virender Sehwag of India (fifth), England’s Andrew Flintoff (sixth) andSri Lanka’s Sanath Jayasuriya (ninth). Matthew Haydenand Darren Lehmann rank 11th and 15th respectively.But despite the advantages of modern-day batsmen, an intriguing mixof dashers from yesteryear also figure prominently. Maurice Tate, the England allrounder of the 1920s and ’30s, is the third-fastest batsman. The swashbuckling South African Jimmy Sinclair, who debuted in 1896, ranks fourth. In eighth place is the legendary Australian strokemaker Victor Trumper, who hummed along at nearly 68 runs per 100 balls. Don Bradman, cricket’s most prodigious batsman, rates as the 16th-fastest.The Hurricane Hundred encompasses batsmen whoscored at least 1000 Test runs. If that minimum qualification isstripped away, then the speediest of them all – faster even than Gilchrist – was Gilbert Jessop, the bludgeoning Englishman of the early 20thcentury, who scored at a bewildering 112 runs per 100 balls.”It is fair to say that Gilchrist, taking both batting average andscoring speed into account, is the most dynamic batsman the game hasever seen,” says Charles Davis, the Melbourne-based cricket scientistwho conducted the research. “One advantage he has, as with Viv Richards, is that he plays in a supremely dominant side. But even when he is exposed topredicaments demanding fierce resistance, his response is invariablyaggressive.”Until now, the strike rates of batsmen through the ages have remaineda mystery. Balls faced were recorded irregularly – or not at all – until as recently as the mid-1980s. The Hurricane Hundred is the product of countless hours of detective work and slogging through old scorebooks and match reports. Where the number of balls a batsman faced in an innings is not available, Davis has made a near-precise estimate by taking into account the number ofminutes batted and the prevailing over-rate that day.”This research invites us to reassess cricket’s past, to seethe giants of batting in a new and revealing light,” says ChristianRyan, the editor of . “We always suspected Victor Trumper was something special, but wehad to rely on hearsay and imagination and romanticised eyewitnessaccounts. Now we have hard scientific evidence.”
Wisden Cricketers’ Almanack Australia 2004-05 is published on November 3. To order a copy from Cricshop, click here.