And which bowler completed his full quota of overs in 20 ODIs in a row?

Anantha Narayanan22-Aug-2020My last article was a wacky look at various streaks in Test cricket. I am sure you will have found mention of quite a few of the streaks in that article and in this one, on streaks ODIs, either in ESPNcricinfo’s huge collection of records, in Steven Lynch’s excellent weekly columns, or in features written by members of the ESPNcricinfo stats team. However, these two articles are probably the first place where you will read about all of these streaks in one place, by format.Let me first clear a slight misconception about the contents of this article. A number of readers thought that the Test-streaks piece was a records article and worded their comment emails as such. These articles are not about records per se but streaks; the distinction is fine but it exists.There were a few good suggestions from readers and to complete the coverage, I will first refer to those relevant to the Test format. Yomesh Kothari suggested non-zero streaks. David Shead suggested one on bowler-batsman combinations. As earlier, the year refers to the end of the concerned streak.Batsmen dismissed by bowler in consecutive innings: There have been seven instances of a batsman being dismissed by a particular bowler six times in succession. The combinations are Walter Read by Charlie Turner, Dilip Vengsarkar by Imran Khan, Kris Srikkanth by Wasim Akram, Greg Mathews by Richard Hadlee, Graeme Hick by Curtly Ambrose, Matthew Hayden by Makhaya Ntini, and Daren Ganga by Shaun Pollock. Of these seven, the interesting ones are the Srikkanth-Akram one (lbw lbw lbw b b lbw) and Hayden-Ntini (all catches).Consecutive non-zero scores: David Gower had a terrific run of 119 innings between August 1982 and December 1990, during which he was not dismissed for a duck. Richie Richardson had a sequence of 96 innings without a zero in 1991. Sachin Tendulkar had a sequence of 91 such innings in 2013, and Allan Border a streak of 89 innings in 1988. (A 0* is taken as a non-zero innings.)Jim Burke, the Australian opening batsman, had a career of 44 innings, between February 1951 and February 1959, without ever being dismissed for a zero.Quite a few readers who wrote in mentioned the longevity of the record of Charles Bannerman’s innings in the first ever Test. He scored 165 not out in a completed innings of 245. This 67.3% value remains, to date, the highest percentage share of a completed team innings. So this record has stood for 52,400 days and counting.Now let us move on to the ODI format.

Player combination

Same 11 players: Pakistan played the same XI in seven ODIs in 2002, between ODI #1825 and ODI #1834. The team was Imran Nazir, Shahid Afridi, Mohammad Yousuf, Younis Khan, Abdul Razzaq, Inzamam-ul-Haq, Rashid Latif (wk), Wasim Akram, Saqlain Mushtaq, Waqar Younis(c) and Shoaib Akhtar. Pakistan won five and lost two of those matches. South Africa (twice), India and New Zealand have played the same team in six consecutive ODIs.Same opening pair: This is a rarely mentioned streak. It is not a surprise that Adam Gilchrist and Mark Waugh opened in 42 consecutive innings between April 1998 and October 1999. They averaged 41.5 runs for the opening wicket during this run. David Boon and Geoff Marsh opened in 40 consecutive ODIs (average stand 40.6) between 1987 and 1989. Marcus Trescothick and Nick Knight also opened in 40 ODIs in a row (average 38.4) between October 2001 and March 2003.Same opening bowlers: This one is a surprise; rather than more famous and established fast-bowling partnerships from other teams, it is Kapil Dev and Manoj Prabhakar who opened the bowling in 53 consecutive innings between March 1990 and March 1993.Batsmen dismissed by bowler in consecutive innings: Gary Kirsten was dismissed by Dominic Cork in five consecutive innings in 1996. Collins Obuya was dismissed by Graeme Cremer in five consecutive innings in 2009. Sixteen batsmen have been dismissed by the same bowler four times. The more interesting streak was when Devon Smith was dismissed leg before wicket on four occasions by Mohammad Hafeez. Adil Rashid dismissed Mitchell Marsh and Ashton Agar four times each.

Results

Wins: In 2003, either side of the World Cup, Australia won 21 ODIs in a row. This streak was ended by an away loss in the West Indies. South Africa, twice, and Pakistan had runs of 12 consecutive wins.