Is Sehwag Now the World's Best Batsman?


TNN
 
New Delhi, Mar 13:
The write-ups that follow any substantial knock by Virender Sehwag are usually flooded with adjectives such as "explosive", "destructive" and "bludgeoning".

But such praise hides an obvious truth that the cricket world finds difficult to acknowledge - that the Nawab of Najafgarh is a genius and, perhaps, the best batsman in the world today.

When Sehwag's at the crease, anything is possible. Like smashing the first three balls he faced on this tour for a six. When he hits the fastest ever ODI century by an Indian, it is almost expected.

But a much larger pool of facts illustrates why he's the most feared batsman today. Sehwag is the only batsman in current international cricket with two Test triple tons.

Both were scored at breathtaking speed against respectable attacks: Pakistan and South Africa. He is a more prolific "big" innings player than anybody else in world cricket. His last 11 hundreds have been 150-plus: 201 not out, 319, 151, 180, 254, 201, 173, 164, 155, 309, 195.

Not one of these was against Bangladesh or Zimbabwe. Barring one, each had a strike rate of 70-plus, amazing by Test standards.

The 319 against South Africa in Chennai last year had come off just 304 balls. In terms of strike rate, not even Sir Donald Bradman compares.

What really makes Sehwag special isn't his strike rate or his shot-making skills. It is the fact that he's succeeded on his own terms.

Rather than blindly follow the coaching manual, he has only taken what suited him and in the process created a grammar his own: head still, feet still but eyes lighting quick.

Add to that immaculate hand-body coordination and loads of self-belief. Whatever the situation, he has never altered this basic style.

In his autobiography All-Round View, former Pakistan captain Imran Khan said that a batsman must succeed on all kinds of surfaces to be classified as a genuine great.

But the reason why he put Vivian Richards ahead of every other batsman in his generation was because he could dominate the bowling more than others.

But in this generation, it seems that mantle now belongs to Virender Sehwag. Sehwag too is a dominator. In bowlers, he induces fear. No other batsman has reduced world-class bowlers to helplessness as consistently in all forms of the game - Tests, ODIs and Twenty20s - as the Delhi opener.

Only the finest can achieve a strike rate of 100-plus in ODIs after playing over 200 games - to be precise, 101.66 in 204 games.

His overall ODI average of 34 may be modest by his own standards, but in the last 20 innings, he has averaged an astounding 60.58. And he has succeeded on every surface - in South Africa, Australia, West Indies, Sri Lanka.

His debut ton came on a seaming pitch in Bloemfontein against the fearsome pace attack of Shaun Pollock, Nantie Hayward, Jacques Kallis, Lance Klusener and Makhaya Ntini.

In Sri Lanka last year, when the Fab Four fumbled against mystery slowman Ajantha Mendis, he led the way. Earlier, during the disastrous 2002-03 series against New Zealand, he was the only Indian batsmen to get two match-winning ODI hundreds on violently seaming tracks.

Dravid, Laxman, Ganguly and Sachin collectively scored 215 runs at an average of 10.75. None of them scored a single knock above 25.

Tendulkar managed only two runs in three innings at an average of less than 1. Sehwag scored 299 runs at 42.71 out of the team's 916, almost a third of the team's tally.

In a land where an overwhelming majority of cricket coaches, commentators, even historians, display an obsession with grammar and purity, it is not hard to understand why Sehwag hasn't yet been feted and fawned upon the way a master ought to be.

It is only when those who create the ideology of batsmanship - what constitutes greatness and what doesn't - see him as the creator of a new paradigm, rather than a rule-breaker, will they be able to truly appreciate his greatness.

The loss, until then, is only their's, not Sehwag's.

The Dominator

* Matchwinner in all forms of game - Test, ODI, Twenty20

* Scores at breathtaking speed. ODI strike rate of 101; Test: 78; Twenty20: 144

* Most prolific big innings player. Last 11 centuries all 150-plus knocks

* Only current cricketer to score two Test triple centuries (against SA and Pak). Also scored fastest triple ton ever

* Induces fear in every bowler. No stats but see it written on their faces 

  

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