• 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.

PEAK all time XI

The Sean

Cricketer Of The Year
Early Arthur Morris worthy of a mention.
Great shout. Probably as good as Hayden. Recency bias will invariably be a problem with a peak XI since we're more likely to remember the ones we actually saw.
Yeah great call, especially if we're keeping it to shorter peak periods - Morris across 1947 and 1948 hit seven tons in 12 Tests and averaged 82. Drops a little to just nudging 70 if you extend it to a 15-Test cutoff but still bloody good.
 

silentstriker

The Wheel is Forever
The twist is that this team will have to tour every Test country and play that country’s all time XI (excluding anyone that’s in this side) in a one off match.
 

morgieb

Request Your Custom Title Now!
I know it wasn’t Test cricket, but WG Grace during the 1870’s was averaging around 60 when everyone else was lucky to average 25.
 

silentstriker

The Wheel is Forever
I'll add Gavaskar for contention - in the 30 matches between 1977 and 1980, Gavaskar averaged 67 as an opener, which included Test matches in Australia, in England, in Pakistan and at home.
 

silentstriker

The Wheel is Forever
I would have Hayden over Sehwag but peak Sehwag between Dec 2003 to Mar 2005 played 16 Test matches with an average of 72. In those 16 matches, he had 6 centuries including 195 (In Autralia at Melbourne), 309 at run a ball (in Pakistan), 155 (vs Australia at home), 164 (vs South Africa at home), 173 (vs Pakistan at home) and 201 (vs Pakistan at home).
 

subshakerz

Hall of Fame Member
I would have Hayden over Sehwag but peak Sehwag between Dec 2003 to Mar 2005 played 16 Test matches with an average of 72. In those 16 matches, he had 6 centuries including 195 (In Autralia at Melbourne), 309 at run a ball (in Pakistan), 155 (vs Australia at home), 164 (vs South Africa at home), 173 (vs Pakistan at home) and 201 (vs Pakistan at home).
Mostly at home though. Hayden was scoring pretty much everywhere.
 

harsh.ag

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Picked Hobbs and Gooch because they had to face difficult conditions/attacks when compared to Hayden and Morris and Hutton. Gavaskar is close, very close. But would be boring to pick Hobbs and Gavaskar
 

silentstriker

The Wheel is Forever
There won't be a choice for #3. We will go to four next.

Pick two out of the following for openers:

  1. Hobbs (1910-1914)
  2. Hayden (2001-2004)
  3. Gavaskar (1977-1980)
  4. Sehwag (2003-2005)
  5. Gooch (1990-1994)
  6. Sutcliffe (1924-1932)
  7. Gautam Gambhir (2008-2010)
  8. Simon Katich (2008-2010)
  9. Alastair Cook (2010-2011)
  10. Len Hutton (1948 to March 1954)

I'll start, I'm going to pick Hobbs and Gavaskar.
 
Last edited:

subshakerz

Hall of Fame Member
There won't be a choice for #3. We will go to four next.

Pick two out of the following for openers:

  1. Hobbs (1910-1914)
  2. Hayden (2001-2004)
  3. Gavaskar (1977-1980)
  4. Sehwag (2003-2005)
  5. Gooch (1990-1994)
  6. Sutcliffe (1924-1932)
  7. Gautam Gambhir (2008-2010)
  8. Simon Katich (2008-2010)
  9. Alastair Cook (2010-2011)

I'll start, I'm going to pick Hobbs and Gavaskar.
Gooch and Hobbs as mentioned.
 

Top