MrPrez
International Debutant
Both Tahir and Ajmal have around 100 ODI matches under their respective belts, which feels a fair number to be considered in a discussion of this sort.
I was originally planning on looking at Tahir in particular, which led me to notice Ajmal's remarkable ODI stats.
Ajmal: 180 wickets in 108 matches @ 22.17 @ 4.18
Tahir: 162 wickets in 98 matches @ 24.21 @ 4.62
Ajmal's economy rate is particularly remarkable in this day and age.
In comparison:
Saqlain Mushtaq: 288 wickets in 169 @ 21.78 @ 4.29
Muttiah Muralitharan: 534 wickets in 350 @ 23.08 @ 3.93
Shane Warne: 293 wickets in 194 @ 25.73 @ 4.25
Abdul Qadir: 132 wickets in 104 @ 26.16 @ 4.06
Adjusting for the increase in run rates over the past decade or so, this makes for interesting reading. Of course, both Ajmal and Tahir didn't put out this level of performance over as long a period as their competition (with the exception of Qadir). But how much does that count against them?
I was originally planning on looking at Tahir in particular, which led me to notice Ajmal's remarkable ODI stats.
Ajmal: 180 wickets in 108 matches @ 22.17 @ 4.18
Tahir: 162 wickets in 98 matches @ 24.21 @ 4.62
Ajmal's economy rate is particularly remarkable in this day and age.
In comparison:
Saqlain Mushtaq: 288 wickets in 169 @ 21.78 @ 4.29
Muttiah Muralitharan: 534 wickets in 350 @ 23.08 @ 3.93
Shane Warne: 293 wickets in 194 @ 25.73 @ 4.25
Abdul Qadir: 132 wickets in 104 @ 26.16 @ 4.06
Adjusting for the increase in run rates over the past decade or so, this makes for interesting reading. Of course, both Ajmal and Tahir didn't put out this level of performance over as long a period as their competition (with the exception of Qadir). But how much does that count against them?