i had kinda hope speakman had died, what a pity
Shannon: "I'm just happy to see uniforms that look good. There's no requirement in cricket for "telling the teams apart" -- ahem Test Matches ahem -- and if you still have trouble the two guys with the bats are from the batting side!"
Canary Yellow! That's Australian Gold my friend and don't you fucking forget it! Canary Yellow indeed...
The best thing about Finance Minister Bill English\'s latest Budget is that it does finally signal a much greater role for the private sector in the New Zealand economy. And another step along the way to extract this country from the political cul-de-sac in which Helen Clark\'s Labour Government parked us.
Afridi, not good enough to play in the IPL.Yeah, right.
love dannyboys strike rate of 400. nice wee boost to his stats
HIGHEST PERCENTAGE OF TEAM RUNSRoss TaylorThis one's an unlikely winner - Taylor scored 782 runs in 2009, which is 18.19% of New Zealand's total runs scored in the year. The leading run-scorer of the year, Samaraweera, scored 17.22% of Sri Lanka's total runs as Sri Lanka had several high-scoring batsmen in 2009 - of the top six leading run-getters, four were Sri Lankans.
HIGHEST PERCENTAGE OF RUNS IN BOUNDARIESRoss TaylorTaylor struck nine sixes and 106 fours in the 782 runs he scored, a percentage of 61.13. Gayle was next at 59% (18 sixes and 82 fours in 739), while Watson had a percentage of 57.26. At the bottom of the pile was Paul Collingwood, with a percentage of just 39.78 (88 fours and two sixes in a tally of 915).
BATTING PAIRS OF THE YEAR: OPENERS(cut-off: at least eight innings)Brendon McCullum and Jesse RyderIn 11 innings this New Zealand pair put together 519 runs at an average of 47.18 and a scoring rate of 6.15 runs per over, giving them a partnership index score (average stand multiplied by runs per ball) of 48.36. India's Sehwag and Tendulkar were next, with an index score of 44.22 (average 40.20 at a scoring rate of 6.60 runs per over).
MOST DISCIPLINED: ODIsNew ZealandIn the 24 ODIs they played in 2009, New Zealand conceded only 203 extras, an average of 8.46 per match, which was the lowest among all teams. India and Bangladesh were next, with 11.4 extras each per match. New Zealand also had the biggest differential between extras gained while batting and extras conceded in the field - they got 341 and conceded 203, a difference of 138.