Ten things I learnt from watching Steve Waugh run out his batting partner 66 times

By RobT / Roar Rookie

There was a recent story where Shane Warne discovered that Steve Waugh was involved in 104 run outs in international cricket, but was dismissed in only 31 of the incidents.

That is a long way under the 50-ish per cent you would expect, and Warne used this to prolong his post-retirement hobby of saying Steve Waugh is selfish in varying ways.

Steve Waugh declined to comment.

Happier times for Warnie and Steve Waugh. (Photo by Neal Simpson/EMPICS via Getty Images)

The non-response makes me wonder, what good is a baited hook when the fish won’t bite? What is the use of a red rag without the charging bull?

I don’t know the answer about fishing, but Steve Waugh’s feelings on red rags are pretty well known. They are extremely useful for tucking into the waistband of your cricket trousers for easy access to wipe the sweat from your brow during a series-winning century at Sabina Park.

But is Steve Waugh actually selfish?

I went to YouTube and watched 66 dismissals to find out. I assume the seven I couldn’t view come from international tours in the 1980s and early 1990s that were not filmed. I looked at each dismissal and tried to determine whether it was Waugh or his batting partner at fault.

Here are ten things I learnt.

1. Steve Waugh is not a selfish player
This is the most important learning of all.

From the 66 dismissals, there were five instances where it was clearly neither batsman’s fault. For the other 61 dismissals, most involved obvious blame, but sometimes it wasn’t clear for a range of reasons – lack of context about the match situation, poor camera angles, poor sound and vision quality, and uncertainty about the exact nature of the miscommunication between the players. In those cases I made a subjective judgment, rather than sit on the fence a dozen or more times.

After doing this, by my count Waugh was at fault 26 times, but his partners were responsible for their own downfall 35 times.

2. Jonty Rhodes is maybe the greatest cover fielder of all time
Of the five no-fault dismissals, three involved a tail-ender being run out in the last over on an ODI or attempting to farm the strike to Waugh. The other two times involved Allan Border: one where a straight drive brushes the bowler’s fingertips, which is always a fluke, but another where Jonty Rhodes is just far too good for any batting pair.

There was a lot of great ground fielding and throws from various cricketers among the dismissals. My favourite is a teenager named Sachin Tendulkar charging in from the deep while wearing an oversized white cap – but only Rhodes left me contemplating that there was no escape from losing a wicket in that moment.

3. The stories about the Waugh brothers running between the wickets badly are true
Mark Waugh was run out eight times batting with Steve, twice as many times as anyone else. Almost all of them were them were horrible, out by half-the-pitch mix-ups.

In their defence, Mark probably batted with Steve more than anyone else in his international career. Also, batting together from childhood probably means they were able to steal a lot of extra runs in situations less familiar batting pairs wouldn’t have attempted. But when it went wrong, it really went wrong.

4. The other most common Waugh victims are…
With four dismissals each: Michael Bevan, David Boon, Allan Border and Simon O’Donnell.

I’ve already highlighted that Border was unlucky to fall victim to a touched straight drive and Jonty Rhodes. Bevan and Waugh were about half-half on the blame, while O’Donnell was mostly pushing with Waugh for extra runs late in one-day innings. Only David Boon can claim to have been run out by Waugh every time.

5. Speed kills
Michael Bevan, Dean Jones and Mike Veletta each ran themselves out twice, attempting ones nobody without their pace and confidence would even attempt. So you can be too fast.

6. But slow and steady also does not win the race
Steve Waugh is not Bevan quick, but he has a decent motor, even in his later years when hampered by earlier injuries to his back, groin and hamstring. Those that get left behind are normally lumbering fast bowlers on the second or third run: Jo Angel, Brendan Julian, and Merv Hughes.

(Clive Mason /Allsport)

7. Late 1980s ODI running could be comically bad
A lot of the times Steve Waugh runs people out early in his career are remarkably similar. The other batsman hits the ball to wide mid-on in a World Series Cricket match, and the fielder from short midwicket cuts off the angle and throws down the stumps. Over and over again.

It was like the running hadn’t quite adjusted to improved fielding standards. I do recall Allan Border running out many batsmen the same way when it was Australia’s turn to field. The instances of this type of run out are far less frequent as Waugh’s career moves forward.

8. Don’t take on the fielder’s arm outside Australian grounds
Another common dismissal is going for a second or third run on the smaller grounds outside Australia, especially in the Caribbean.

9. The typical Steve Waugh at-fault run out is…
Waugh is on strike, and taps the ball off the back foot into the area just behind square on the off side. This is already a black spot for uncertainty about calling responsibility between batsmen. From here, Waugh often does one of two things to compound the uncertainty that leads to his partners demise.

The first is that he will take a step or two with no intention of running, only to see his partner has come for the run and is now trying to turn back mid-pitch.

The second is that Waugh will call and sprint without reply, leaving his ball-watching or more cautious partner high and dry at the keeper’s end.

10. Finally, the least surprising thing from watching 66 dismissals…
Is that a cricketer nicknamed ‘Fat Cat’ struggled running between the wickets.

The Crowd Says:

2020-06-22T09:40:38+00:00

Dwanye

Roar Rookie


Yep maybe true Dingo. Possibly a better reading is what teammates have to say. Is there other apart from Warne that hold that opinion?

2020-06-22T09:33:34+00:00

Dwanye

Roar Rookie


Yeah jameswm it was and to me complaining, blind faith you can come good after being shown they got your measure With the data backing this up, being bitter about the captain not Backing you and having faith in you, that is selfish. Lol. Imagine how much more Warne would carry on about the ‘dropping’ if the team had lost the test.

2020-06-22T06:32:51+00:00

Insult_2_Injury

Roar Rookie


Fun reading.

2020-06-22T06:18:21+00:00

qwetzen

Roar Rookie


The difference Popey is that no-one's claiming Clarke was all gritty. Mind you, a lot of people describe him as something that rhymes with 'grit'...

2020-06-22T05:36:03+00:00

Trevor

Guest


At least have the courage to use your own name, Warney.

2020-06-22T05:11:09+00:00

DingoGray

Roar Guru


A nice article. I'm not sure though with the mere number of run / outs- that you'll truly debunk the selfish claim as a myth. I think there is a number of other things associated to Steve Waugh indicating a little bit of selfishness. But it doesn't matter at all. Everyone has absolutely respect what he was able to achieve in the Baggy green. He clearly didn't have the natural ability of others (including his own brother) but he absolutely drained every ounce of what he had out of himself.

2020-06-22T04:44:46+00:00

Pope Paul VII

Roar Rookie


I think Boony was deceptively nimble or maybe got wiser as he got older.

2020-06-22T04:42:24+00:00

Pope Paul VII

Roar Rookie


That's not uncommon. Clarke 31.9 for example.

2020-06-22T03:59:54+00:00

JGK

Roar Guru


That 80 was his last Test innings as well!

2020-06-22T00:06:02+00:00

Peter Farrar

Guest


I'm just impressed with the amount of research that went into this article.

2020-06-21T23:38:01+00:00

qwetzen

Roar Rookie


You are not alone. And you can fault his record. He was rubbish in the 4th innings. 25.4, hs 80.

2020-06-21T23:23:05+00:00

qwetzen

Roar Rookie


How come Warne never cops this splashback when he disses John Buchanan? Something he's done more frequently than he's sniped at Waugh.

2020-06-21T22:36:09+00:00

qwetzen

Roar Rookie


You left out 'sporting' before "genius people"... :happy:

2020-06-21T10:36:15+00:00

Pope Paul VII

Roar Rookie


Lower than Tubby clinging to the captaincy with no runs?

2020-06-21T04:49:20+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


Isn't he the one credited for improving McGrath's batting? Geez you're a big fan. The article actually blew away the myth of the selfish run-outs - it didn't reinforce it.

2020-06-21T03:47:38+00:00

Ace

Roar Rookie


Very interesting reading. I hope I'm not picked to pieces here but watching Waugh over the years he left me with the feeling that he was selfish. Run outs aside it was the feeling I got. I think I'm right when he said it was up to the tail enders to bat for their own survival rather than being protected by him. As he often batted lower he was left with the tail . Cannot fault his grit and record but it was just a feeling I had.

2020-06-21T02:27:00+00:00

Pope Paul VII

Roar Rookie


Well run RobT.

2020-06-20T23:20:05+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


You are right about the claimed catches. And there were some selfish run-outs but in the overal scheme of things he was the right person to captain after Taylor. I think Taylor being selected was not only right of itself but also sent a message to Waugh to smarten up. And genius people are rarely perfect and Waugh and Warne are excellent examples.

2020-06-20T22:44:09+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Waugh is one of my greatest captains. He was right to drop Warne. Both are very indomitable. Warne should pull his head in as he is wrong.

2020-06-20T17:17:10+00:00

Mike B

Guest


I'm tired of Warnie's inability to grow up and move on. The way he has held a grudge over being dropped for the one test in the West Indies proves exactly why Waugh was chosen ahead of him to be captain in the first place. Warne was a brilliant player with a great tactical cricket brain but he is a deeply flawed personality - prone to jealousy, makes bad decisions, lacks discipline and honesty in his personal life etc. These are all qualities that are needed in the role of Aussie cricket captain. Can you imagine Waugh ever being caught sexting on tour while his wife was busy at home raising their kids? I rest my case.

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