That’s not a particularly arresting statistic on first glance, but think about it. When Virender Sehwag passes 100 he almost always hits in excess of 150. That’s something.
A running theme of this site of late has been the importance of imposing yourself on the opposition. We alluded to it in our retirement posts about Marcus Trescothick and Adam Gilchrist. Virender Sehwag is a batsman who really can affect the way his opponents think and act. He can change a game beyond his own contribution.
Scoring a common-or-garden hundred is worthy. It’s not something to be sniffed at, but a hundred rarely decides a match in its own right. Bowlers decide matches really. However, if you can score 150 plus, 200 plus or 300 plus, you can win with a significantly poorer set of bowlers.
The great thing about Virender Sehwag is that he scores huge numbers of runs at a ridiculous speed. Concede 540 as India did in this match and you should really be hoping for a draw at best. Not with Sehwag at the crease. He’s probably the only batsman in the world who can score at a run a ball for such an extended period of time that you can overhaul a score like that and set a target with time left in the game.
Dropping Virender Sehwag was mental. You don’t average 50 after 50-odd Tests without being a decidedly gifted batsman.
Virender Sehwag hits the fastest Test 300 of all time against South Africa
Brian Lara should be looking at his telly nervously tomorrow…
Don’t jinx him, Suave!
Somehow, Sehwag has just never seemed that good to me. He clearly is, but somehow he’s never quite commanded tthe same respect in my head.
If I hear ‘Tendulkar’, ‘Dravid’ or ‘Lara’, I think “Wow, now that’s a great batsman!” Maybe it’s some kind of aura?
Or maybe it’s the way his name sounds. Sehwag. Not exactly one for chanting on the terraces…
It’s probably just me. I’m hungover and rambling.
We’ll get the highlights up for you in a bit, Mahinda. We just watched them and glazed over. It was just too much to take in.
He is that good.
On second thoughts, we won’t put the highlights up. Demand is rather too high for the poor old internet to cope with.