OverratedSanity
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That six off McGrath never gets old
Was a terrific knock and happy to say I was there for it. Am a massive Laxman fan but one thing I would say militates against it being totally in the very top echelon is the match was dead when he came out to bat.Laxman 167 is one of the top 20-30 greatest centuries of all time imo and it was even more incredible considering it was his first hundred, he had no solid place in the side and it was against arguably the GOAT bowling line-up at home while not one other batsman in the side stood up with him.
Yep.. This and the Cape Town hundreds from Sachin and Azhar are very very similar in that they were breath taking to watch and lighted up a rather one sided and somewhat boring test but ultimately utterly inconsequential and it felt inconsequential even when the innings was going on.Was a terrific knock and happy to say I was there for it. Am a massive Laxman fan but one thing I would say militates against it being totally in the very top echelon is the match was dead when he came out to bat.
Was still one for the ages to watch though.
Hmm, I don't think it's fair to say the Sachin Azhar knocks are very similar. They came in a dire situation in the game but that partnership atleast temporarily gave India hope of recovery in the first innings. They're not really the same kind of lost cause go all guns blazing kind of knocks like astle or vvs were.Yep.. This and the Cape Town hundreds from Sachin and Azhar are very very similar in that they were breath taking to watch and lighted up a rather one sided and somewhat boring test but ultimately utterly inconsequential and it felt inconsequential even when the innings was going on.
Hmm, I don't think it's fair to say the Sachin Azhar knocks are very similar. They came in a dire situation in the game but that partnership atleast temporarily gave India hope of recovery in the first innings. They're not really the same kind of lost cause go all guns blazing kind of knocks like astle or vvs were.
Babar Azam's 71 was quite close in terms of quality with that knock.That Sachin-Azhar partnership is one of my favourite '90s cricket memories.
there is a good 15 minutes or so on youtube if you haven't seen it, bill lawry, tony greig & ian chappell are waxing lyrical about the innings.v.v.s. laxman's 167 at the s.c.g in1999/00. his first test hundred opening the batting out of 258 in the second innings.
india were thrashed but we got to see how great laxman was against australia.( the first of many). one of my favourite alltime players to watch.
Santa's 192 at Hobart
Even the way Haze got out was like Leach almost got out at HeadingleyIt was the way he got them too. Essentially Ben Stokes/Perera style but just fell short
Yeah, against all odds, against all hope, against Donald. As HB said, the fate was inevitable in the game but those 2-3 hours were a delight and one could barely believe it was happening after the carnage in Johannesburg.That Sachin-Azhar partnership is one of my favourite '90s cricket memories.
Carnage happened in Durban and not Johannesburg, right? Where India was bowled out for 100 in the first innings and 66 in the second.Yeah, against all odds, against all hope, against Donald. As HB said, the fate was inevitable in the game but those 2-3 hours were a delight and one could barely believe it was happening after the carnage in Johannesburg.
I will forever remember the Jo'burg test more fondly than anything else from that tour. Dravid took on Donald and Co. both in terms of cricket skills and verbals and came out on top. We would have won too but for ****ing rain and Srinath forgetting how to get tailenders out. Klusener showed a different side to his game too and was extremely impressive.Carnage happened in Durban and not Johannesburg, right? Where India was bowled out for 100 in the first innings and 66 in the second.
India nearly won the next test match in Johannesburg (last South African batsman Allan Donald managed to see off some 20+ balls on the final day in that match).
Cape Town wicket where Azhar-Tendulkar had their partnership in that series was a beautiful batting wicket. Indian batsmen got out because of their own mistakes.
Azhar got run-out and that's how the partnership broke.
Azhar was in mad-max mode that year. He totally dominated that partnership. He came in when Tendulkar was batting on 20 odd, but reached his hundred much before Sachin did.
Azhar's mad-max mode started with the Eden Gardens century in the previous series. That century was also a fantastic performance in a losing cause.
That Cape-town match was the first time I noticed Rahul Dravid. He opened in that match, batted for an hour and scored just 2 runs, before playing himself on to a nothing delivery from Klusener.
But he looked technically brilliant for that hour. The amount of time he had, even against Donald's pace, was very noticeable. Another noticeable thing was the ease and the clarity with which he left deliveries outside off.
That was something I hadn't seen in Indian batsmen for a while.
Nevertheless back then that Indian team just didn't know how to win test matches outside India. After 1986 Test series win in England, all the way till 2002, India won 3 Test matches outside India (not talking about series wins here, just matches).
Against Sri Lanka in Sri Lanka in 1993, against Bangladesh in Bangladesh in 2000, and against Zimbabwe in Zimbabwe in 2001.