• Welcome to the Cricket Web forums, one of the biggest forums in the world dedicated to cricket.

    You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join the Cricket Web community today!

    If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

ODI ATG XIs

mr_mister

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Warnes came a few months after being dropped and from his arguable lowest point in cricket, form wise. I believe he was considering retirement.

Maybe I'm a bit sentimental as well but in the context of a side 0/50 chasing 200, it was pretty damn clutch
 

MrPrez

International Debutant
Warne gets too much credit for it, not too little. Anyone remembers Arvinda de Silva in 96 world cup? Like Warne in 99, he was MoM in both semi and final. I don't think his rating gets elevated above his career stats quite as much.
Would you consider de Silva a better batsman than Jonty Rhodes?

I'd assume as much - yet their ODI stats are identifcal.

de Silva certainly gets seen as a batsman better than a 35-average, 80SR batsman.
 

TheJediBrah

Request Your Custom Title Now!
Warne gets too much credit for it, not too little. Anyone remembers Arvinda de Silva in 96 world cup? Like Warne in 99, he was MoM in both semi and final. I don't think his rating gets elevated above his career stats quite as much.
I don't think there's any truth to this at all. In my experience it's the opposite. As an Australian I've definitely heard a lot more about de Silva in '96 than Warne in '99. I wasn't around for either World Cups but tbh this is the first I've actually heard about Warne doing anything special in World Cups whereas de Silva seems to get mentioned all the time for his batting in '96.
 

TheJediBrah

Request Your Custom Title Now!
Warne gets too much credit for it, not too little. Anyone remembers Arvinda de Silva in 96 world cup? Like Warne in 99, he was MoM in both semi and final. I don't think his rating gets elevated above his career stats quite as much.
I don't think there's any truth to this at all. In my experience it's the opposite. As an Australian I've definitely heard a lot more about de Silva in '96 than Warne in '99. I wasn't around for either World Cups but tbh this is the first I've actually heard about Warne doing anything special in World Cups whereas de Silva seems to get mentioned all the time for his batting in '96.
 

OverratedSanity

Request Your Custom Title Now!
I don't think there's any truth to this at all. In my experience it's the opposite. As an Australian I've definitely heard a lot more about de Silva in '96 than Warne in '99. I wasn't around for either World Cups but tbh this is the first I've actually heard about Warne doing anything special in World Cups whereas de Silva seems to get mentioned all the time for his batting in '96.
This sounds like a load of nonsense and I do not believe you
 

TheJediBrah

Request Your Custom Title Now!
Not sure how given my 7 locks posted above are better than any Australian player ever.

Sachin
AB
Viv
Kohli
Dhoni
Wasim
Garner
Murali

That said, I have no issues with those who might decide to select a Symonds or McGrath in their XI, since it's a very close thing. I provided my reasons for not including Bevan or Gilchrist above. If it wasn't for Dhoni, Gilchrist would make my side. (I could cheat and have ABD as my keeper :p).
You really are the personification of NZ's "little brother" anti-Australian syndrome

This sounds like a load of nonsense and I do not believe you
Absolutely not. It's why I always pick Brad Hogg ahead of Warne in an Aus ODI team. This is the first I've ever heard of him doing anything of note in ODIs.
 

TheJediBrah

Request Your Custom Title Now!
The Donald/Klusener run out overshadowing things could definitely be the case. That and the Steve Waugh/Herschelle Gibbs non-catch.
 

mr_mister

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
That actually happened in a different match.
It was one big battle lol. 2 of my favourite matches to re-watch along with the 96 semi. Since it's relevant to the thread, Bevan was in match saving partnerships in both the 96 and 99 semis, but then Warne overshadowed him both times
 

jimmy101

Cricketer Of The Year
World Cup final XI

Gautam Gambhir
Adam Gilchrist+
Viv Richards
Ricky Ponting
Clive Lloyd
Aravinda de Silva
Yuvraj Singh
Imran Khan
Mitchell Starc
Shane Warne
Joel Garner

A team comprised of standout players in CWC finals only. Hopefully it doesn't look too dodge. Grant Elliott & Gary Gilmour unlucky to miss out.
 

sunilz

International Regular
True, but technically speaking it doesn't have anything to do with why Warne's 4-fer is less remembered than Aravinda's knock in '96.
May be because AUS have won 5 WC and SL only 1 . People also don't talk much about Mohinder amarnath's all round performance in semi-final and final of WC 1983 or Steve smith 3 consecutive 50+ scores in knock-out match of WC 2015.
 

Dan

Hall of Fame Member
In rating Warne, I think that context needs to be taken into account wrt how rare wrist spinners have been in ODI cricket over the years, let alone attacking wrist spinners.

I did the below analysis before realising that this is pointless and doesn't prove any argument, let alone my own. But I've done it now so have fun reading.

By the end of 1996 -- and I've picked that fairly arbitrarily as 'long enough for Warne to have an impact plus add in the 1996 World Cup', only 7 spinners had hit the 100 wicket mark (though, as a caveat, Murali and Saqlain were rushing up the list very quickly by this point):

Anil Kumble -- 148 @ 25.77 @ 4.02 (side note: holy **** he had an awesome 1996)
Abdul Qadir -- 132 @ 26.16 @ 4.06
Carl Hooper -- 131 @ 31.91 @ 4.35
Mushtaq Ahmed -- 131 @ 32.91 @ 4.34
Ravi Shastri -- 129 @ 36.04 @ 4.21
Shane Warne -- 110 @ 20.47 @ 3.87
Roger Harper -- 100 @ 34.31 @ 3.97

Tendulkar is the 23rd most prolific spinner of all time with 43 @ 57.65 @ 4.81 at this point, one wicket behind Vic Marks. Attacking spin was woefully underdeveloped throughout the early years of ODIs.

The 26th most prolific ODI finger spinner of all time is Graeme Swann, right. Have a guess at the 26th most prolific wrist spinner, without looking it up.
 

Top