... albeit not in the 1996 WC. One of the great myths of our time is that SL's success owed anything at all to their openers. Fact is, apart from a group match against India and having fun chasing down an inadequate total posted by a feeble England side, their significant wins happened despite the openers, not because of them.and did it successfully too.
SL is the exception I could think of. But Kaushal Silva is right up there in pecking order with PJ. One disastrous tour with gloves may see PJ losing his place to a better batsman who keep.Very good point. Wicketkeepers who were great batsmen used to be the exception. Now, no international side would dare pick a weak batsman behind the stumps. Although many overlook what a brilliant keeper Gilchrist was, and think they just need to pick somoen who can bat.
Would Dhoni, Matt Prior, Kamran Akmal or McCullum have managed to keep their places so long if not for Gilchrist?
It was not the first time that he kept dropping double centurions BTWI think PJ is skating on thin ice. Had a poor series last year against India with the bat and dropped a crucial catch off Tendulkar as well.
James Lillywhite might have something to say to Mr Wisden, in fact I thought his Annual the better of the two publications when both were on offer. I think international cricket coverage may have given Wisden the edgePretty hard to shorten to just 5.
Some good choices thrown around
My additions will be
John Wisden (w/o him no wisden, no extended reports, no profiles, no statistics, no history-- impossible to imagine)
Edgar Wilsher (Generally considered as pioneer of over-arm, can't believe no one mentioned him)
Harry Trott (Some one mentioned Armstrong as the first real captain, but I'm sure trott is before him and introduced pretty much everything regarding captaincy: field placements, bowling changes, resting bowlers etc.)
Glad you mentioned SN one of my favourites when I was a kid, except for when he appealed against the Aussies for handle the ball Although they did not call it reverse swing in those days1. Sir. Don Bradman
2. Sachin Tendulkar
3. WG Grace
4. Sarfraz Nawaz
5. Shane Warne
Pretty much agree with all 5 of your choices there. Only other ones could be the cheating Aussie who instructed the underarm ball or Jardine for Leg Theory as both are so controversial.Do we define "most influential" by the effect they've had on the playing of the game, the game itself as a whole or the world at large? Or any combination thereof?
Anyway, my tuppence worth:
1) WG Grace - founder of the modern game and all that. Cricket could well have remained a bucolic English pasttime rather than becoming a major international sport were it not for the Good Doctor.
2) Sachin Tendulkar - whatever his merits as a cricketer (and they're many), Sachin is a demi-god in the biggest cricketing nation on earth. When he plays, India watches. His emergence as India's greatest player (with apologies to Kapil & Sunny) co-incided with the devlopement of the information age and is in no small part responsible for the sport being the multi-billion dollar industry it now is.
3) Donald Bradman - he was that good. Even American sportswriters occasionally use his dominance over his peers and generations past and future as an analogy. I once saw him namechecked in an article about Tiger Woods.
4) Muttiah Muralitharan - However one regards him as a player, his influence on the sport is undeniable. As much as some would seek to disingenuously deny it he's been the catalyst for a whole raft of changes, not all of them necessarily for the better.
5) Adam Gilchrist - Has largely killed off the specialist keeper. Never again will we see keepers selected without some ability with the bat.
I don't think Gatting was that influential...there's a fat english guy with a goofy beard who says hello
he definately inspired those in australia, england and non sc countries for doing it. I think , regardless of whether from sc or not, he did things with the ball that no other leggies could do, and pushed the boundries of what was possible. Kumble, murali and harbhajan have all said what warne has done with the ball is amazing and inspirational.Still no my friend. Warne did inspire youngsters outside SC, but the inspiration for leg break in SC was there much earlier even Warne touched a cricket ball. Warne was a great bowler for sure, but not a trend setter for taking up leg spin, at least in SC (which accounts for about 75% of FC cricketers in the world).
what do u mean by media beast?In terms of him being a 'media beast', his record speaks for itself. He is just as influential as murali.