Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
Dunno about that, for all the middle-order strokeplayers who've succeeded as ODI openers (Mark Waugh, Gilchrist, Ganguly, Tendulkar, Astle, Johnson, Gibbs, Jayasuriya [though they transformed themselves into Test openers too, albeit both were something of flat-track bullies]; and obviously Kaluwitharana and Afridi weren't successful, but they both opened many times in ODIs) there've been plenty of specialist long-form openers as well (Saeed Anwar, Graeme Smith, Kirsten, Knight [who eventually turned himself from middle-order batsman to opener successfully in both forms], Trescothick, Hayden, Gayle [though the Test credentials of all those three are dubious to me]).But the case of Tendulkar and Ganguly does suggest that a good idea on flat ODI decks is to push the stroke-makers used to coming in in the middle order to the top. Probably true.
I'd be much more confident of seeing a genuine First-Class opener who could also play one-day cricket emerging than a middle-order player who someone thought could do the job at the top succeeding by being tried. Someone who's not of county one-day standard as a middle-order batsman is ridiculously unlikely to be ODI-standard opening, and someone who's county one-day standard in the middle is a rare and precious commodity and really can't afford to be wasted at the top of the order.
And BTW, can we discuss the terrorist attacks and their effect in the other thread please?