Virender Sehwag sets the pace

Published March 17, 2009
Indias Virendar Sehwag balances his bat on his shoulder as he leaves the nets during team training the day before their first test cricket match against New Zealand in Hamilton, March 17, 2009. -Reuters

MUMBAI After hitting the seventh fastest century in one-day cricket, Virender Sehwag goes into Indias test series against New Zealand carrying a reputation as the worlds most destructive batsman.

`Hes now very much in a class of his own and is easily the most destructive player in the game today,` New Zealand batting great Martin Crowe wrote in Mumbai tabloid Mid Day.

`Given his innings in test cricket, triple hundreds, exploits in Twenty20s and, obviously, one-dayers, he continues to defy really what batsmen have been trying to do for ages,` the former New Zealand captain wrote.

Sehwags century in the fourth one-day international in Hamilton last Wednesday was the fastest by an Indian.

The explosive opener, who spent nearly a year out of the Indian test side after being dropped for poor form, hit 100 in 60 balls, reaching the mark with a six.

He finished with 125 not out in a 201-run opening stand in 23.3 overs in a rain-hit ODI to help India secure their first series victory on New Zealand soil.

Sehwag notched up a 27-ball 40 with three sixes and as many fours in the final match on Saturday which New Zealand won by eight wickets to register their only victory in the five-match series.

The three-test series between the two teams begins in Hamilton on Wednesday.

SPECTACULAR COMEBACK

Englands Kevin Pietersen and West Indian captain Chris Gayle are among batsmen in contemporary cricket capable of changing the course of a game in a matter of minutes.

Australias Adam Gilchrist was acknowledged as the ultimate destructive match-winner of this decade until he retired last year.

The 30-year-old Sehwag has been amassing runs and setting up victories with ridiculous ease since his spectacular comeback in January last year and could well be the worlds best batsman on current form.

A leaner-looking Sehwag smashed test crickets quickest triple century against South Africa and a double hundred of rare quality against Sri Lankas spinner Ajanta Mendis to announce his return after having been dropped in 2007.

Although he has always been aggressive, he demonstrated a tighter technique and a refreshing new attitude as he racked up 1,462 runs in 14 tests in 2008 at an impressive average of 56.23.

Sehwag also scored 893 runs from 18 ODIs at just under 50 in 2008 as India emerged as serious contenders in all forms of the game.

Sehwag, who has scored more than 5,000 runs in test and ODI cricket, hit four 50s in five matches in the ODI rout of England in November in what was built up by Indian media as a face-off between him and the innovative Pietersen.

RUN CHASE
The following month he struck a stunning 83 to successfully launch the then fourth-highest run chase in test cricket for an unlikely win after India were set 387 by England in the first test.

`He set it up brilliantly. How many players in the world can do that?` centurion Sachin Tendul kar said after the victory in Chennai.

`Very few people in the world can do what he does and we are extremely happy that he plays for India,` the worlds highest run-getter in test and one-day cricket said.

Sehwag, voted Indias international cricketer of the year for the 2007-08 season, struck a century in the third ODI against hosts Sri Lanka as India recorded a 4-1 series win in February.

He emerged the teams highest run-getter with 299 runs, including a century and two fifties, to fuel Indias ODI success in New Zealand and heads a one-day batting line-up that Tendulkar rates as the best he has been part of in his career.

`Sehwag creates a momentum at the top of the order and is such an aggressive player that he can take the game away quite quickly,` New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori told reporters at the start of the series.

Sehwag scores runs at breakneck speed --- his strike rate is 78.14 in tests, 101.85 in ODIs and 144.80 in Twenty20 --- and his last 11 test centuries have been scores of 150 plus.

He is only the third batsman in the world, after Australias Don Bradman and West Indian Brian Lara, to score two test triple centuries.

Crowe said Sehwag had the capacity to score 400 in a test innings. Lara is the only batsman to have scored a quadruple century in test cricket.

`Hes got to 300 twice and now he is at the peak of his powers and scores at a rate that could turn this possibility into reality soon,` Crowe wrote.

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