The Sean
Cricketer Of The Year
I spoke a bit about Imran’s away record in my previous post and wasn’t inclined to revisit it, but as I noted then I don’t think it’s as simple as just the over all career number. Even before he hit his prime, he had been a prolific wicket taker in both Australia (including a match-winning 12-wicket haul) and West Indies in the 1970s and – as I also noted – in those early years seven of his first nine Test series were away from home.
However, if we look at his away series between November 1979 and April 1988:
1979/80 in India – 19 wickets at 19.21
1981/82 in Australia – 16 wickets at 19.50
1982 in England – 21 wickets at 18.57
1985/86 in Sri Lanka – 15 wickets at 18.00
1986/87 in India – 8 wickets at 49.00
1987 in England – 21 wickets at 21.67
1987/88 in West Indies – 23 wickets at 18.09
That one anomaly in India in 86/87 aside (where he actually had an excellent series with the bat), that is a spectacular run of away performances over a significant period of time. And it could well have been even more impressive but for that knee injury which left a big gap between 1983 and 1985 and caused him to miss out on Australia in 1983/84 (he played two Tests and didn’t bowl at all) and New Zealand in 1984/85 (peak Hadlee v peak Imran may well have been one for the ages).
As I said previously, you can make arguments for or against so many of the great quicks when we try to rank them, but in Imran’s case I really don’t think just repeating “averaged 25 away” without any context is one of the stronger ones.
However, if we look at his away series between November 1979 and April 1988:
1979/80 in India – 19 wickets at 19.21
1981/82 in Australia – 16 wickets at 19.50
1982 in England – 21 wickets at 18.57
1985/86 in Sri Lanka – 15 wickets at 18.00
1986/87 in India – 8 wickets at 49.00
1987 in England – 21 wickets at 21.67
1987/88 in West Indies – 23 wickets at 18.09
That one anomaly in India in 86/87 aside (where he actually had an excellent series with the bat), that is a spectacular run of away performances over a significant period of time. And it could well have been even more impressive but for that knee injury which left a big gap between 1983 and 1985 and caused him to miss out on Australia in 1983/84 (he played two Tests and didn’t bowl at all) and New Zealand in 1984/85 (peak Hadlee v peak Imran may well have been one for the ages).
As I said previously, you can make arguments for or against so many of the great quicks when we try to rank them, but in Imran’s case I really don’t think just repeating “averaged 25 away” without any context is one of the stronger ones.