Yeah I meant triples.Or he could be thinking of triple hundreds (Sehwag was within 7 runs of being the first to 3 of those).
Was ****ing hilarious watching him bat. Just stood there and clobbered the **** out of it. Loved himSehwag's unreal strike rate is probably going to hold him in good stead here. The guy was was a beast against spinners. Clobbered Murali, Saqlain and dominated Warne in that Chennai innings.
Can’t rush greatness.Can we get the next name? Waiting eagerly DoG
Also had an ATG Grandmother.No.43
Geoffrey Boycott (England) 764
Regarded as such a selfish player that he was purposely run out by Ian Botham in a test match, Geoffrey Boycott was nevertheless a superb opening batsman. He scored at a very slow strike-rate (adjusted up to 39 from the original 35) but whenever he didn't play he was sorely missed, especially when England were grounded into the dust by Lillee and Thomson in 1974/75. He missed many matches during his peak years and perhaps he may have ended with an even higher average. The counter-argument to this is that he avoided the aforementioned Lillee and Thomson in 1974/75 and Holding and Roberts in 1976. He came back gloriously in the 1977 Ashes, scoring his 100th first-class hundred, but he was never universally loved. His actions since his retirement have done nothing to endear him either. But he has to be admired for his fine record as England's best post-Hutton opener.
Total shyyteBoycs wouldn't like that Sehwag and Hayden are ahead of him. Would love to hear his rants if he ever happens to see this thread.
Finding it tough using a mobileIf you go to his profile, there is a link to see the threads he has started. That is how I found his top 100 bowlers list.
Certainly a great opener, but a prick of a bloke. England's Border
Why so ? Have heard a lot about him bitching about Sehwag and Hayden being Flat track bullies, though many including me don't subscribe to that view.Total shyyte