• 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.

Better 153 : Perera or Lara

Better test knock


  • Total voters
    19
In far tougher conditions against a far better attack and far less jammy.


Things people who actually watch cricket would know. :)
Digressing a bit from the topic, but I was reading the Cricket monthly from CI last night where the central point was Angelo Mathews’s save at the boundary line in 2009. At that time it was deemed spectacular because it was so rare and that it basically pioneered the circus and acrobatics that we see today in the modern game.

Going back to Lara’s knock, I remember that he was under pressure with the captaincy and the critique and whatnot. Anyways, in pure Lara fashion, he let his bat do the talking.

It’s a classic
 

honestbharani

Whatever it takes!!!
What was jammy about Perera's knock? (I didn't see it but the match reports suggested it was chanceless.)
Top edges over the keepers' head. Edges wide of slip and gully at catchable heights. He played a lot of great shots, but he kept playing a lot of shots like most of the T20 age batsmen do with the #11 for company and everything just went his way.

Obviously, folks like Salty have no idea coz they dont actually watch cricket.
 

HouHsiaoHsien

International Debutant
Close, you can be fine either ways, but Perera marginally ahead for me given he was playing overseas. What stuns me is the fact that Lara had an innings in the 99 series that is among the 5 best of so ever, another top 20 innings and one more masterful destructive world class hundred
 

honestbharani

Whatever it takes!!!
Close, you can be fine either ways, but Perera marginally ahead for me given he was playing overseas. What stuns me is the fact that Lara had an innings in the 99 series that is among the 5 best of so ever, another top 20 innings and one more masterful destructive world class hundred
All with a chipped bone on his right wrist which made it very difficult for him to play like any of the top hand dominated shots. He missed a LOT of cricket after this series and was never really completely healed till the 2003 WC, I think. Shows how remarkable his strength of will was. Funnily enough, Sachin had a similar situation with the tennis elbow which made batting tougher than normal for him for about 18 months or so before he was fully healed.
 

Sliferxxxx

School Boy/Girl Cricketer
Close, you can be fine either ways, but Perera marginally ahead for me given he was playing overseas. What stuns me is the fact that Lara had an innings in the 99 series that is among the 5 best of so ever, another top 20 innings and one more masterful destructive world class hundred
Don't forget that his first test half century likely would have been another 100 had he not wrongfully been given out. Healey did not have the ball in hand during that run out.
 

Sliferxxxx

School Boy/Girl Cricketer
Lara. Tough conditions vs an atg great and mixed attack (great pace and spin) on a Kensington wicket with spineless batsmen as support. Perrera close behind.
 

subshakerz

Hall of Fame Member
Top edges over the keepers' head. Edges wide of slip and gully at catchable heights. He played a lot of great shots, but he kept playing a lot of shots like most of the T20 age batsmen do with the #11 for company and everything just went his way.

Obviously, folks like Salty have no idea coz they dont actually watch cricket.
There were those in Lara's innings too. He got dropped by Healy and then an edge flew wide of Warne in slip, from what I recall. McGrath smacked him on the head, which led to that epic pull for four next ball.

Stop looking with rose-tinted glasses. However, I will agree in terms of strokeplay this was ahead.
 

subshakerz

Hall of Fame Member
Another couple of points for Perera:

- His was a lowscoring match where he was the only one to ton up. Makes it more special. In Lara's game, Waugh nearly scored a double as Australia had a big first innings scores.

- Pererra scored 78 runs for the last wicket to win. That's incredible and they could have so easily lost. Lara did a bit similar with Ambrose in the 9th wicket.
 

Top