McCullum in a class of his own

A very small crowd at Eden Park No. 2 on Sunday afternoon bore witness to Brendon McCullum playing one of the great innings (170 of 108 balls) in New Zealand domestic cricket history.

To hit a century so dominant that it allows your team to get to a victory target of 311 within 43 overs is something very few players around the world are capable of – and to add to the feat he plundered New Zealand's new ball bowling attack to accomplish it.

Not only did he pummel Auckland's bowling in his opening blitzkrieg he seems to have recently learnt the extra (lower) gear needed to push on past the century mark and then control a run chase.

Brendon McCullum is – at this moment (and I do mean only right now) – the best ODI batsmen in the world.

He may not be flaying the greatest attacks in the world but the manner in which he goes about his business is certainly something special.

Until very recently I was completely against using him at the top of the Black Caps order in what seemed like a stop-gap move after he had been very successful as a closer, but even his stats are now reflecting that he and John Bracewell made the right decision.

If you disregard his first four ODIs - where he played as opener against Australia and South Africa and averaged 17.75 in the 2001/02 tri-series – his average at the top of the order has been 53.66 at a strike rate of 109.89.

He has failed to reach 10 on just four occasions and his next lowest score in his 14 recent outings as an opener is 35.

During these 14 innings he has hit 420 of his 644 runs as an opener in boundaries including 69 fours and 24 sixes.

Matt Hayden and Sachin Tendulkar are the two other current in-form opening batsmen in world cricket and even though both these two have a greater pedigree in the game neither are batting in a style nearly as explosive as McCullum right now.

In the same time period (from Oct 2007 until Mar 2008) Tendulkar and Hayden average significantly less individually and have hit less sixes combined.

You can't say the man won't make use of a powerplay.

The current blight on his record is his lack of centuries at international level but after his back-to-back tons against Canterbury and Otago I'm sure he has already learned how to put that aberration right.

His emergence as a world cricket superstar along with Jacob Oram and Daniel Vettori has at least left us with some star power to rely on in the upcoming test series.

We were never outmatched in the ODI series against the English but for the Tests I think we definitely are. It will take some special performances from our key players to even reach parity with this very good English team.

On another note it's been very good to see the New Zealand selectors push ahead their new blood policy and take a bet on Grant Elliot.

I'm not convinced he had quite earned his stripes in New Zealand but he arrived in Wellington with quite some reputation behind him after playing for South Africa 'A'.

As always a performance on the park will put to rest any question marks he has over his head.

Is Brendom McCullum the best in the world right now? What do you think of Grant Elliot's selection?

YOUR COMMENTS

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kylemillsmuliaina - posted Mar 3 11:39 pm
no one is consistant. every batsmen gets out of form sum time or another
kiwievafree - posted Mar 4 05:29 am
In the last couple of years we have seen McCullum just get better and better as a player allround, all in all he is moving up the best batter ladder and in time he will be up there with the best if not the best.
To say some of the bowlers he has faced are not the best maybe true, but then some of the black caps top order have also faced the same attack but done very little, this just shows he has some genuine greatness to one day be one of the greats.
s.k@xtra.co.nz - posted Mar 4 05:55 am
Youa are alright, it may be to early to say he is the best in the world, but if we remember back to december 2007 in Australia he did score 96 of 103balls in adelaide and averaged 35 for the series (Australia do have an alright bowling attack). I also note that Hayden in the same series scored a total of 46 runs at an average of 23. So perhaps right now hes is not the best in the world but hes also still young and should given the chance only improve.
ampermal - posted Mar 4 06:07 am
He's a good kiwi batsman. There's no way i will put him in the "one of the best batsman" (not even the best opener) class. Look at Shewag, Hayden, Gibbs, Kallis, Tendulkar, Sangakkara & do not forget Sanath Jayasuriya. Maybe in years to come McCullum will be mentioned in the same breath. For now, do not blow he's trumpet until he's actually one of the best. This is a KIWI problem. if someone (or team) do good we IMEDIATLY tell ourselves that that sport start (team)
concerned_response - posted Mar 4 06:12 am
"As a man thinketh in his heart so is he", and because I see some very unique similarities in the mentality of Brendon and Sir Donald Bradman, I would say that those who are skeptical, are going to find that those sticking there necks out here were just speaking from a higher vantage point that allows one to recognize greatness before it is obvious to everyone. In bowling Shane bond is also in a class of his own, who else has taken out the majority of Aussi batsmen singlehandedly in th
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