Sehwag, the eternal destroyer!

03 January,2010 07:03 AM IST |   |  Ian Chappell

In a calendar year where there were many fine feats and admirable achievements, Virender Sehwag's remarkable performance in scoring 284 off 79 overs in a Test match stands out like a peaceful protest


In a calendar year where there were many fine feats and admirable achievements, Virender Sehwag's remarkable performance in scoring 284 off 79 overs in a Test match stands out like a peaceful protest.

The way he mercilessly flayed the Sri Lankan attack at Brabourne Stadium is further proof that he's the greatest destroyer since the U-Boat.

In an era where over rates are slowing perceptibly, he's scoring quicker than ever. At a time when batsmen like Sanath Jayasuriya and Jonathan Trott enact more rituals than a religious cult, Sehwag just faces up, taps his bat a couple of times and proceeds to lash the ball to all parts. Where other batsmen rely on visualising techniques he prefers the tried and tested method of "see the ball, hit the ball."

Sehwag has often said he doesn't think too much when he's batting. A wise man.

After years of speculation about what, apart from his enormous skill, made Sir Donald Bradman so great, I've come to the conclusion that a crucial attribute was his ability to bat with an uncluttered mind.

That's not all Sehwag has in common with Bradman. They are the only batsmen to surpass 290 three times in Test cricket. They also comfortably have the best strike rate among the high scorers of their generation. This leads to an interesting thought on batsmanship -- should greater consideration be given to stroke production rather than technique in moulding young batsmen? After all, efficient run-scoring is not just a statistical exercise, it's the first rung on the climb to victory.u00a0

Here's to sheer brilliance: Virender Sehwag. PIC/AP


Unique

To add further weight to that argument, despite Sehwag's carefree approach, it's amazing how many of his notable achievements surpass those of opening batsmen renowned for their technique.

As an opener, Sehwag has a higher average than Sunil Gavaskar. And seventy five per cent of Sehwag's centuries exceed 150 whilst Sir Leonard Hutton only achieved that landmark around fifty per cent of the time.
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This is even more remarkable when you realise there was a time during John Wright's term as India coach that Sehwag was criticised for throwing his wicket away once he'd got a start.

I asked about the response when the coach eventually felt the need to admonish Sehwag and Wright said; "Viru just shrugged his shoulders as if to say watch my next innings."

There can be no argument that Bradman had the better technique, which speaks volumes for Sehwag standing by that conviction he revealed to Wright in his early days. This is an area where a coach can't help a young player; he's either born with Sehwag's confidence in his own ability or he's like the bulk of international batsmen and has moments of doubt.

When comparing Sehwag to his own generation it's the strike rate column that shows his true worth to the team.

Way ahead

He exceeds such renowned new ball clatterers as Matthew Hayden and Chris Gayle by more than 20 runs per hundred balls. Incredibly, he's 16 runs per hundred balls ahead of the eternally belligerent Jayasuriya. To score at 81 runs per 100 balls opening the batting in Test cricket is quite remarkable even in an era where the standard of fast bowling is a little down on the previous decade.u00a0u00a0u00a0u00a0u00a0

There's another amazing aspect to Sehwag's Test match success. In T20 cricket, there are a number of openers who are within a faint edge of Sehwag's strike rate. This suggests there are openers who can score quickly for a short period but only one, Sehwag, who can prolong a hectic run-rate throughout a long innings.

This again speaks volumes for Sehwag's amazing confidence in his own ability and the incredible strength of his uncluttered mind.

To those who attribute much of Sehwag's success to scoring heavily on flat Indian pitches, there's evidence to the contrary. He averages 50 away from India as an opener and he's scored seven of his 17 hundreds on foreign soil. His 195 at the MCG in 2003-04 is one of the finest examples of an opener "taking on" the opposing bowlers on the opening day with gusto and audacious strokeplay.u00a0

Nevertheless, even that tearaway Sehwag innings pales into insignificance when compared with the outstanding achievement of 2009; his 293 off a mere 254 balls at Brabourne stadium. May he play more innings like it in 2010 and hopefully everybody reading this column has a happy and healthy year.

14,707
number of balls Sehwag has faced in all forms of international cricket

1999
The year Virender Sehwag first played for India

Highest Test totals in 2009

Pakistan
765-6u00a0
Vs Sri Lanka at Karachi

Sri Lankau00a0
760-7
Vs India at Ahmedabad

West Indies
749-9
Vs WI at Bridgetown

India

726-9
Vs Sri Lanka at Mumbai

Australia
674-6u00a0
Vs England at Cardiff
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Virender Sehwag 284 runs off 79 overs remarkable Test performance Sports Cricket