Best bowlers in the world

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Fastest bowler in the world According to top Speed Rankings Best bowlers in the world  Watch Video        In the world of cricket, fast bowlers and spinners are two types of bowlers.  Of course, the real fast bowler is the pride of the bowling attack and the crown of the cricket line-up.  Fast bowling is a multi-faceted art that is developed in a variety of ways.  These days, there are a lot of new styles and techniques in this field. Cricket is known as one of the most exciting sports in the world, which is believed to be dominated by batsmen, but a closer look reveals that cricket has excellent bowling and excellent batting.  Is a game of  Sometimes the game of cricket is dominated by the bowler.  A bowler's quick delivery can send someone from the crease to the pavilion before the player realizes it.  While it is thrilling to see batsmen at the speed of opponents, it is also thrilling for bowlers to surprise everyone with their speed.  Let's take a look at who are the fast

Best 11: Cricket Test team of the year 2021

 

 Best Cricket Test Team of the Year 



1. Rohit Sharma (India)

M: 11 | Housing: 21 | Igijima: 906 | Distance: 47.68 | 100s: 2 | 50s: 4 | HS: 161

After dominating white cricket and home conditions for years, Rohit Sharma won his final margin this year by proving he could hit major Test runs outside of Asia. And a strong 2021 that finished him off just after Joe Root in just a few runs would have been better if a professional right-handed player had turned a strong kick into a big kick. He reached 20 or more of his 14 of the 19 innings he completed but scored two centuries - a total of 161 of 329 to win in Chennai and the 127 patient at The Oval, his first Test a hundred away from home.

2. Dimuth Karunaratne (Sri Lanka) (c)

M: 7 | Housing: 13 | Igijima: 902 | Range: 69.38 | 100 years: 4 | 50s: 3 | HS: 244

No batsman has opened Test more runs in the last seven years than Karunaratne and the left-handed player enjoyed another year at the top in capturing the captaincy. Starting 2021 with 103 of the 211 defenders playing South Africa in Johannesburg, the Sri Lankan captain scored a four-hour saving goal in Antigua ahead of a tough home campaign, highlighted by 244 points against Bangladesh, leading his team. winning the Tigers and Windies series.

3. Marnus Labuschagne (Australia)

M: 5 | Housing: 9 | Igijima: 526 | Distance: 65.75 | 100s: 2 | 50s: 4 | HS: 108

It is a testament to how good Marnus Labuschagne has been this year to win a place in the team despite Australia playing just five Tests in 2021. The right-hander scored 50 in six of his nine innings, scoring hundreds against India in Brisbane and England in Adelaide, as he climbed to the top of the ICC Test battalion. Although Labuschagne’s scoring race just after returning to the Test team two and a half years ago could not be passed as a purple patch, an average of 70 in 16 Tests as he could not remember. Undoubtedly he is one of the best strikers in the world and he seems to be getting better.

4. Joe Root (England)

M: 15 | Housing: 29 | Jobs: 1708 | Ave: 61.00 | 100 years: 6 | 50s: 4 | HS: 228 | Reports: 14 | Distance: 30.50 | BBI: 5-8

For a moment, let’s forget about England’s annus horribilis and think of one of the best years ever produced by Test cricket batsmen. Joe Root's 2021 year started with an odd number of 228, 186 and 218 in consecutive continental tests before he enjoyed another centuries-long run in a series of games against India in the middle of the year. The 100-year-old in Australia is still in a frustrating situation where he can't be reached, but Root is the player who has hit the most runs after three Ashes Tests, and finished the year in third place with the highest number of strikers in Test history. And he did all of this with little or no support from his beating colleagues.

5. Fawad Alam (Pakistan)

um: 9 | Housing: 13 | Igijima: 571 | Distance: 57.10 | 100 years: 3 | 50s: 2 | HS: 140

One of the returning good news continued in 2021 with Fawad Alam establishing himself as a steady source of run for more than a decade after making a century of his first audition. After celebrating the 11th anniversary of the 100-year exile in New Zealand by the end of 2020, this extraordinary man proved himself to be a man who met all conditions by adding hundreds to Karachi, Harare and Kingston to complete the year as one of his students. three men to get three big points or more.

6. Rishabh Pant (India) (wk)

M: 12 | Housing: 21 | Running: 748 | Distance: 39.36 | 100s: 1 | 50s: 5 | HS: 101 | Ct: 30 | St: 6

One hundred and a minimum of 40 is completely below the impact of the Rishabh Pant this year, especially in the first three months of 2021. The changing left-handed numbers may look better if he has managed to turn 97 points (Sydney), 89no (Brisbane) and 91 (Chennai) into bigger ones but, as before with a destructive player like Pant, the numbers tell only part of the story however. The way he dissolved Australia and England earlier this year has earned him a fair advantage compared to the great Adam Gilchrist and while his England trip was one he will never forget, 2021 may one day be regarded as the year that the modern hero arrived. on the world stage.

7. Ravichandran Ashwin (India)

um: 9 | Episode: 54 | Eve: 16.64 | SR: 43.0 | BBI: 6-61 | BBM: 9-207 | 5w: 3 | 10W: 0 | Running: 355 | Range: 25.35 | 100s: 1 | HS: 106

It is a testament to how old Ravichandran Ashwin has grown that one exciting year, when he took more Test wickets than anyone else, will be tired of some disappointment. Playing very well at home (where he took 46 of the 54 wickets), the off-spinner missed India's sealing-sealing victory in Brisbane due to injury and due to injury was sidelined by the series in England as the selectors prefer the additional beats provided by. Ravindra Jadeja. But another year of 50-plus wickets deserves to be celebrated, as is the fifth-century Test and the crucial appearance he made hitting in the famous Indian tournament at the SCG.

8. Kyle Jamieson (New Zealand)

M: 5 | Episode: 27 | Ave: 17.51 ​​| SR: 41.8 | BBI: 6-48 | BBM: 11-117 | 5w: 3 | 10w: 1

While you think New Zealand’s pace-bowling stocks will never look better, comes Kyle Jamieson. After entering the field in 2020, the top right-back was impressive this year despite playing just five Tests, which led to him winning the match by seven wickets in the World Test Championship final against India. He then took six wickets against India in Kanpur, proving he could win in the subcontinent, and looks set to win wickets for the Kiwi for many years to come.

9. Axar Patel (India)

M: 5 | Weeks: 36 | Ave: 11.86 | SR: 33.6 | BBI: 6-38 | BBM: 11-70 | 5w: 5 | 10w: 1

Bowling under favorable conditions is one thing but using them to the best of your ability - in your first year of cricket testing, not less - is quite another. The fact that Axar Patel was not selected in India's first match against England in February has made it even more difficult for the subsequent assassination as the left-hander scored 27 points in just three Tests in the first memorable series in history. The combination of precision points and sharp contrast (a lot of his staff playing for England come from non-throwing balls) has made him an ongoing threat and another destructive spin option for India to call for future campaigns.

10. Hasan Ali (Pakistan)

M: 8 | Episode: 41 | Eve: 16.07 | SR: 31.0 | BBI: 5-27 | BBM: 10-94 | 5w: 5 | 10w: 1

The place for the third player was too hot for the team, but Hasan Ali of Pakistan gets ahead of Jasprit Bumrah of India and Jimmy Anderson and Ollie Robinson after a strong comeback at the 2021 Test arena. 14 of the 41 wickets came out and 41 came out. When we face a struggling Zimbabwean team, right-handed numbers are hard to disprove and his ten-point win over South Africa at Rawalpindi - his first Test campaign in two years - will long remain in his memory. His level of hitting 31.0, which means he has taken a wicket almost every five overs, is the best Test taker in 2021.

11. Shaheen Shah Afridi (Pakistan)

um: 9 | Episode: 47 | Eve: 17.06 | SR: 37.3 | BBI: 6-51 | BBM: 10-94 | 5w: 3 | 10w: 1

One of the most exciting talents in world cricket, Shaheen Shah Afridi has done his best in 2021 to finish the year as the second largest player in cricket. With explosive speed, good form and a dying action, the left-hander led Pakistan's attack on five Test campaigns (four of which are far from home), the highest point being his 18 wickets in two Tests against the West Indies in Jamaica. . At just 21 years old, Afridi has only doubled in 17 innings this year, adding to the incredible consistency of his undoubted strength.

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