It’s a World Cricket XI with a mysterious twist
By Kersi Meher-Homji, 28 Jun 2010 Kersi Meher-Homji is a Roar Expert
- Tagged:
- Cricket, International Cricket, Joel Garner, Richard Hadlee
One of the biggest fascinations amongsst cricket-lovers is selecting Best Elevens: a World XI, Post World War II XI vs. Pre WW II XI, Best left-handers XI vs. Best right-handers XI, Best ambidextrous XI, Best Northern Hemisphere XI vs. Best Southern Hemisphere XI, and so on. I have selected an Unusual World XI and it is up to you, Roarers, to guess the logic and method in my madness behind my selections.
Here it is in batting order (with striking statistics):
Barry Richards (508 runs at 72.57 in 4 Tests for South Africa)
Kepler Wessels (1761 runs in 24 Tests for Australia and 1027 runs in 16 Tests for South Africa)
Majid Khan (3931 runs in 63 Tests for Pakistan)
Viv Richards (8540 runs and 122 catches in 121 Tests for West Indies)
Garry Sobers, vice-captain (8032 runs at 57.78, 235 wickets and 109 catches in 93 Tests for
West Indies)
Rohan Kanhai, wicket-keeper (6227 runs in 79 Tests for West Indies)
Imran Khan, captain (3807 runs and 362 wickets at 22.81 in 88 Tests for Pakistan)
Richard Hadlee (3124 runs and 431 wickets at 22.29 in 86 Tests for New Zealand)
Michael Holding (249 wickets at 23.68 in 60 Tests for West Indies)
Wes Hall (192 wickets at 26.38 in 48 Tests for West Indies)
Tony Lock (174 wickets at 25.58 in 49 Tests for England).
Hall and Holding will open the attack. Then Imran and Hadlee will take over. The spin will be in the palm and fingers of Lock and Sobers. Kanhai will keep wickets.
Sadly, Lock will be there only in spirit.
12th man: Alvin Kallicharran (WI). Reserves: Andy Roberts, Joel Garner and Winston Davis (WI), Jeff Crowe (NZ), Younus Khan (Pakistan), Colin Milburn, weighing 18 stone, Graeme Hick and Gladstone Small (England) and Rusi Surti (India).
Roarers, could you spot the rationale in my squad selection? Hint: England’s John Hampshire will be one of the umpires.
Second hint: Chris Gayle and David Murray from West Indies, Pakistan’s Shahid Afridi and Sri Lanka’s Muttiah Muralitharan, Lasith Malinga and Ajantha Mendis were considered, but were found ineligible by my strict criterion.
So have you decoded my rationale? Leave your theories below this post.
I’ll be unveiling the answer at 4pm today!
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- Explore:
- Cricket, International Cricket, Joel Garner, Richard Hadlee

David Barry said | June 28th 2010 @ 10:51am | Report comment
They’re all foreigners (well sort of, in Wessels’ case) to have played Sheffield Shield cricket.
Vinay Verma said | June 28th 2010 @ 11:55am | Report comment
Kersi,this is even too esoteric for me. I can only think as David barry does that they all played SS. But I am not sure about Majid Khan and michael holding. Tony Lock I know settled down in WA and Barry Richards also. I do not think Richard hadlee played SS.
Or could it be they have all scored a Test fifty. or they have all captained their country?
I think you have stumped me.
Kersi Meher-Homji said | June 28th 2010 @ 12:01pm | Report comment
David and Vinay,
It will be revealed at 4pm today.
Whiteline said | June 28th 2010 @ 2:46pm | Report comment
I reckon David has it. Didn’t Hadlee play for Tasmania?
Kersi Meher-Homji said | June 28th 2010 @ 3:57pm | Report comment
You are all correct.
My team along with the 12th man and reserves are Test cricketers who have played first-class cricket for different Australian States in Sheffield Shield / Pura Cup.
Garry Sobers, Barry Richards, Joel Garner, Younus Khan, Jeff Crowe and Gladstone Small for South Australia; Wes Hall, Viv Richards, Majid Khan, Kepler Wessels, Alvin Kallicharran, Graeme Hick and Rusi Surti for Queensland; Imran Khan and Andy Roberts for NSW; Rohan Kanhai, Tony Lock and Colin Milburn for Western Australia and Michael Holding, Richard Hadlee, Winston Davis and John Hampshire for Tasmania.
Surti became the first bowler to take a hat-trick for Queensland in Sh. Sh.
Gayle, Afridi, Muralitharan, Malinga and Mendis do not qualify because they played only Twenty20 cricket for Australian States. Overseas Test cricketers who played only grade cricket in Australia (namely England’s Mike Gatting, West Indian Desmond Haynes and Gus Logie among others) are not considered for selection.
Roarers, have I missed any overseas Test cricketer who played Sheffield Shield / Pura Cup?
Why as many as nine out of 22 (41%) were from the Windies? And why has the import all but discontinued?
Chaos said | June 28th 2010 @ 7:44pm | Report comment
Can you get their Shield statistics?
David Barry said | June 28th 2010 @ 8:04pm | Report comment
Off-hand, I can think of the recent Zimbabweans – Murray Goodwin (with WA either side of his time playing for Zim), Sean Ervine (WA), Andy Flower (SA).
Chaos: if you dig up their player profiles on CricketArchive, click on ‘list of matches and more detailed statistics’, and then on the next page there’s a line saying ‘First-class record for each team batting and fielding and bowling’.
sheek said | June 28th 2010 @ 8:15pm | Report comment
Kersi,
I only came upon this after the 4pm deadline. However, you could have had your specialist keeper as Alan Knott played for Tassie in 1969/70 (admittedly before they received Sheffield Shield admission in 1977/78).
Also, Lance Gibbs played the same season with South Australia while the leading 15 Aussies were in India & South Africa. Admittedly, he had a very poor season.
Barry Richards had a mega-season for SA in 1970/71. He was hoping to get some first-hand knowledge of Aussie conditions & players before South Africa’s tour in 1971/72, which tragically from a sporting viewpoint, was called off.
Anyway, Richards hit a century against every other state as well as the touring Englishmen. He was particularly harsh on the Englishmen, hitting 224 & 146 (two separate matches). He also hit 356 against WA; 178 against NSW; 155 against Qld & 105 against Vic.
For the Australian season in 10 first class matches, he hit 1,538 runs at an average of 109.85, with 6 centuries & 3 half-centuries. This is one reason why people like me unhesitantly nominate him as the best opener from all countries in the past 40 years.
Did you know Andy Roberts in 1976/77 was the first non-Australian to represent NSW? To this day Victoria has never selected a non-eligible Australian player in its Shield team (as far as I’m aware).
The reason why so many Windies have played Sheffield Shield is because it fitted in with their own season. They usually went straight from Australian Sheffield Shield to Caribbean Shell Shield (or its variations).
South Australia have tended to benefit most from overseas players. Apart from the afore-mentioned Richards & Gary Sobers, who scored a stack of runs & took a stack of wickets with SA in the mid-60s, Joel Garner was also supreme in 1982/83.
In 8 matches, Garner took a whopping 55 wickets at 17.75, including 4 x 5/fors in an innings & 2 x 10/fors in a match. His best bowling was 7/78. Imran Khan also had an outstanding season with NSW in 1984/85.
While Englishman Tony Lock is credited with giving WA the confidence that led them to becoming the dominant cricket state in the 70s & 80s. Kepler Wessels was also outstanding during his 7 seasons with Queensland.
Kersi, the Sri Lankan leg-spinner Malcolm Francke was a team mate of Surti’s at Qld in the early 70s. Although by that time I think he was eligible for Aussie selection.
Greg Russell said | July 6th 2010 @ 6:25pm | Report comment
“To this day Victoria has never selected a non-eligible Australian player in its Shield team (as far as I’m aware).”
Paul Collingwood played several seasons of Melbourne grade cricket while David Hookes was at the helm for Victoria. Collingwood, a fringe England player at the time, was eligible for Victorian selection. Whenever Hookes was asked about this, he would respond “The reason I don’t pick him is not because he’s English. It’s purely because he’s not good enough.”
One wonders what Hookes would say to this now. I suspect it would be “He’s still not good enough to play for Victoria”! And he may have a point. Just at look at the way Andy Flower flopped at South Australia. Australian first-class cricket has always proven a very difficult environment for foreigners, even the most highly credentialed ones. That is why Barry Richards’ season for South Australia is so amazing: not just of itself, but also because he did it as a foreigner. Sir Donald Bradman, the man who got Richards to South Australia, chose Richards in his best XI of all time, and said that his season for South Australia was a major reason for this.
Brett McKay said | July 6th 2010 @ 7:10pm | Report comment
Vastly underrated player, Paul Collingwood, I’d pick him in my team every day of the week and twice on Saturdays….
And Greg, hasn’t Darren Patterson played for Victoria since his one Test for England anyway??
Greg Russell said | July 7th 2010 @ 8:09pm | Report comment
David Hookes died in January 2004. So one has to remember that when Hookes made his assessment, Collingwood wasn’t nearly the player that he now is.
Darren Pattinson was born in England but grew up in Australia. He had already played for Victoria when he was plucked from obscurity to play for England. It is still reasonable to suspect that this mysterious selection was to some extent motivated by a desire to make him ineligible for Australia. My point is that Darren Pattinson should not be seen as a foreigner who has played for Victoria. Rather, he should be seen as an Australian who has played for England.
Darren’s brother James is 11 years younger, was born in Australia, played for Australia U19, and according to my spies in Melbourne is a super prospect who is likely to become a formidable pace bowler for Australia. The Pattinson parents may have been born in England but their boys are Australian.
Brett McKay said | July 6th 2010 @ 7:12pm | Report comment
groan….. I’ve just seen David’s comment DIRECTLY below mine; way to scroll down, Brett…..
David Barry said | June 28th 2010 @ 8:38pm | Report comment
Sheek, Victoria have picked Darren Pattinson, who won’t be eligible for Australia again for another 4 years I think, since he played a Test for England in 2008.
sheek said | June 28th 2010 @ 8:59pm | Report comment
DB,
Thanks for that. Like my music, I don’t pay the same attention to Shield cricket that I did in the 80s….. !!!
Kersi Meher-Homji said | June 28th 2010 @ 9:54pm | Report comment
Thank you, Sheek and David for your additions.
Lancashire’s Jack Simmons also played for Tasmania but he was not a Test cricketer.
Let me feature four well-known imports who were outstanding in Sheffield Shield cricket starting with Garry Sobers, one of the greatest in the game.
The West Indian side of 1960-61 was the most popular to tour Australia. Sir Donald Bradman was so impressed with Sobers that he encouraged him to play the following season as it would rekindle interest in the Sheffield Shield. With Wes Hall and Rohan Kanhai playing for other states, the Sheffield Shield enjoyed its best trading year since Bradman.
Sobers’ brilliant all-round skill was demonstrated in a match against New South Wales at the Adelaide Oval. In the 2nd innings for South Australia Sobers scored a magnificent 251 against an attack boasting Alan Davidson and Richie Benaud. He then proceeded to crash through the NSW top and middle order dismissing Ian Craig, Norm O’Neill, Bob Simpson and Neil Harvey, finishing with figures of 6 for 72.
Sobers scored a century and took 5 wickets in an innings against NSW on three separate occasions.
In 1962-63 Sobers returned to South Australia and proceeded to become the first player to do the double of 1000 runs and 50 wickets in an Australian domestic season, a feat he repeated the following season. In all, he took 137 wickets at 26.02.
Barry Richards played for S Australia in 1970-71 and had a brilliant season scoring 1538 at a Bradmanesque average of 109.86, top score 356 (including an incredible 325 in a day) vs. WA against an attack of Graham McKenzie, Dennis Lillee and Tony Lock. Off the last ball of the day he casually strolled down the wicket to hit Lillee straight to the sight screen for four.
South Australia won the Sheffield Shield that year and Bradman included him in his all time greatest eleven.
Tony Lock came to Western Australia in 1962-63 after being omitted from the M.C.C squad to tour Australia. He captured 316 wickets from 1962-71 for WA at 24.59 with 7-53 as his best.
Joel Garner took 55 wickets at 17.74 for SA in 1982-83, his best being 7-78.