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<blockquote data-quote="fazaal24" data-source="post: 793838" data-attributes="member: 9342"><p><span style="font-size: 18px"><span style="font-family: 'Lucida Sans Unicode'"><span style="color: DarkOrchid"><strong><span style="font-family: 'Verdana'"><span style="color: Black">1-10: </span></span><span style="font-family: 'Georgia'">Shane Warne's 50 greatest cricketers</span></strong><strong> - <span style="font-family: 'Palatino Linotype'"><span style="color: Gray"><em></em></span></span></strong></span></span></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px"><span style="font-family: 'Lucida Sans Unicode'"><span style="color: DarkOrchid"><strong><span style="font-family: 'Palatino Linotype'"><span style="color: Gray"><em>'Tendulkar’s toughness puts him out on his own'</em></span></span></strong></span></span></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px"></span> <span style="font-size: 12px"></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"></span> <span style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS'"><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="color: RoyalBlue"><strong>My countdown is complete – and no Australian is in the top three – but few can dispute the brilliance of my final top ten </strong></span></span></span></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>1</strong></p><p><strong>Sachin Tendulkar</strong> (India) </p><p><strong>Test matches</strong> 140 <strong>Runs</strong> 11,150 at 54.92</p><p></p><p></p><p> You have to watch India in India truly to appreciate the pressure that Sachin Tendulkar is under every time he bats. Outside grounds, people wait until he goes in before paying to enter. They seem to want a wicket to fall even though it is their own side that will suffer. This is cricket as Sachin has known it since the age of 16. He grew up under incredible weight of expectation and never buckled once – not under poor umpiring decisions or anything else. I place him very slightly ahead of Lara because I found him slightly tougher mentally. It is such a close call, but here is an example of what I mean: in Australia in 2003-04 he was worried about getting out cover driving so he decided to cut out the shot. I saw the wagon wheel for his next innings: he scored 248 without a single cover drive. Like Lara, he has scored runs all over the world. I have seen him run down the pitch and hit Glenn McGrath over the top for six, and I have seen him hit me for six against the spin going around the wicket. I have been lucky to get to know him off the field as well. He is quiet and humble. A great player and a great man.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>2 </strong></p><p><strong>Brian Lara</strong> (West Indies) </p><p><strong>Test matches</strong> 131 <strong>Runs</strong> 11,953 at 52.88</p><p></p><p></p><p> Whether you played with him or against him, you were in awe of Brian Charles Lara. I loved his strut, his swagger and his ability to hit four after four with his high backlift and incredible placement. He had an amazing knack of playing match-winning innings all through his career and has constructed two of the three highest scores in Test history. He reserved some of his best batting for Australia. At times I felt as though we could bowl 100mph or spin it 14 feet and he still would not get out.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>3 </strong></p><p><strong>Curtly Ambrose</strong> (West Indies) </p><p><strong>Test matches</strong> 98 <strong>Wickets</strong> 405 at 20.99</p><p></p><p></p><p> It was very difficult to split Curtly and Glenn McGrath, but I think Curtly had that extra half-gear as well as being just as accurate and clinical. He could take your head off if he wanted, and he did have that nasty streak. I don’t remember him ever giving me a half-volley – or anybody else for that matter. He turned a game – and the series – in Perth in 1992-93 with a spell of seven wickets for one run. Early in my career, I watched in amazement at his brilliance.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>4</strong></p><p><strong>Allan Border</strong> (Australia) </p><p><strong>Test matches</strong> 156 <strong>Runs</strong> 11,174 at 50.56 </p><p> AB is the top Australian in my list. I probably learnt more from him than anybody bar Ian Chappell. The toughest cricketer I have played with, he was also an outstanding batsman and had been for more than a decade by the time I came into the side. People remember his determination but he also had plenty of shots. He led from the front and remains a great example to youngsters. </p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>5</strong></p><p><strong>Glenn McGrath</strong> (Australia) </p><p><strong>Test matches</strong> 124 <strong>Wickets</strong> 563 at 21.64</p><p></p><p></p><p> He kept everything simple but effective. Although batsmen knew exactly what McGrath was about, he still beat them almost every time. He had that ability to take the big wicket and his longevity was incredible. By keeping things so tight he helped me to get a lot of wickets at the other end. Don’t let him fool you over his batting: it really was terrible. </p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>6</strong></p><p><strong>Wasim Akram</strong> (Pakistan) </p><p><strong>Test matches</strong> 104 <strong>Wickets</strong> 414 at 23.62 <strong>Runs</strong> 2,898 at 22.64</p><p></p><p></p><p> Being a left-armer gave an advantage but the ability to swing the ball from over or round the wicket, reverse or conventional, puts him among the great bowlers of my time. His whippy action made him harder to face and there was a spell at Rawalpindi in 1994 that was as fast as anything I have seen. Good enough with the bat to score a Test double-hundred.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>7 </strong></p><p><strong>Muttiah Muralitharan</strong> (Sri Lanka) </p><p><strong>Test matches</strong> 113 <strong>Wickets</strong> 700 at 21.33</p><p></p><p></p><p> No matter what anybody thinks about his action, he is wonderful to bat against for the experience of facing a ball that turns so much. He has helped to turn Sri Lanka into a formidable side at home. It is also worth remembering the work he did in the aftermath of the tsunami when he gave so much hope to people in despair. And we all love that smile.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>8</strong> </p><p><strong>Ricky Ponting</strong> (Australia) </p><p><strong>Test matches</strong> 110 <strong>Runs</strong> 9,368 at 59.29</p><p></p><p></p><p> By the time he finishes I think Ricky will have smashed all Test batting records. He can play for at least another two Ashes series. People say that he was gifted with natural talent, which is true, but he has built on that and has improved beyond recognition against the short ball and spin. He is a really athletic fielder and the 2005 experience helped to turn him into an excellent captain</p><p></p><p><strong>9</strong></p><p><strong>Mark Taylor</strong> (Australia)</p><p><strong>Test matches</strong> 104 <strong>Runs</strong> 7,525 at 43.49 </p><p> I played under four Australia captains but “Tubby” was the pick. He seemed to have an instinct for what was right and was never afraid to break conventions if he thought it was right. His sharp brain has now made him a good commentator. I owe him for holding some incredible slip catches, but his first role was as a very, very solid player. </p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>10</strong></p><p><strong>Ian Healy</strong> (Australia) </p><p><strong>Test matches</strong> 119 <strong>Runs</strong> 4,356 at 27.39 <strong>Catches</strong> 366 <strong>Stumpings</strong> 29 </p><p></p><p></p><p> He was the best wicketkeeper I saw. I can’t remember him making a mistake during the 1993 Ashes series either standing up to the spinners or back to the quicks. What people did not see was the practice he put in to reach that level. He was a dangerous lower-order batsman, but these days the requirement seems to be for keeper-batsmen, not batsmen-keepers.</p><p></p><p><span style="font-size: 15px"><strong>The list in full</strong></span></p><p><strong>50</strong> Jamie Siddons </p><p><strong>49</strong> Darren Berry </p><p><strong>48</strong> Brian McMillan </p><p><strong>47 </strong>Chris Cairns </p><p><strong>46</strong> Dilip Vengsarkar </p><p><strong>45</strong> Waqar Younis </p><p><strong>44</strong> Alec Stewart </p><p><strong>43 </strong>Michael Atherton </p><p><strong>42</strong> Ravi Shastri </p><p><strong>41</strong> Justin Langer </p><p><strong>40</strong> Kapil Dev </p><p><strong>39</strong> Stuart MacGill </p><p><strong>38</strong> Sanath Jayasuriya </p><p><strong>37</strong> Stephen Harmison </p><p><strong>36</strong> Andy Flower </p><p><strong>35</strong> Michael Vaughan </p><p><strong>34</strong> Bruce Reid </p><p><strong>33</strong> Allan Donald </p><p><strong>32</strong> Robin Smith </p><p><strong>31</strong> Tim May </p><p><strong>30 </strong>Kevin Pietersen </p><p><strong>29</strong> Shoaib Akhtar / Craig McDermott </p><p><strong>28</strong> Saeed Anwar / Mohammad Yousuf </p><p><strong>27</strong> Jacques Kallis / Shaun Pollock </p><p><strong>26</strong> Steve Waugh </p><p><strong>25</strong> Darren Lehmann </p><p><strong>24</strong> Brett Lee </p><p><strong>23</strong> Stephen Fleming </p><p><strong>22</strong> Martin Crowe </p><p><strong>21</strong> David Boon</p><p><strong>20</strong> Adam Gilchrist </p><p><strong>19</strong> Aravinda de Silva </p><p><strong>18 </strong>Merv Hughes </p><p><strong>17</strong> Matthew Hayden </p><p><strong>16</strong> Andrew Flintoff </p><p><strong>15</strong> Graham Gooch </p><p><strong>14</strong> Rahul Dravid </p><p><strong>13</strong> Anil Kumble </p><p><strong>12</strong> Mark Waugh </p><p><strong>11</strong> Courtney Walsh </p><p><strong>10</strong> Ian Healy </p><p><strong>9</strong> Mark Taylor </p><p><strong>8</strong> Ricky Ponting </p><p><strong>7</strong> Muttiah Muralitharan </p><p><strong>6</strong> Wasim Akram </p><p><strong>5</strong> Glenn McGrath </p><p><strong>4</strong> Allan Border </p><p><strong>3</strong> Curtly Ambrose </p><p><strong>2</strong> Brian Lara</p><p><strong>1</strong> Sachin Tendulkar </p><p></p><p></p><p><a href="http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/columnists/shane_warne/article2364258.ece" target="_blank">Source</a></p><p><a href="http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/columnists/shane_warne/article2364258.ece" target="_blank"></a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="fazaal24, post: 793838, member: 9342"] [SIZE=5][FONT=Lucida Sans Unicode][COLOR=DarkOrchid][B][FONT=Verdana][COLOR=Black]1-10: [/COLOR][/FONT][FONT=Georgia]Shane Warne's 50 greatest cricketers[/FONT][/B][B] - [FONT=Palatino Linotype][COLOR=Gray][I] 'Tendulkar’s toughness puts him out on his own'[/I][/COLOR][/FONT][/B][/COLOR][/FONT] [/SIZE] [SIZE=3] [/SIZE] [FONT=Trebuchet MS][SIZE=3][COLOR=RoyalBlue][B]My countdown is complete – and no Australian is in the top three – but few can dispute the brilliance of my final top ten [/B][/COLOR][/SIZE][/FONT] [B]1[/B] [B]Sachin Tendulkar[/B] (India) [B]Test matches[/B] 140 [B]Runs[/B] 11,150 at 54.92 You have to watch India in India truly to appreciate the pressure that Sachin Tendulkar is under every time he bats. Outside grounds, people wait until he goes in before paying to enter. They seem to want a wicket to fall even though it is their own side that will suffer. This is cricket as Sachin has known it since the age of 16. He grew up under incredible weight of expectation and never buckled once – not under poor umpiring decisions or anything else. I place him very slightly ahead of Lara because I found him slightly tougher mentally. It is such a close call, but here is an example of what I mean: in Australia in 2003-04 he was worried about getting out cover driving so he decided to cut out the shot. I saw the wagon wheel for his next innings: he scored 248 without a single cover drive. Like Lara, he has scored runs all over the world. I have seen him run down the pitch and hit Glenn McGrath over the top for six, and I have seen him hit me for six against the spin going around the wicket. I have been lucky to get to know him off the field as well. He is quiet and humble. A great player and a great man. [B]2 [/B] [B]Brian Lara[/B] (West Indies) [B]Test matches[/B] 131 [B]Runs[/B] 11,953 at 52.88 Whether you played with him or against him, you were in awe of Brian Charles Lara. I loved his strut, his swagger and his ability to hit four after four with his high backlift and incredible placement. He had an amazing knack of playing match-winning innings all through his career and has constructed two of the three highest scores in Test history. He reserved some of his best batting for Australia. At times I felt as though we could bowl 100mph or spin it 14 feet and he still would not get out. [B]3 [/B] [B]Curtly Ambrose[/B] (West Indies) [B]Test matches[/B] 98 [B]Wickets[/B] 405 at 20.99 It was very difficult to split Curtly and Glenn McGrath, but I think Curtly had that extra half-gear as well as being just as accurate and clinical. He could take your head off if he wanted, and he did have that nasty streak. I don’t remember him ever giving me a half-volley – or anybody else for that matter. He turned a game – and the series – in Perth in 1992-93 with a spell of seven wickets for one run. Early in my career, I watched in amazement at his brilliance. [B]4[/B] [B]Allan Border[/B] (Australia) [B]Test matches[/B] 156 [B]Runs[/B] 11,174 at 50.56 AB is the top Australian in my list. I probably learnt more from him than anybody bar Ian Chappell. The toughest cricketer I have played with, he was also an outstanding batsman and had been for more than a decade by the time I came into the side. People remember his determination but he also had plenty of shots. He led from the front and remains a great example to youngsters. [B]5[/B] [B]Glenn McGrath[/B] (Australia) [B]Test matches[/B] 124 [B]Wickets[/B] 563 at 21.64 He kept everything simple but effective. Although batsmen knew exactly what McGrath was about, he still beat them almost every time. He had that ability to take the big wicket and his longevity was incredible. By keeping things so tight he helped me to get a lot of wickets at the other end. Don’t let him fool you over his batting: it really was terrible. [B]6[/B] [B]Wasim Akram[/B] (Pakistan) [B]Test matches[/B] 104 [B]Wickets[/B] 414 at 23.62 [B]Runs[/B] 2,898 at 22.64 Being a left-armer gave an advantage but the ability to swing the ball from over or round the wicket, reverse or conventional, puts him among the great bowlers of my time. His whippy action made him harder to face and there was a spell at Rawalpindi in 1994 that was as fast as anything I have seen. Good enough with the bat to score a Test double-hundred. [B]7 [/B] [B]Muttiah Muralitharan[/B] (Sri Lanka) [B]Test matches[/B] 113 [B]Wickets[/B] 700 at 21.33 No matter what anybody thinks about his action, he is wonderful to bat against for the experience of facing a ball that turns so much. He has helped to turn Sri Lanka into a formidable side at home. It is also worth remembering the work he did in the aftermath of the tsunami when he gave so much hope to people in despair. And we all love that smile. [B]8[/B] [B]Ricky Ponting[/B] (Australia) [B]Test matches[/B] 110 [B]Runs[/B] 9,368 at 59.29 By the time he finishes I think Ricky will have smashed all Test batting records. He can play for at least another two Ashes series. People say that he was gifted with natural talent, which is true, but he has built on that and has improved beyond recognition against the short ball and spin. He is a really athletic fielder and the 2005 experience helped to turn him into an excellent captain [B]9[/B] [B]Mark Taylor[/B] (Australia) [B]Test matches[/B] 104 [B]Runs[/B] 7,525 at 43.49 I played under four Australia captains but “Tubby” was the pick. He seemed to have an instinct for what was right and was never afraid to break conventions if he thought it was right. His sharp brain has now made him a good commentator. I owe him for holding some incredible slip catches, but his first role was as a very, very solid player. [B]10[/B] [B]Ian Healy[/B] (Australia) [B]Test matches[/B] 119 [B]Runs[/B] 4,356 at 27.39 [B]Catches[/B] 366 [B]Stumpings[/B] 29 He was the best wicketkeeper I saw. I can’t remember him making a mistake during the 1993 Ashes series either standing up to the spinners or back to the quicks. What people did not see was the practice he put in to reach that level. He was a dangerous lower-order batsman, but these days the requirement seems to be for keeper-batsmen, not batsmen-keepers. [SIZE=4][B]The list in full[/B][/SIZE] [B]50[/B] Jamie Siddons [B]49[/B] Darren Berry [B]48[/B] Brian McMillan [B]47 [/B]Chris Cairns [B]46[/B] Dilip Vengsarkar [B]45[/B] Waqar Younis [B]44[/B] Alec Stewart [B]43 [/B]Michael Atherton [B]42[/B] Ravi Shastri [B]41[/B] Justin Langer [B]40[/B] Kapil Dev [B]39[/B] Stuart MacGill [B]38[/B] Sanath Jayasuriya [B]37[/B] Stephen Harmison [B]36[/B] Andy Flower [B]35[/B] Michael Vaughan [B]34[/B] Bruce Reid [B]33[/B] Allan Donald [B]32[/B] Robin Smith [B]31[/B] Tim May [B]30 [/B]Kevin Pietersen [B]29[/B] Shoaib Akhtar / Craig McDermott [B]28[/B] Saeed Anwar / Mohammad Yousuf [B]27[/B] Jacques Kallis / Shaun Pollock [B]26[/B] Steve Waugh [B]25[/B] Darren Lehmann [B]24[/B] Brett Lee [B]23[/B] Stephen Fleming [B]22[/B] Martin Crowe [B]21[/B] David Boon [B]20[/B] Adam Gilchrist [B]19[/B] Aravinda de Silva [B]18 [/B]Merv Hughes [B]17[/B] Matthew Hayden [B]16[/B] Andrew Flintoff [B]15[/B] Graham Gooch [B]14[/B] Rahul Dravid [B]13[/B] Anil Kumble [B]12[/B] Mark Waugh [B]11[/B] Courtney Walsh [B]10[/B] Ian Healy [B]9[/B] Mark Taylor [B]8[/B] Ricky Ponting [B]7[/B] Muttiah Muralitharan [B]6[/B] Wasim Akram [B]5[/B] Glenn McGrath [B]4[/B] Allan Border [B]3[/B] Curtly Ambrose [B]2[/B] Brian Lara [B]1[/B] Sachin Tendulkar [URL="http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/columnists/shane_warne/article2364258.ece"]Source [/URL] [/QUOTE]
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