Smith was just Hayden with less productivity. He didn't even have any X factor like Sehwag of scoring absurdly fast. I mean he was still really, really good, and underrated like the other 2, but I just don't see how he's Gavaskar comparable.
I watched Graeme Smith literally grow up in front of me, I would say there is a huge difference between Hayden and Smith ..
Matthew Hayden was one of the games greatest late bloomers, by the age of 29 he had only played 12 Test matches in 6 years for Australia, with a test average of 26 ..
He scored heavily in Sheffield Cricket , and was backed by Steve Waugh in a set up that was dominating world cricket..
Graeme Smith on the otherhand was a prodigy from his teenage years, he was handed the captaincy at 23 at a difficult time, the ghost of Hansie Cronje still loomed large over South African cricket after the match fixing scandal..
Shaun Pollock had relinquished the captaincy after a botched ODI WC at home, the quota system was being ready for implementation, Smith had to grow up very fast.
Graeme Smith's USP is :
●South Africa never lost a Test Match when he scored a Test Hundred
●Smith opened the batting in conditions that were very challenging for most openers statistically.
●A great batsman away from home , averaging over 50 away from SA, only a select group of batters can say that, and the list is probably shorter for those who have played 100+ Tests.
●4th innings Expert, most batsmen tend to struggle in the 4th innings ,Graeme Smith truly thrived..
All of his 4th innings test hundreds came in winning causes , the most by any cricketer in match winning knocks in the 4th innings. In total, only Younus Khan had more 4th innings hundreds than Smith(4) with 5 tons.
His aggregate of 1611 Test runs in the 4th innings is 3rd on the all time list in Test cricket.
●Captaincy.
Nobody in the game has captained more Test Matches than Graeme Smith, a record that will probably be around for a very long time. 109 of his 117 Tests was spent as Test Captain ! Don't think anyone will ever have a greater percentage of their Test career spent as skipper.