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Can't see anyone else apart from the obvious onez in Boucher and Gilly. Sangakarra can quite possibly have a good series too.
MS Dhoni?Can't see anyone else apart from the obvious onez in Boucher and Gilly. Sangakarra can quite possibly have a good series too.
Or Kamran Akmal -post summer 2006.Dhoni was never that bad ITFP!
Those who think he was should watch Geraint Jones in 2004 or Wayne Phillips in 1985!
Meh, forget about MS, him and Boucher =Boucher > Dhoni?
Just for the tournament. I agree it would take some doing to be a better over-all player than Gilchrist. Gilchrist seems to have not scored many decent scores for a couple of years and is getting out quicker. McCullum will benefit from the dire situations the opening batsman put NZ inEven so, McCullum > Gilchrist probably won't happen for another 10 years at best...
Gilchrist hasn't been great this season but it's just 1 season - there was nothing wrong with his form for most of 2005\06.Gilchrist seems to have not scored many decent scores for a couple of years
I wouldn't go that far, its still 20 balls shy of the ODI record, and the fielders weren't on the ropes from the startGilly's 57 ball ton in the Perth test was at par with the fastest century in odi cricket because basically because all the fielders were at the boundary rope trying to save 6's and 4's but Gilly kept hitting them into the stands.
He's unquestionably still the most dangerous, but it's no good really being dangerous if you're going to get 5 single-figure scores in between each more-than-run-a-ball big-'un.A certain 57 ball test century less than 3 months ago is still fairly fresh in my memory. I know it wasn't in an ODI but he's still (arguably) the most dangerous batsman in world cricket.
Gilly's 57 ball ton in the Perth test was at par with the fastest century in odi cricket because basically because all the fielders were at the boundary rope trying to save 6's and 4's but Gilly kept hitting them into the stands.
I think what he was saying is that the fielders were out pretty instantly whereas the rules in the Afridi game prevented such a thing.I wouldn't go that far, its still 20 balls shy of the ODI record, and the fielders weren't on the ropes from the start
Dunno about "unquestionably still the most dangerous". I think it's something that could be debated. Jayasuriya might have a case.He's unquestionably still the most dangerous, but it's no good really being dangerous if you're going to get 5 single-figure scores in between each more-than-run-a-ball big-'un.