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Sangakkara goes past Jayasuriya

Stats highlights from the fourth ODI between New Zealand and Sri Lanka in Nelson

Shiva Jayaraman20-Jan-201515 Runs Kumar Sangakkara needed before this game to pass Sanath Jayasuriya and become the third-highest run scorer in ODIs. Sangakkara scored 74 and is now only 215 runs short of going past Ricky Ponting, who is second in this list. Sangakkara’s 74 was his 112th fifty-plus score in ODIs, as many as Ponting had in his ODI career. Only Sachin Tendulkar, with 145 such scores, is ahead of them.68.30 Kane Williamson’s batting average in ODIs since 2014 – the second highest among batsmen with at least 500 runs. Williamson has hit 50-plus scores in nine of the 14 innings he’s played during this period. Only AB de Villiers has averaged more during this period.3 Centuries Kane Williamson has hit in ODIs batting at No. 3 – the most by any New Zealand batsman. Nathan Astle and Ross Taylor have two each. No other New Zealand no. 3 has more than one hundred.9 Number of times a team has chased a target of 275 or more to win an ODI in New Zealand, including this match. The odds were against New Zealand when they began their chase, with teams setting targets of 275-plus winning 35 of the 45 contests.39 Number of innings since Angelo Mathews got out for a duck in ODIs – also against New Zealand, in 2013. Until that innings Mathews had ten ducks in 108 innings in ODIs – an average of almost one duck in 11 innings.
192 Runs Mahela Jayawardene had scored in ODIs in New Zealand in 13 innings before this tour. In three innings on this tour, he has more than doubled his tally in New Zealand, scoring 225 runs at an average of 75.48 Number of ducks by Sri Lanka captains in ODIs – including the one by Mathews in this match. Sri Lanka have now gone past England as the team whose captains have got out for most ducks in ODIs.

Anwar's record and de Villiers' sixes

Stats highlights from the Group B game between South Africa and UAE in Wellington

Bishen Jeswant12-Mar-20155:05

Insights – Using DRS effectively

341 South Africa’s total, their fourth 300-plus score at this World Cup, the joint-most with Sri Lanka. They have made a 300-plus score in each of the four games where they batted first this World Cup.0 South African batsmen who made a century today, making their 341 the highest score in World Cup matches without a single individual hundred. The previous record was also set during the 2015 tournament when Pakistan scored 339 against UAE without a single batsman getting to 100.20 Sixes hit by AB de Villiers during this World Cup, the most by any batsman in a single edition. Matthew Hayden struck 18 sixes during the 2007 World Cup. Chris Gayle also has 18 during this World Cup.36 Sixes hit by De Villiers in all World Cups, the most for any batsman. He went past Ricky Ponting who has 31 sixes in World Cup matches.Shaiman Anwar, with 309 from five matches, has the record for most runs by an Associate player in a World Cup•Getty Images309 Runs made by Shaiman Anwar at this World Cup, the most for any batsman from an Associate nation in a single edition. Second on this list is Ryan ten Doeschate with 307 in the 2011 World Cup.11.5 Average opening stand for South Africa in this World Cup, the second-worst for a Test nation, behind Pakistan’s 10.4. South Africa’s six openings stands at this World Cup have been 10, 12, 18, 12, 0 and 17.8.1 Quinton de Kock’s ODI batting average in 2015, the worst for a top-order batsman (Nos. 1 to 7) from a Test nation (min. five innings). De Kock has played seven innings in 2015 with a top score of 26.2-15 De Villiers’ bowling figures in this game, his career-best in ODIs. This is the second time that De Villiers has claimed two wickets in an ODI. Since 2014, he has picked up at least a wicket on five out of the six times he has bowled.

Voges joins the old boys

The oldest Test debutants since the start of the new millennium

03-Jun-2015Shaun Udal (England)
Debut: v Pakistan in Multan, November 2005
Age: 36 years and 239 days
Matches played: 4•PA PhotosAdam Voges (Australia)
Debut: v West Indies in Roseau, June 2015
Age: 35 years and 242 days
Matches played: 1*•Getty ImagesEnamul Haque (Bangladesh)
Debut: v Zimbabwe in Harare, April 2001
Age: 35 years and 58 days
Matches played: 10•IDI/GettyZulfiqar Babar (Pakistan)
Debut: v South Africa in Abu Dhabi, October 2013
Age: 34 years and 308 days
Matches played: 8•Getty ImagesLuke Ronchi (New Zealand)
Debut: v England in Leeds, May 2015
Age: 34 years and 36 days
Matches played: 1•Getty Images

Highest stands without a triple, and the best visitors at Lord's

Also: the most runs and wickets after 30 Tests, and when England’s batting and bowling record-holders played together

Steven Lynch28-Jul-2015Was the 501 partnership between Alviro Petersen and Ashwell Price the other day the highest in which neither man reached 300? asked Terry Farmer from England

Alviro Petersen and Ashwell Prince put on 501 for Lancashire’s third wicket against Glamorgan in Colwyn Bay, only the 13th stand of 500 or more in first-class history. And you’re right: it was the first one in which neither batsman reached 300 – Petersen was out for 286 and Prince for 261, both career-bests. The previous-highest stand without a triple-century is the next one down, the 494 of Marshall Ayub (289) and Mehrab Hossain (218) for Bangladesh’s Central Zone against East Zone in Bogra in 2012-13.Have Australia ever beaten England by more runs than they did at Lord’s? asked Kelvin Hardie from Australia

Australia have had two bigger victories over England by runs – but one of them was also at the Home of Cricket, when Don Bradman’s Invincibles sailed to victory by 409 runs at Lord’s in 1948. Bradman also had a hand in England’s biggest runs defeat, scoring 244 – and putting on 451 with Bill Ponsford, who made 266 – at The Oval in 1934, when Australia ended up winning by 562 runs. England also lost by 425 runs to West Indies at Old Trafford in 1976. But England can take some comfort in that the biggest victory by runs in all Test cricket was by them, in an Ashes Test in 1928-29. At Brisbane, in the match in which Bradman made his debut, England won by the little matter of 675 runs.Was Steven Smith’s 273 runs in the Test at Lord’s the most by a visiting batsman? asked Nikila Trikha from India

Steven Smith’s scintillating double of 215 and 58 in the second Test at Lord’s did give him the record for a visiting batsman at Lord’s, which was previously Graeme Smith’s 259 (in one innings) for South Africa against England in 2003. Next comes India’s Vinoo Mankad, who made 256 runs in 1952 – he scored 72 and 184, and in between took 5 for 196 in 73 overs! Don Bradman made 255 runs (254 and 1) for Australia in 1930. Graham Gooch still holds the overall Lord’s record with 456 runs (333 and 123), for England against India there in 1990 (this is the Test record for any ground). In third place at Lord’s is England’s Jonathan Trott, with 262 runs (226 and 36 not out) against Bangladesh in 2010.In elite company: Steven Smith sits behind Don Bradman and Everton Weekes for the most runs after 30 Tests•Getty ImagesEarlier this season I watched James Harris take 9 for 34 at Lord’s. Were these the best figures for Middlesex there? asked Matt Ballard from England

James Harris’ 9 for 34 against Durham earlier this season in May were the second-best figures in any County Championship match at Lord’s, after the former England captain Gubby Allen’s 10 for 40 against Lancashire there in 1929. That was a remarkable performance – “a truly exhilarating exhibition of fast bowling” according to the Times – not least because Allen, an amateur, arrived late for the match: he took the field at ten to twelve on the first day, as he’d been working in the morning. There have been at least 13 better analyses in other first-class matches at Lord’s, all but one (in 1906) from the 19th century. There have been six better analyses than Harris’ for Middlesex: Allen still leads the way, then come Albert Trott (10 for 42 v Somerset at Taunton in 1900), Richard Johnson (10 for 45 at Derby in 1994), George Burton (10 for 59 v Surrey at The Oval in 1888), the amateur VE Walker (10 for 104 v Lancashire at Old Trafford in 1865) and Jack Hearne (9 for 32 against Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge in 1891). Harris just elbowed out his team-mate Steven Finn, who took 9 for 37 at Worcester in 2010.How many batsmen had more runs after 30 Tests than Steven Smith’s 2926? asked Steve Austin from Australia

Only two batsmen have made more runs in their first 30 Tests than Steven Smith. Top of the list, almost inevitably, is Don Bradman – after his 30th Test the Don had scored 3969 runs at 92.30. In second place, but over 1000 runs behind, is the West Indian Everton Weekes: he made 2938 at 61.21 in his first 30 Tests. Smith comes next, with 2926 at 58.52, ahead of Neil Harvey (2924 at 60.92), Kevin Pietersen (2898 at 52.69), and Brian Lara (2869 at 58.55). The most wickets after 30 Tests is 169, by Waqar Younis – although England’s Sydney Barnes took 189, in a career of just 27 matches.Currently Alastair Cook and James Anderson are England’s leading Test run-scorer and wicket-taker respectively. When was the last time the two English record-holders played together? asked Simon Dowland from England

Alastair Cook passed Graham Gooch’s old record of 8900 Test runs for England during the second Test against New Zealand at Headingley in May, about six weeks after James Anderson eased past Ian Botham’s 383 wickets during the first Test against West Indies in Antigua. Gooch and Botham played a fair bit together, but never while both held these particular records: it wasn’t till towards the end of his career, which lasted till 1994-95, that Gooch passed Geoff Boycott (8114) and David Gower (8231). There were some near-misses during the 1980s – Botham didn’t pass Bob Willis (325) until three years after Boycott’s final Test, then Gower didn’t overhaul Boycott until Botham had finished. And it turns out, rather surprisingly, that England’s top run-scorer and wicket-taker hadn’t played together for more than a century before 2015: the last time was in South Africa in 1913-14, when Jack Hobbs appeared alongside Sydney Barnes. Both of them had claimed their respective records – Hobbs from his Surrey team-mate Tom Hayward, and Barnes from Johnny Briggs – during the Triangular Tournament in England in 1912.

Calling Delhi, anybody home?

While Ishant Sharma cannot be absolved of all blame in the Delhi Ranji squad selection fiasco, the majority of it undoubtedly lies with the chaotic state association

Sidharth Monga24-Sep-2015A day after the laughable exclusion of Ishant Sharma from the Delhi team, more unfortunate aspects of Indian cricket have emerged. The Delhi selectors left him out of the side because “he didn’t answer their phone nor responded to our text”, but the larger forces at play here are Delhi’s shambolic cricket administration and also the tug-of-war between India’s fast bowlers, wanting to rest a little when they are off international duty, and their state associations wanting to show them their place.Talk to those in the know in Delhi cricket, and it is common knowledge that Ishant wanted to sit out of the first two matches. Except that he hadn’t officially informed them. That hurts egos, and instead of giving out rest as the reason for not picking Ishant in the squad for the first match the Delhi selectors blamed Ishant, who is part of the pre-season camp in Bangalore. The egos have perhaps been satisfied: Ishant has informed the Delhi authorities he will be available for the team’s second match.The games, though, are not over. Delhi have gone ahead and named him in the squad for the first match too. Vinay Lamba, the chairman of selectors, says they would love for Ishant to play in the first game too. Their intriguing press release – “Ishant Sharma has confirmed his availability for the second Ranji Trophy match but we are including him in the team right now” – is a classic case of putting the ball in the opponent’s court. The bowler is now seen to be asking for rest when he can play all the international cricket and all the IPL.Lamba says he called Ishant, who says he didn’t receive any calls. The truth is somewhere in between. International cricketers get hundreds of calls from unknown numbers. They generally don’t answer calls from numbers they don’t know. There was no text, Ishant says, though Lamba says there was. These are not signs of a state team trying to pick its best XV to win as many matches as possible. For that team would have tried to get in touch with Ishant long ago, and not on the eve of the selection meeting. That team would have got one of the officials whose number Ishant would have saved on his phone to call the player. They could have asked the captain Gautam Gambhir to call him. The unwritten code generally to deal with star players in Indian domestic cricket is that the captain gets in touch with him, and asks him what matches he wants to play. None of that has happened with Ishant.In the past, too, India’s captain MS Dhoni and former bowling coach Joe Dawes have both complained about state sides’ unwillingness to let India fast bowlers rest. “We have got a couple of youngsters that say when they ask [state associations] not to bowl at training, they are told they have got bad attitude and that they are lazy when they are actually trying to manage their bodies,” Dawes had told ESPNcricinfo.Such complaints about attitude would have sounded a little less rich coming from a side other than Delhi, a side that has only to gain from Ishant’s game while Ishant has little to gain. The money is loose change for him, the administration is a shambles, and facilities are non-existent when compared with international cricket, but Ishant is still playing. He has asked for rest for just one match.It doesn’t completely absolve Ishant, though. He should have informed the selectors if he wanted to rest. However, when asked by ESPNcricinfo if he hadn’t informed them earlier, Ishant asked the question that has been around for a while: who is running the Delhi team? Which faction should Ishant have informed? Who will be coaching Delhi? What was the assurance that Vinay Lamba, Hari Gidwani and Rahul Sanghvi were going to finally be the selectors after three different preliminary squads had been named by three different factions? How does a player keep tab of all these machinations while also putting in long hours at the pre-season camp at the National Cricket Academy in Bangalore? Seam position one second, sports committee next?Seriously, though, Ishant must learn his lesson. For all that cricket has changed, for all the shift towards performance over perception, if ever you need to stage a comeback into international cricket, you need to do it through performances for your state association. Ishant might be in the form of his life right now, but in a leaner period he will need these state bosses. Such is life in Indian cricket. A perfect solution in Ishant’s case, and many others, would have been – and Dawes advocated that – a Pat Howard-like performance manager of Indian cricket, who would have officially made the communication of the need for resting Ishant to Delhi. Just like how Cricket Australia made sure Kings XI Punjab knew exactly how many deliveries Mitchell Johnson could bowl in which training session in the IPL.Except, in Delhi’s case, whom do you tell?

'The greatest sports administrator of India'

Reactions from the cricket world to the death of BCCI president Jagmohan Dalmiya

ESPNcricinfo staff20-Sep-2015

“He was a very interesting man. He was extremely resolute, resilient and determined. He was very political and used the power of India to take leadership positions in cricket. While India’s concerns were always first and foremost, he saw the bigger picture of world cricket. He was an early leader in creating and marketing the enormous value of cricket TV rights in India and sought to commercialise them for the benefit of the other countries.”
“I remember today my long innings with Jagmohan Dalmiya from when we worked together to lay the solid foundations of Indian cricket and built it into a global powerhouse. Jaggu’s passion, energy and dedication was instrumental. He was an able cricket administrator and I, along with millions of cricket lovers around the world, salute his commitment and dedication to the game.”
“With the passing away of Jagmohan Dalmiya, Bangladesh cricket has lost a true friend and a genuine well-wisher. We are forever grateful for the assistance and warmth received from Mr Dalmiya in taking cricket forward in Bangladesh. It is also apt to say that Bangladesh’s elevation to Test status in many ways was a result of his farsightedness and whole-hearted support. World cricket will sorely miss his dynamism, leadership and vision.”
“Mr Dalmiya was a highly respected and powerful figure in the international game and played a key role in the BCCI’s growth including India hosting the 1987 and 1996 ICC Cricket World Cups. His tenure also coincided with Australia and India forging closer links on and off the field including the establishment of the Border-Gavaskar Trophy which has since seen highly competitive and memorable Test series between the two countries.
“Mr. Dalmiya will never be forgotten in South African cricket circles for being instrumental in welcoming us back into the international cricket fold and for extending in 1991 that historic invitation to the United Cricket Board to make possible the Proteas first ever tour abroad to India. always felt good around Mr Dalmiya and I will never forget his warm words during my own difficult times. He was a special person and South Africans have much to be grateful to him for the strong relationship he cultivated between the two countries.”
“Mr Dalmiya was widely appreciated for his dedication to the game and the respect with which he always treated the players and his fellow administrators from around the world. It was under his watch as ICC President that the game first took the globalisation seriously with the launch of the ICC Knock-Out tournament (now known as the ICC Champions Trophy), the revenue from which was reinvested into cricket development around the world. On behalf of the ICC, I extend my condolences to all those associated with Mr Dalmiya.”
“I first met him in the early nineties when he and Inderjit Bindra, another veteran cricket administrator, decided to take on the Government of India and defend the BCCI’s right to telecast its own cricket matches and support the game of cricket with the revenues generated by Television Broadcasting rights. Having economically empowered the BCCI with the TV money, Dalmiya realized the power of the ‘eyeballs’. India alone accounted for more than seventy five per cent of the TV audiences. Dalmiya became the President of the ICC and India’s influence in the world of cricket has never looked back. The game of cricket has lost a great administrator who shifted the Home of cricket to India. I have lost a personal friend.”
“I am saddened with the passing of Mr Dalmiya. He was a visionary cricket administrator who dedicated his life to cricket. Cricket flourished in India during his tenures as the BCCI President, while global cricket got stronger when he was the ICC President. Cricket has lost one of its most loyal, committed and dedicated servants.”
“I will miss his ready laugh. It was under Mr. Dalmiya’s leadership that the ICC who then had only a few thousand dollars in their kitty went on to have the millions today which are disbursed to the rest of the cricketing world. His statesmanship also helped ease many a prickly situation in international cricket and Indian cricket in particular. May his soul rest in peace.”
“We have lost a friend, a gentleman and one of cricket’s favorite sons. He was not just a friend of West Indies cricket, but world cricket. He loved the game and gave his all for the good of the sport.Mr. Dalmiya was a visionary and had a huge impact on the game as one of the most respected and admired administrators in its history.”

Malik, Akmal help Pakistan survive UAE scare

ESPNcricinfo staff29-Feb-2016Mohammad Amir picked up from where he left off against India, finding early swing to knock off Muhammad Kaleem’s off stump•Associated PressUAE were reeling at 12 for 3, but Shaiman Anwar almost single-handedly dragged his team to a competitive total, stroking 46 off 42 balls•Getty ImagesUAE swung wildly in search of runs after Anwar’s dismissal, but were greeted by quick wickets. Amir returned at the death to bowl Muhammad Usman out•Getty ImagesIt meant he ended with match figures of 4-1-6-2, the second-most economical spell in T20Is•Associated PressPakistan needed just 130 for victory, but they suffered early setbacks in the chase, with the captain Amjad Javed striking thrice•Getty ImagesThose blows seemed to tilt the contest UAE’s way, with Pakistan struggling at 17 for 3•Getty ImagesUmar Akmal, though, played a calm ahead, hitting a vital half-century to put his team back on track•Getty ImagesShoaib Malik, too, found form with a 49-ball 63, as the pair’s unbroken 114-run partnership eventually took Pakistan home with eight balls to spare•Getty Images

New Zealand's tactical sharpness reaps rich dividends

The biggest story behind New Zealand’s success has been how well they have read the conditions, and how well they have selected their XIs, and coach Mike Hesson has played a key role in it

Sidharth Monga in Mohali21-Mar-2016The curator in Nagpur, Mike Hesson, the New Zealand coach, said, had advised the side that the pitch for their match against India was “hard and fast” and was going to have “lots of bounce”. Hesson and Kane Williamson’s response was to leave out Tim Southee and Trent Boult, and go in with three spinners. New Zealand scored just 126, but their spinners took nine Indian wickets for just 44 runs on a raging turner. “I didn’t see the groundsman after the match, no,” Hesson said in Mohali, where New Zealand will play Pakistan on Tuesday.New Zealand now have a foot in the semi-finals, and the biggest story behind their success has been how well they have read the conditions, and how well they have selected their XIs. Hesson is believed to be a significant factor in tactical decisions.Apart from leaving out Southee and Boult in the first match, New Zealand made a last-minute change in Dharamsala, bringing in future Man-of-the-Match Mitchell McClenaghan in place of Nathan McCullum, who had given their defence against India a great start with Shikhar Dhawan’s wicket in the first over. Dharamsala then turned out to be a pitch where seamers banging in cutters in the middle of the pitch proved near impossible to hit. That just happens to be McClenaghan’s length. It becomes all the more incredible because they didn’t even take a look at that pitch until a couple of hours ahead of the match because of the rain on the day before it.There is an Indian ad campaign of soft drink Sprite, which says, [“Don’t go by what is shown to you, use your own brain.”] The New Zealand players who play a lot of IPL must have relayed the mantra to Hesson.”We look at a lot of footage and stats, and talk to a lot of people, but then ultimately you look at the surface and make your own assessment what you expect it to be,” Hesson said. “Thankfully, we have a lot of players who have played IPL. So we gather all the information we can, and pick up a team that suits the condition as well as the opposition.”It is one thing to pick an XI, but they have to respond well too. In Nagpur, Mitchell Santner saw Ravindra Jadeja bowl fast and flat and draw a lot of turn. He did the same, and took four wickets. In Dharamsala, McClenaghan knew in the second over of the match, which Shane Watson bowled, what lengths to bowl. He spoke to Southee and Boult and McCullum, after the second over, and figured he had to bowl cutters halfway down the pitch.The other aspect of this decision-making is to manage those who have been left out. Players of the stature of Southee and Boult. McCullum after an analysis of 3-0-15-2. “We are lucky to have a good group of people who are focussed on what the team needs,” Hesson said. “Although there is no doubt there is a little bit of disappointment, but players understand that we are doing this to pick the best team. It’s not that we like players more or less than others, we just are matter of fact about it. As I said we are lucky to have good people who understand that, and they could well get an opportunity throughout the tournament. If they do, the others players left out have to be equally supportive.”The batting has been equally selfless. Ross Taylor has been batting out of position, at No. 5, a move Hesson explained. “Our middle order has probably lacked a bit of power in the past, and we think here we need a bit more power at the top,” he said. “Colin Munro and Corey [Anderson] provide that, and also provide a good left-right combination. Also we feel as the ball slows up we need a bit more experience through the middle. To have Ross, Grant [Elliott] and Luke Ronchi come out at key times in the game, that’s where we think we need that experience.”From squad selection to team selection to execution by those XIs, everything has worked perfectly for New Zealand, but Hesson said they were not thinking of the knockouts yet. That might just be akin to what the Nagpur groundsman told Hesson.

Spin and reverse swing does England in

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Jul-2016Stuart Broad was the wicket-taker, his 350th in Tests and added Mohammad Amir to his bag to bowl Pakistan out for 215•Getty ImagesEngland were set 283 to win and came out with the pedal to the metal. Pakistan were a touch rattled by it, until a peach from Rahat Ali had Alastair Cook nicking behind•Getty ImagesAlex Hales flashed at a wide delivery to be caught at first slip…•Getty ImagesBut that didn’t quite deter the England batsman from playing their strokes…•Getty Images…And Pakistan exploited that. When Root top-edged a pull to Yasir Shah at deep square leg, the hosts slipped to 47 for 3•Getty ImagesJames Vince directed his intent towards staying in the middle, instead of hitting out, and took his team to lunch without any further damage•Getty ImagesVince fell shortly after lunch when he drove at a wide revere-swinging delivery from Wahab Riaz•Getty ImagesGary Ballance was looking reasonably solid against pace and spin to offer England some hope…•Getty Images…until Yasir Shah pulled out a ripping delivery which spun from the footmarks to bowl him around his legs•Getty ImagesMoeen Ali will not want to see a replay of his shot against Yasir as he charged down the pitch and missed•Getty ImagesJonny Bairstow was far more of a challenge for the Pakistan bowlers, and with Chris Woakes, who finished with 11 wickets in the match, in tow held all of England’s hopes•PA PhotosThings took a grim turn for the hosts as Wahab Riaz unleashed a fiery spell of reverse swing bowling after tea•AFPYasir capitalised on that pressure to remove Bairstow and Woakes to finish with 10 wickets in the match, the first legspinner ever to do so at Lord’s•Getty ImagesThe limelight then fell on Mohammad Amir, who at the very ground where he had played a role in spot-fixing in 2010, sealed Pakistan’s 75-run victory•Getty ImagesPakistan last won at Lord’s in 1996, so it called for a special celebration•Getty ImagesAnd the whole squad lined up to do press-ups in front of an appreciative crowd that had been enthralled by four days of brilliant cricket•Getty Images

Tahir's ODI best a first for South Africa

Stats highlights from the tri-series fixture between West Indies and South Africa in Basseterre, where Imran Tahir returned the best figures by a South Africa bowler in ODIs.

Shiva Jayaraman16-Jun-20166-16 South Africa’s previous best bowling figures in ODIs – by Kagiso Rabada against Bangladesh last year. Imran Tahir’s 7 for 45 is the first instance of a South Africa bowler taking more than six wickets in an ODI.2 Number of ODI hauls from spinners that have bettered Tahir’s 7 for 45. Shahid Afridi took 7 for 12 against the same opposition in an ODI in 2013 and Muttiah Muralitharan returned 7 for 30 against India at Sharjah in 2000. This is only the third time that a spinner has taken seven wickets in an ODI. Tahir’s figures are ninth in the list of ten seven-wicket hauls in ODIs.14 Number of innings Hashim Amla has taken to complete 1000 runs against West Indies – the fewest by a batsman to score 1000 runs against an opposition in ODIs. Viv Richards had completed 1000 runs against England in 15 innings. The 17 innings that AB de Villiers took to complete 1000 runs against West Indies is third on this list.2 Number of five-wicket hauls by South Africa spinners in ODIs before Tahir’s 7-for. Nicky Boje had taken 5 for 21 against Australia in Cape Town in 2002 and Tahir himself had taken 5 for 45 against West Indies at the 2015 World Cup.58 Matches needed by Tahir to complete 100 wickets – the fourth fewest by any bowler and the second by a spinner in ODIs. Saqlain Mushtaq is the fastest bowler and spinner to reach the 100-wicket mark; he achieved the feat in his 53rd ODI. Shane Bond (54 ODIs) and Brett Lee (55) are the other bowlers to achieve the feat faster than Tahir. The legspinner has taken one match fewer than Morne Morkel, who was the quickest South Africa bowler to 100 wickets before him. Click here for a list of bowlers fastest to 100 ODI wickets.87.25 Amla’s batting average against West Indies – the highest for a batsman with at least 1000 runs against an opposition in ODIs. Mohammad Yousuf’s average of 73.78 against Zimbabwe is second on this list. Yousuf made 1033 runs in 22 innings against them, including three hundreds and seven fifties. Amla has made five hundreds and four fifties in 14 innings against West Indies. Only Quinton de Kock has taken fewer innings to hit five centuries against any opposition in ODIs. De Kock’s five ODI hundreds against India came in just nine innings.6 Number of batsmen who have recorded more ODI centuries than Amla. Among batsmen with active ODI careers, only Virat Kohli (25) and de Villiers (24) have more centuries. Amla has taken just 132 innings to notch up 23 ODI hundreds – the fewest by any batsman, and 25 innings fewer than Kohli, who is next best.9 Wickets taken by South Africa’s spinners in this match – the most they have taken in an ODI. These are the most wickets by spinners of a non-Asian team against a Test team in an ODI. The previous highest was the eight wickets taken by West Indies’ spinners in an ODI against South Africa in Karachi in 1995-96.4 Number of 150-run stands between Amla and de Kock in ODIs. Only three other pairs have more such partnerships. India’s former opening pair of Sourav Ganguly and Sachin Tendulkar leads this list with ten stands. Herschelle Gibbs and Graeme Smith put together five stands, the most by a South African pair. West Indies’ Gordon Greenidge and Desmond Haynes also had five 150-plus partnerships. The 182-run stand between Amla and de Kock in this match was the fourth-highest opening partnership in ODIs in West Indies and the highest against the hosts at home.139 Margin of defeat for West Indies in this match – the second biggest at home while fielding first. Their biggest loss had also come at this venue – 169 runs to Australia in 2008.4 Number of times South Africa have made 300 or more runs against West Indies in eight ODIs since 2015. All these scores have been in excess of 340. Overall, it was the eighth time South Africa had made a 300-plus total against West Indies in ODIs.

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