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Monday, June 06, 2005

Nasser Hussain's top 10 Australian cricketers

June's 10

Nasser Hussain's best Australian cricketers

Sunday June 5, 2005

1 Shane Warne

The art of leg-spin bowling was dying until Warne resurrected it. He's been great for Australia and cricket as a whole. Whether it was his bowling, his blond streaks, his weight problems or sledging, there was always something to talk about. One of my last games for Essex was against Hampshire when he had just finished his year-long ban. 'It's good to have you back, Warnie,' I said - and I meant it! I loved facing him. There would be a few words exchanged. But you would feel, too, that you were really being tested. It says everything that in all the years I played against him, I can count on one hand the number of crap balls he bowled. He would have made a great Australia captain, too.

2 Steve Waugh

You thought you had him down and out, then he would come right back at you. In January 2003, he came in at Sydney with Australia 56 for three and his own form in question. A few hours later, he was stroking the last ball of the day to the boundary to bring up a century. I was never sure how good he was as a captain because he had so many great players in his team. But he deserves credit for changing the nature of Test cricket. Draws were no longer good enough. Only a win would do. If that meant fast scoring and bold declarations, then so be it.

3 David Boon

Boonie's a Tasmanian and he always seemed to be slightly apart from the other Aussies, who came from the mainland. He would stand there at short leg, the helmet on, looking out at you over that big moustache of his, never saying a word, while everyone around him was losing his head. It was quite disconcerting. It made you want to know whether he rated you as a batsman. He was equally unassuming and undemonstrative when batting but he piled up run after run at number three - a good player to come in first wicket down. He was a very hard man to dislodge.

4 Mark Taylor

I enjoyed coming up against Mark because he played the game in the right way. Unlike some Australians he never went in for sledging, but he was a gutsy player. I watched him in the field as he scored a century at Edgbaston in 1997. It was obvious that he was out of nick and that his team would lose, but he kept going because that's the kind of player he was. As a captain, he was very bold. His decision to bat first at Old Trafford later in that series looked like madness. But Mark had a plan and that was to have Shane Warne bowling at us later in the match after the pitch had dried out. When Warnie cleaned up in the final innings of the game, he was fully vindicated.

5 Glenn McGrath

Aggressive, very aggressive. Everything a coach tells a bowler to do - to think his over out, to seek out a batsman's weakness, when to attack and when to contain - he did it. He could be a strike bowler or a control bowler. My only criticism of him is that he could sometimes lose the plot. If, as a captain or a batsman, you saw that, then you sensed that you could get under his skin and score a few runs. Alan Mullally did that to him when we won at Melbourne in 1998.

6 Jason Gillespie

A very fine bowler who, with a bit more luck with injuries, could by now have taken nearly as many wickets as McGrath. But he is a lot more relaxed than McGrath. He played it tough on the pitch, yet he seemed to have a sense of perspective. At the end of a match, you would often find him and Mark Butcher together, having a beer, and you knew that whatever they were talking about, it wouldn't be cricket.

7 Allan Border

I didn't play against Allan that many times, but he was a team-mate at Essex for a few seasons. It was there that I saw just what a tough competitor he was. He wasn't the most talented of batsmen, but he squeezed every last drop out of his ability and he never made excuses. It was his no-nonsense approach that got Australia back on track in the late Eighties. He was also a bloody good bloke.

8 Adam Gilchrist

One of the top 10 players of all time. Along with Viv Richards and Brian Lara, he is probably the most destructive batsman of the modern era. With his aggressive approach, he has done almost as much as Steve Waugh to change cricket. He has absolutely no fear of failure. Christ, at Adelaide in 2002, he hit Richard Dawson for six on his first ball! As a keeper, he would have to be the best in the world and he is also a real sportsman, which is not something you can always say about the Aussies.

9 Mark Waugh

Mark was one of the old school. He didn't go in for practice much - he just needed a few throw-downs, then he would go out and score the most beautiful innings you had seen. I remember a hundred he scored for Essex at Ilford against Middlesex. He was a great player of spin bowling and he drove Phil Tufnell mad that day. There weren't many better slip catchers, either. When he wasn't playing, Mark just wanted a beer, a round of golf or a day at the races, and he was happy.

10 Ricky Ponting

I know he's had his problems with gambling and drinking, but I think that has made Ricky a better captain. It means he can understand players who have also been through difficult times. A model pro such as Graham Gooch or Alec Stewart isn't always the best person to lead a side. His batting exuded class. When our guys bowled at him, they knew their length had to be perfect. Even that sometimes wasn't enough. At Headingley, in 2001, he hit Alex Tudor for a couple of sixes off balls most players would have blocked.

Rationale

This month's 10 was selected by Nasser Hussain. Here he justifies his choice:

I know there are many great Australian cricketers, but I can choose from only those I played against. My first Ashes Test was in 1993 and, you might say, it was my bad luck that it was then that the Aussies began to establish their supremacy in world cricket. Over the next 10 years, I never won a series against them.

But I always enjoyed playing Australia. Everything I wanted from cricket was a challenge and that's what they gave you. Even when I put Australia in on the first day of the opening Test at Brisbane in November 2002 and they scored 364 for the loss of just two wickets, I still preferred to be playing them than anyone else.

If you want to beat the Aussies, you have to resist their bullying. You have to be immune to what Steve Waugh called 'mental disintegration'. I think that's what you see in the England guys - Botham, Gough, Thorpe and, dare I say it, Hussain - who have done well against them.

A lot of people around the cricket world are eagerly waiting for Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath to retire. There's no doubt that when those two are out of the side - as happened when we beat them at Sydney in 2003 - they lack something. When they go, we'll get a better idea of how good the others are.

I have been retired for a year now. The only time I shall begin to miss cricket will be when that first Ashes Test starts in July. I'll be itching to get out on the pitch all over again.

ยท Nasser Hussain played 96 Tests for England, 45 as captain, scoring 5,764 runs. He will be commentating on the NatWest series, which starts on 16 June and is broadcast exclusively on Sky Sports.

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