Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
Yet again we have the situation where there are many performances that can't be defined between. The first that springs to my mind is Colin Cowdrey batting one-handed after having his arm broken by Wesley Winfield Hall, and saving the Test.
But how can anyone possibly say that Gayle's century (or Chanderpaul's a few months earlier, or his in the last game) can be better or worse than Jones' innings in 1986? Nor can any of them be better than a guy who very recently found he didn't have a fractured skull returning to the fray and almost turning-around an almost impossible situation.
Nawab of Pataudi sort of beats it all by playing with one eye, but Fulton is now proving that that's by no means impossible.
One innings I think is very overrated is the 157* at The Oval. If he had been troubled all innings it would have been fair enough but many people seem not to realise or to have forgotten that he only started to be seriously inconvenienced on 84. He knew Hussain would have refused any request for a runner so he didn't bother to ask, but it did take some skill to hobble to another 73. However, there have surely been a few better performances.
Rumour has it, for instance, that Jack Hearne had a seriously damaged right toe when he took the first (and to this day only the second) hat-trick by an England bowler in The Ashes. Just no-one really knows about the feats of the 1890s in that much detail.
But how can anyone possibly say that Gayle's century (or Chanderpaul's a few months earlier, or his in the last game) can be better or worse than Jones' innings in 1986? Nor can any of them be better than a guy who very recently found he didn't have a fractured skull returning to the fray and almost turning-around an almost impossible situation.
Nawab of Pataudi sort of beats it all by playing with one eye, but Fulton is now proving that that's by no means impossible.
One innings I think is very overrated is the 157* at The Oval. If he had been troubled all innings it would have been fair enough but many people seem not to realise or to have forgotten that he only started to be seriously inconvenienced on 84. He knew Hussain would have refused any request for a runner so he didn't bother to ask, but it did take some skill to hobble to another 73. However, there have surely been a few better performances.
Rumour has it, for instance, that Jack Hearne had a seriously damaged right toe when he took the first (and to this day only the second) hat-trick by an England bowler in The Ashes. Just no-one really knows about the feats of the 1890s in that much detail.