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The best Test XI of 2018

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31st December, 2018
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2018 is starting to fade in the rear-view mirror, but before we look ahead to 2019 and the final test between Australia and India in Sydney, we have to look back on the players who stood up over the last 12 months.

While it was a rough year for Australian cricket, there was plenty of excellence on show around the world throughout the year, and, in some respects at least, it was a changing of the guard sort of year with figures on this team and only just missing out who wouldn’t have even been close 12 months ago.

Onto the best XI of 2018.

1. Dimuth Karunaratne (Sri Lanka)
Karunaratne has benefited from barely leaving the sub-continent, sure, but he has had an excellent year at the top of the order for Sri Lanka.

He will finish the year in the top ten for total runs, having 743 at 46.43, including going past 50 on seven occasions with a single century.

His consistency in going past 50 and getting Sri Lanka off to good starts, admittedly in conditions which suited him more often than not, has got the nation ahead of the ball plenty of times throughout 2018.

He will have goals to improve and turn 50s into 100s during 2019, but he won’t be complaining about the past 12 months.

2. Aiden Markram (South Africa)
It was another strong 12 months for Markram, who has been a consistent rock at the top of the order for the Proteas.

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Facing some of the best attacks in the game including Australia and India, as well as making a trip to the sub-continent to take on Sri Lanka, there can be no doubting his place in the side.

Markram does edge out fellow South African opener Dean Elgar for the second spot, but finishing the year with 672 in the toughest spot in the batting order is better than a fair effort.

3. Cheteswhar Pujara (India)
The position of number three is an incredibly tough one to get right. To be successful here, you need to be able to both knuckle down and consolidate on the back of an early wicket, or take the game to the next level if the openers are able to build a solid platform.

Some of the best players to every grace a cricket field, like Ricky Ponting, made number three their own during their careers.

Pujara’s 2018 has put him on the right path to doing the same for India. His fighting century in the Adelaide Test against Australia shows exactly how far he has come, and he finishes the year with 837 runs, having been a key part of India’s tour of Australia.

4. Virat Kohli (c) (India)
Kohli was first picked for the team of the year, and is the undoubted choice as captain, even if he couldn’t get India over the line during their tough tour of England.

He has led from the front and rubber-stamped his authority as the best batsman in the world, finishing the year with 1322 runs at 55.08.

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It’s not quite as good as the year Steve Smith put together in 2017, but it’s not far away and while others have been inconsistent at times, Kohli has suffered no such fate, going past, going past 100 on five occasions and 50 a further four times in 21 innings.

Maybe the best number for Kohli is his strike rate, which has sat just below 60 for the entire year. Quick runs aren’t the order of the day in Test cricket, but he hasn’t been stopped by any attack.

Virat Kohli celebrates taking a wicket.

(Photo by Quinn Rooney/Getty Images)

5. Joe Root (England)
The English captain has had a strong year and will finish second on the total run-getters list for the year. He misses out on skippering because Kohli was just that good, but he wasnt far off given he led the side to that win over India and, with the exception of the Ashes which finished in January, England have had a pretty solid year.

Regardless, Root will finish just short of 1000 Test runs in the calendar year, sitting on 948 at 41, with a pair of centuries and a further six half centuries.

He will be frustrated by his inability to go the extra mile and turn starts into big centuries, but nonetheless, still a strong year for Root.

6. Kane Williamson (New Zealand)
Williamson may not have played many Tests in 2018, but he has made them all count, putting up runs at every opportunity for the New Zealanders.

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The Kiwi captain, who has become one of the best in the game, racked up 651 runs in just 12 innings, averaging 59 and going past 50 once in every two innings.

It’s been a stunning 12 months for Williamson and his spot in the team was never really in question, despite a lack of overall Tests.

Logic says if he had of played as many Tests as Kohli or Root, he may well have scored more runs than any other batsman this calendar year.

7. Jonny Bairstow (wk) (England)
The selection of wicketkeeper was a tricky one, mainly because none of them have really stood up with the bat over the last 12 months.

Bairstow gets the spot despite not keeping during England’s recent tour of Sri Lanka where he handed the gloves away to Ben Foakes.

On the plus side, he has batted extremely well with the middle order and tail throughout the year, racking up over 600 runs and doing it at a fair clip for the most part.

8. Nathan Lyon (Australia)
While Lyon received strong competition for the spinners spot from Dilruwan Perera of Sri Lanka, there was nothing between them at the end of the year.

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Perera had a slightly better average, however, had the benefit of playing most of his cricket throughout the year in the sub-continent as Sri Lanka didn’t make any major tours of note, except for the West Indies, which virtually doesn’t count at this stage.

Lyon, on the other hand, has bowled against some top batting attacks in tough spin bowling conditions. They include a tour of South Africa, a difficult trip to Pakistan and some home Tests against India.

The fact he has managed to end up at the top of the tree for wickets with 49 at an average of 34.02 is a testament to the way he has played his cricket this year in a struggling Australian team.

9. Mohammad Abbas (Pakistan)
What a breakout year it’s been for Mohammad Abbas. The Pakistani quick finishes 2018 with a strike rate most could only dream about, taking a wicket once every 36.3 balls.

He hasn’t done it through sheer pace or extreme ball movement, but rather, just deadly accurate consistently and the ability to get the ball to reverse swing when in the dry, barren conditions of the United Arab Emirates.

His performances against Australia in the recently completed series were outstanding, and finishing his first full year of Test cricket with 38 wickets makes him one of the more exciting debutants we have seen in recent times.

10. James Anderson (England)
Anderson just won’t go away. He might now be 36 years of age, but he hasn’t slowed down even a little bit and in fact, might just be getting better with age.

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He finishes the year in the top five for total wickets, ending with 43 at a ridiculously good average of 22.51.

He was a pivotal part of England’s series win over India through the middle of the year, and while he struggled during last year’s Ashes series in Australia, he was able to put all of that behind him and perform at the top of his game during 2018.

James Anderson drops a catch

(Photo by Philip Brown/Getty Images)

11. Kagiso Rabada (South Africa)
Kagiso Rababda will finish just about at the top of the tree for 2018. He is the best pace bowler in the world right now without a shadow of a doubt, playing in a South African attack which strikes fear into every opposition line-up they face.

He finishes 2018 with 52 wickets at 20.07, taking a wicket once every six and a half overs.

They are staggering stats to maintain across the entire year, especially when you consider they have played Australia (before the ball-tampering scandal) and India.

He was almost first picked for this side and wouldn’t look out of place in any high-performance team from 2018.

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Roarers, what did you make of 2018. Who would have made your Test team of the year?

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