Rahul Dravid: Timeless Steel

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by Chappell, Greg


  47

  9/8

  30

  1.12

  Mohammad Azharuddin

  47

  14/14

  19

  1.00

  *Qualification: at least 20 Tests as captain

  And on the field, he took a record 210 catches, mostly in the slips. That was another aspect of the game where his immense powers of concentration stood him in good stead.

  There’s plenty to like about Dravid’s Test career. The one disappointing aspect, though, is his record against Australia and South Africa, arguably the two best bowling sides during his playing period. His poor final series in Australia meant his overall average against them dipped below 40 (38.67), while against South Africa he averaged only 33.83. Thus, in 54 Tests against those two teams, he averaged 36.75, with only four hundreds; in 27 Tests in those two countries, he averaged 36.53, with only two centuries. He never scored another Test hundred in South Africa after that 148 in Johannesburg in 1996-97, while the 233 in Adelaide remained his only Test hundred in Australia. Those, though, are minor blips in a career that largely stayed at an exceptionally high level for more than 15 years.

  Dravid in ODIs

  Unlike his Test career, which started with a bang, Dravid’s scores in his first five completed ODI innings were 3, 4, 3, 11 and 13. It was only in the tougher conditions of Toronto, in 1996, that his orthodoxy and tight technique were first recognised as a blessing in ODIs as well: in the five-match Friendship Cup against Pakistan, he notched up his first half-century and top-scored in two matches.

  That was followed by a few impressive innings, including his maiden century, against Pakistan, in a match overshadowed by Saeed Anwar’s record-breaking 194. However, ODIs were still largely a struggle for Dravid, and perhaps never was that better illustrated than by his 21-ball 1 against Bangladesh in a Coca-Cola Triangular Series match in May 1998. Till the end of that year, his ODI record was strictly modest: an average of under 32, at a strike rate of 63, in 65 games.

  In his first ODI of 1999, Dravid broke the shackles with an outstanding unbeaten run-a-ball 123 against New Zealand in Taupo, and that kickstarted a sustained run of excellence over the next seven years. It included a fantastic World Cup in 1999 – 461 runs at 65.85 – and another run-a-ball century against New Zealand later that year, 153 in Hyderabad, which remained his highest ODI score. The 2003 World Cup was another big success – 318 runs at 63.60.

  Between 1999 and 2005, Dravid averaged almost 43 from 210 matches, scored ten of his 12 centuries, and won nine of his 14 Man-of-the-Match awards.

  Rahul Dravid’s ODI career

  Period

  ODIs

  Runs

  Average

  Strike rate

  100s/50s

  Till Dec 1998

  65

  1709

  31.64

  63.48

  1/12

  Jan 1999 to Dec 2005

  210

  7134

  42.97

  71.97

  10/53

  Jan 2006 onwards

  69

  2046

  35.27

  76.34

  1/18

  Career

  344

  10,889

  39.16

  71.24

  12/83

  In the seven years from 1999 to 2005, Dravid was among the most successful ODI batsmen in the world, which says a lot about his ability to work on his game and adapt. Among batsmen with at least 4000 ODI runs during this period, only three – Damien Martyn, Kallis and Tendulkar – had a higher average, while Dravid’s strike rate of 72 was very acceptable too. Batsmen like Inzamam-ul-Haq, Mohammad Yousuf and Sourav Ganguly, who were generally rated as far more free-stroking, only had marginally higher scoring rates.

  Top ODI batsmen between Jan 1999 and Dec 2005*

  Batsman

  ODIs

  Runs

  Average

  Strike rate

  100s/50s

  Damien Martyn

  163

  4411

  46.43

  78.18

  5/30

  Jacques Kallis

  177

  6348

  45.66

  70.69

  10/48

  Sachin Tendulkar

  151

  6181

  45.44

  85.07

  17/28

  Rahul Dravid

  210

  7134

  42.97

  71.97

  10/53

  Ricky Ponting

  179

  6443

  42.66

  80.48

  13/37

  Inzamam-ul-Haq

  180

  5772

  42.13

  75.61

  5/45

  Mohammad Yousuf

  194

  6502

  40.89

  75.28

  10/42

  Sourav Ganguly

  194

  7185

  40.82

  76.00

  17/41

  *Qualification: 4000 runs scored

  Of the 344 ODIs that Dravid played in, India won 160, and his contributions in those games were pretty significant: 5729 runs at 50.69, which made him one of only 11 batsmen to score 5000 or more runs in wins at 50-plus averages.

  Through some of that period between 1999 and 2004, apart from scoring tons of runs Dravid also kept wicket. He was competent enough at the job to do it 73 times, including at the 2003 World Cup. In those 73 games Dravid didn’t allow his batting to suffer, scoring 2300 runs at more than 44 per dismissal. Among wicketkeepers who have scored more than 2000 runs, only MS Dhoni has a higher average. Dravid’s debut as wicketkeeper was especially memorable: in the 1999 World Cup game against Sri Lanka, he smashed 145 off 129 balls and was in a 318-run stand for the second wicket with Ganguly, which at t
he time was the highest partnership for any wicket in ODIs. In fact, Dravid has been involved in both triple-century partnerships that have been recorded in ODI history: later in 1999, he shared a 331-run stand with Tendulkar against New Zealand, and in the process also notched up his highest score.

  Best batting averages of wicketkeepers in ODIs*

  Player

  ODIs

  Runs

  Average

  Strike rate

  100s/ 50s

  AB de Villiers

  37

  2009

  80.36

  99.65

  8/11

  MS Dhoni

  190

  6235

  49.09

  87.50

  7/40

  Rahul Dravid

  73

  2300

  44.23

  72.60

  4/14

  Kumar Sangakkara

  257

  8647

  39.84

  76.99

  9/63

  Adam Gilchrist

  282

  9410

  35.64

  96.94

  16/53

  Andy Flower

  186

  5845

  34.58

  73.71

  4/46

  Alec Stewart

  138

  4017

  33.47

  70.06

  4/26

  *Qualification: 2000 runs scored

  Of all the batsmen he played alongside, Dravid had the most success with Tendulkar and Ganguly, putting together 11 century partnerships and scoring more than 4000 runs with each. That makes him one of only three players – Tendulkar and Ganguly being the others – to have scored more than 4000 partnership runs with at least two batsmen.

  Dravid’s partnerships with these two were fruitful in World Cups too: he averaged 88 with Ganguly and almost 83 with Tendulkar. In fact, Dravid’s overall World Cup record was splendid, even though his last World Cup campaign ended in bitter disappointment in 2007. Among batsmen who scored at least 750 World Cup runs, only Viv Richards has a better average.

  Best World Cup batting averages*

  Batsman

  Matches

  Runs

  Average

  Strike rate

  100s/50s

  Viv Richards

  23

  1013

  63.31

  85.05

  3/5

  Rahul Dravid

  22

  860

  61.42

  74.97

  2/6

  Sachin Tendulkar

  45

  2278

  56.95

  88.98

  6/15

  Herschelle Gibbs

  25

  1067

  56.15

  87.38

  2/8

  Sourav Ganguly

  21

  1006

  55.88

  77.50

  4/3

  Martin Crowe

  21

  880

  55.00

  83.57

  1/8

  *Qualification: 750 runs scored

  Dravid’s stint as ODI captain is remembered largely for India’s shocking early exit in 2007, but India’s overall ODI record under his leadership was extremely healthy. In 79 games they won 42 and lost 33, giving them a win-loss ratio of 1.27. Among captains who have led India at least 50 times in ODIs, only Dhoni has a better ratio.

  Indian captains and their ODI records*

  Captain

  ODIs

  W/L

  Ratio

  Bat ave

  Strike rate

  MS Dhoni

  106

  59/37

  1.59

  52.92

  82.55

  Rahul Dravid

  79

  42/33

  1.27

  42.19

  75.42

  Mohammad Azharuddin

  174

  90/76

  1.18

  39.39

  78.46

  Kapil Dev

  74

  39/33

  1.18

  30.66

  105.74

  Sourav Ganguly

  146

  76/65

  1.16

  38.79

  76.32

  Sachin Tendulkar

  73

  23/43

  0.53

  37.75

  83.49

  *Qualification: 50 matches played as captain

  Like in Tests, though, the one blot on Dravid’s ODI career is his record against the best team of his era: in 39 innings against Australia, he had a highest score of 80, an average of 24.97 and a strike rate of 66.94. Those are disappointing numbers, especially given the number of matches he played against them. Of course, given Australia’s awesome bowling attack, plenty of other top ODI batsmen struggled too – Ganguly averaged 23.45, Anwar 23.55, and Sehwag 22.37. Against all the other teams, though, Dravid’s record was top-class, even in a format that was initially thought to be o
utside his comfort zone.

  S Rajesh is stats editor of ESPNcricinfo, where a version of this article was first published on March 9, 2012.

  Test match record

  Career averages

  Mat

  Inns

  NO

  Runs

  HS

  Ave

  SR

  100

  50

  overall

  164

  286

  32

  13288

  270

  52.31

  42.51

  36

  63

  Career summary

  Grouping

  Mat

  Inns

  NO

  Runs

  HS

  Ave

  SR

  100

  50

  ICC World XI

  1

  2

  0

  23

  23

  11.50

  31.08

  0

 

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