Greatest Cricketers of All Time

 




Cricket is another religion everywhere in the world. Individuals love cricketers and that is the reason legends are conceived and when they bid, they leave always on the sport of cricket and for individuals who love them. They make and break records and in the long run discover their name in the Hall of Fame of cricket. Here are the best 10 biggest cricketers. 


10. Clive Lloyd 


Clive Lloyd was a West Indies cricketer who made his introduction in 1966. He was by a wide margin the best commander for the West Indies. Lloyd captained the West Indies from 1974–1985 and won two back-to-back World Cups in 1975 and 1979. 


He was sprinter up in the 1983 World Cup, which India ultimately won. It was a fantasy run for the West Indies group while Lloyd was captaining them. His side won 27 matches without rout and is viewed as perhaps the best Test skippers ever. 


9. Dennis Lillee 


Previous Australian cricketer Dennis Lillee was an eager quick bowler of his time. He was additionally evaluated as the 'remarkable quick bowler of the age' and was otherwise called the best quick bowler of the '70s. Lily settled her name in the ICC Hall of Fame in December 2009. 


For his 355 wickets, he was the world record holder for stepping through the most Exam wickets when he resigned in 1984. Notwithstanding Lily being an effective bowler, there were numerous contentions. Like when he utilized an aluminum bat rather than a wooden bat. Another episode happened with Miandad when he terminated his leg while taking a run. 


8. Rahul Dravid 


Famously known as 'The Wall', Rahul Dravid is the best Indian protective batsman ever. At whatever point Team India required a heap of runs, Dravid was consistently there to help. He is probably the best cricketer throughout the entire existence of cricket. 


An incredible 13,000 runs in Test cricket, 270 against Pakistan, and 10,000 odd runs in ODI cricket with the most 153 runs. He set a standard of 50 runs off 22 balls, which was not broken for quite a while. Dravid saved wickets for India in any event, when the group required it most. He was named ICC Player of the Year and Test Player of the Year at the debut ICC Awards service in 2004. 


7. Muttiah Muralitharan 


The greatest Test wicket-taker so far is Muttiah Muralitharan who has taken 800 wickets. He holds the world record for most Test wickets and ODI wickets also. With 534 wickets in the ODI stage, he surpassed Wasim Akram's 502 runs. Murali positioned number one in the ICC Player Rankings for Test bowlers for a sum of 214 matches and for 1711 days, which is an accomplishment in itself. 


6. Jacques Kallis 


The previous South African cricketer and best all-rounder for South Africa is one of the best all-rounders ever. The main player to score 10,000 runs and take 250 wickets in both ODI and Test cricket. 


He is the second most noteworthy Test century player with 40, Sachin Tendulkar with just 51. Kallis was the ICC player of the year in 2005 and the Test player of the year. The main South African to score was in excess of 13,000 runs with 292 wickets, third behind an aggregate of 15,000 runs. 


5. Brian Lara 


Another West Indies veteran batsman, Brian Lara, holds the record for most elevated individual five star score of 501 not out and most noteworthy global individual grade of 400 not out, which is as yet not broken by anybody. 


His best batting unbeaten 153 against Australia at Bridgetown has been the second execution throughout the entire existence of Test cricket in front of 270 by Sir Don Bradman. Lara was granted the BBC Overseas Sports Person of the Year, which is granted to just three cricketers, including her. Genuinely a standout amongst other batsmen in the West Indies. 


4. Shane Warne 


Shane Warne is Australia's leg turn bowling legend. He is the second most elevated wicket-taker ever, Test cricket with 708 scallops and 293 ODIs. He has scored 3000 Test runs without scoring a century and he holds the record for this. 


In the year 2000, he was chosen as one of the five Wisden Cricketers of the Century and was the solitary player to live in Panchak while playing in his time. His cricketing life was brimming with tricks like tolerating cash from casual sources, testing positive for a substance. However, in the entirety of this, Warne was a standout amongst other twist bowlers of his time. 


3. Sir Garfield Sobers 


Sir Garfield Sobers is viewed as the best all-rounder of cricket. He made his introduction for the West Indies at 16 years old and played for quite a while. His first century came against Pakistan where he scored a triple century with a score of 365. He held the record for most elevated individual score until 1994 when Brian Lara scored 375 runs. He scored 8000 odd runs and took 235 wickets in his 93 tests.

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