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Saturday, March 22, 2025

Gayle, Taylor win ESPN cricinfo awards

by

20100219

?Viren­der Se­hwag has won the Test bat­ting prize for the sec­ond year run­ning in the ES­P­N­cricin­fo Awards. Se­hwag's au­da­cious 293 against Sri Lan­ka in Mum­bai was cho­sen over An­drew Strauss's 161 at Lord's in the Ash­es and Chris Gayle's un­beat­en 165 in Ade­laide, by a ju­ry of for­mer crick­eters, com­men­ta­tors and Cricin­fo's se­nior ed­i­tors. The six awards, for per­for­mances in the three in­ter­na­tion­al crick­et for­mats in 2009, were shared be­tween play­ers from three coun­tries–In­dia, Pak­istan and West In­dies. Gayle won the Twen­ty20 bat­ting award for his 50-ball 88 against Aus­tralia at The Oval in the World Twen­ty20. His West In­dies team-mate Jerome Tay­lor's rout of Eng­land in Ja­maica was vot­ed the Test bowl­ing per­for­mance of the year. The ODI bat­ting award went to Sachin Ten­dulkar for his fight­ing 175 in a match In­dia lost by three runs to Aus­tralia.

Shahid Afri­di, who was nom­i­nat­ed for his Twen­ty20 bowl­ing as well, won for his ca­reer-best 6 for 38 in Dubai, al­so against Aus­tralia. The award for Twen­ty20 bowl­ing went to Umar Gul, who was nom­i­nat­ed twice in the cat­e­go­ry, for his five-wick­et haul against New Zealand at The Oval, al­so in the World Twen­ty20–a per­for­mance of re­verse-swing bowl­ing in which, ac­cord­ing to for­mer Aus­tralia cap­tain and ju­ry mem­ber Ian Chap­pell, "for three overs he looked like he was go­ing to take a wick­et every ball and damn near did." Of the win­ners, Gul, Gayle and Afri­di were among eight play­ers to re­ceive two nom­i­na­tions each. Fifty-sev­en per­for­mances from 2009 were short­list­ed in the six cat­e­gories ear­ly in Jan­u­ary and vot­ed on by the ju­ry. For­mer Eng­land open­er Ge­off Boy­cott, one of the mem­bers of the ju­ry, which al­so in­clud­ed Tony Greig, David Lloyd, Ramiz Ra­ja, Daryll Cul­li­nan and San­jay Man­jrekar, said Se­hwag's win was hard­ly sur­pris­ing.

"It is ex­tra­or­di­nary to watch him play. I have seen some peo­ple score quick­ly and get big scores," Boy­cott said. "Part of the time it is brute force, but not so with him. It is just sim­plic­i­ty it­self. I watch him bat and it seems as though he sees the shot even be­fore the bowler has bowled. It is quite ex­tra­or­di­nary. He doesn't play with great pow­er; it is grace, tim­ing and ef­fort­less ease, and his range of shots is quite ex­cit­ing." In ad­di­tion to the per­for­mance awards, the ES­P­N­cricin­fo Awards al­so com­prise the Stats­gu­ru Awards, which are based on de­tailed sta­tis­ti­cal analy­ses of the year's per­for­mances. In­di­an play­ers won the top bat­ting awards here as well. Gau­tam Gamb­hir was ad­judged the Bats­man of the Year, based on a score ar­rived at by adding Test bat­ting av­er­age to ODI bat­ting in­dex (bat­ting av­er­age mul­ti­plied by strike rate).

He was al­so the Test Bats­man of the Year. Se­hwag was vot­ed the ODI Bats­man of the Year. The bowl­ing awards went to Stu­art Broad (Bowler of the Year), Mitchell John­son (Test Bowler) and James An­der­son (ODI Bowler). Oth­er Stats­gu­ru Awards win­ners in­clud­ed Shane Wat­son (Most Con­sis­tent Test Bats­man), Tillakaratne Dil­shan (Most Runs in Test Wins), and Bren­don Mc­Cul­lum and Jesse Ry­der (ODI Open­ing Bat­ting Pair of the Year). Cricin­fo read­ers were in­vit­ed to vote on the nom­i­nees and their picks mir­rored the ju­ry's in all but one cat­e­go­ry; Twen­ty20 bat­ting, where they picked Tillakaratne Dil­shan's un­beat­en 96 in the World Twen­ty20 over Gayle's 88.


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