#5: Geoffrey Boycott (188 points)
Lists featured on: 25/29
Top 5 finishes: 3
Highest finish: 4th (1)
Boycott cracks the top 5! There was a huge gap between the top 4 and the chasing pack, but Boycott comes in as the best of the rest. Which for those playing along at home means 4 of the 5 openers ever are English.
Boycott only made 3 people's personal top 5s and never came any higher than 4th. However he did make the top 10 of 20 lists where as Barry Richards only made 17 lists total. Boycs benefitted from a lot of people(sometimes begrudgingly) acknowledging him as a great opener despite never being a real contender for the title of the greatest.
Boycott is known for a few things. He had almost impregnable defence and put a price on his wicket so high it's likely the only person who had a higher number of balls faced per innings was the Don himself. He had a few quirky personality traits as well. He missed 30 tests in his prime after he made himself unavailable for selection(he felt he had been wrongly passed over as the next captain after Ray Illingworth retired). Despite that he still notched up 108 tests, 8114 runs and 22 hundreds. At the time of his retirement the total tests was 6 shy of the world record at the time held by Colin Cowdrey. The runs scored were in fact the world record which would be passed by Gavaskar the following year. The 22 hundreds was the tied English record with Wally Hammond and Cowdrey.
Boycott's philopshy on opening was that the primary job was to make sure your team couldn't lose first. Then worry about victory. Soaking up balls and time came naturally to him and he had immense powers of concentration and self-denial. He was called selfish by a lot of pundits but the fact remains England only lost 20 of the 108 tests he played. A large part of this was due to his rock solid reliability at the top of the order. He is definitely an opener's opener and for anyone who's played cricket they can respect how hard is it to block and leave balls all day. It's a special kind of talent. He could play shots too of course. He was very selective with their usage and was said to often fail in pressing home in an advantage. After defeat had been avoided he often didn't accelerate enough to really keep the foot on the neck. But his best shots, the backfoot cover drive and the on drive were said to be an amazing sight due to their power and placement. Apparently he just should have brought them out of the kit bag more frequently.
Going purely by averages his record as an opener is top tier to the naked eye and very consistent. He averaged 48.5 at home and 47 away and ended up with an overall average of 47.7. In the Windies he averaged 51 and against them 46. Against Australia he averaged 47.5 and in Australia 45.
Let's look at his record against the Windies first. He played most of his matches against them in the '60s before they had developed their pace firepower. A lot of success came in this period and he only got 2 series against the full strength quartet in 1980 and 1981. In these 9 tests he averaged 41 with a century and 4 fifties. This was against different combinations of Marshall, Roberts, Croft, Garner and Holding and also came at the age of 40. He didn't set the world on fire but he more than held his own and did it very late into his career.
Against Australia he famously missed the 74/75 assault led by Lillee and Thommo but he still had plenty of success against them. Either Lillee or Thommo featured in the bowling attacks of 5 of the 7 ashes tons he notched up. But only in one test did he have to take on both of them together. I won't get into who dodged who or anything like that but I don't think it was a case of either party being hesitant to play the other. Injuries featured in both those bowler's careers and that's not Boycott's fault. Missing the '74/75 series doesn't look too much like him ducking them either as he had already tonned up against both of them in '71. Lilee was also returning from an injury so I'm not sure many people predicted just how lethal he was going to be in that series before it happened.
He stumbled a bit against New Zealand, averaging 38 against them from 15 tests. Funnily enough this had nothing to do with Hadlee. In the late 1960's he had 5 single digit scores across 6 innings against them. In his only 5 tests against Hadlee in '78 he hit 325 runs @ 40 with a ton and 2 fifties so we could call this encounter this a tie.
Along with being able to play pace he also had a fine record against India and the spin quartet. In India he averaged 47 and against them it shot up to 56. This included his famous 242* against them in 1967. It came in 555 balls and nearly 10 hours and resulted in Boycott being famously dropped for his perceived 'selfishness'. England actually won this match so to me it seems a very strange and unfair decision. I feel like his amazingly consistent contributions as an opener are more clear in hindsight. His actual batting style doesn't seem that much slower or selfish than Bill Lawry's and he seems to dodge all the criticism Boycott does(though at the time he copped some too). While he does his reputation no favours sometimes with his outspoken comments it's fair to say Boycott was pretty much an ATG opening batsman. If he doesn't quite qualify for that title it's only by the slightest whisker. He was a master at his own approach to the craft.