Good one...GC Smith
V Sehwag
R Dravid
BC Lara
JH Kallis
Inzamam-ul-Haq
A Flintoff
There was however one test in which this top 7 appeared that they were all at or relatively close to their best - 5th Ashes test a the Oval in 2001.Yeah. That is the best batting lineup I have ever seen, by a fairly comfortable margin, with my own eyes. If only Mark Waugh and Martyn's peaks (a little earlier and later than this point respectively) cooincided with Hayden, Langer, Ponting and Gilchrist...
Trying to find the game in which this line-up appeared, and found it played in the entire 1984/85 series against Australia. Along, of course, with a bowling attack featuring Marshall, Holding, Garner and Walsh.CG Greenidge
DL Haynes
RB Richardson
HA Gomes
IVA Richards
CH Lloyd
PJL Dujon
JafferSehwag
Chopra
Dravid
Tendulkar
Ganguly
Laxman
Patel
Wasnt shabby....however the relatively poor #7 and #2 hold them back.
Have never really thought of that as a let-off per se TBH. Ramprakash could have caught it if he'd been standing closer - but he wasn't, there was no reason he should have been, and at the position he was standing he had no chance at all of catching it.Ponting had just made a 140odd at Headingley and a 50 in this game (although Richard will probably remember the life he had on 0 lol).
Just three front-line bowlers... had never noticed that before actually, despite running over the horror that that game was (until it was eclipsed by an even worse performance by the same team at the same ground against the same opposition 5 years later) more than once.
Wow, and I was embarrased just to have remembered that the third umpire let him off to a catch on 0 in an innings seven years ago.Have never really thought of that as a let-off per se TBH. Ramprakash could have caught it if he'd been standing closer - but he wasn't, there was no reason he should have been, and at the position he was standing he had no chance at all of catching it.
Hmm nah the 2003/04 lineup was better for me, simply because Dravid was in pristine touch back then, whereas he sadly appears to have declined a fair bit.Jaffer
Sehwag
Dravid
Tendulkar
Ganguly
Laxman
Dhoni
is better...Gambhir in place of Jaffer will be even better, which we are yet to see...
It wasn't a bad decision - the ball was clearly grounded.Wow, and I was embarrased just to have remembered that the third umpire let him off to a catch on 0 in an innings seven years ago.
You then go and show me up by remembering the exact positioning of the fieldsman..
Thing which lets that down is the fact Bill Edrich wasn't an opener. If there'd been another proper opener in there that line-up would've been impregnable, as it was there was a single weak-link.Some other solid batting-lineups from the past, England in the 1950s where pretty good.
ENGLAND 1955:
Hutton
B Edrich
May
Compton
Cowdrey
Bailey
Not sure how many test they played together though
Healy was never a good batsman.
No, he wasn't - he was better.There's no way Taylor was a better batsman than Hayden, sorry. I was a big fan of Taylor and he's my favourite Australian captain and was a pretty good batsman, but he wasn't in Hayden's league.
Translated for n00bs.No, he wasn't - he was better.
(In my opinion... )There's no way on Earth Hayden would have been capable of scoring runs against a great many of the attacks Taylor did - never mind the vast number Taylor scored early in his career.
Either way, I think you know this (is my opinion), so I barely even know why I'm bothering to make this post.
Why? For pointing-out that Healy when he was good was better than Gilchrist when he wasn't that good?Richard is funny.
I guess. Edited for picky McNamaras.Translated for n00bs.