Jacques Kallis was the greatest cricketer of the world.
He was a famous cricketer of the world, Because he is played some awesome
cricket and most of games are successfully and he Honorable. So that in future
we are not seeing his good and great game. It’s very unfortunately for all
cricket fan. Of-course that is time to time so . I think One of the most cricket
career of his last and final innings, Because he is most and great player that
his final match getting century.
Jacques
Kallis knew when it was time to leave. Perhaps that was the most surprising
aspect of his decision to end a stupendously accomplished Test career.
Of all the great players
operating at the high level, across a multitude of sports, Kallis all time seemed destined to continue until so many bodily parts fell off that he needed
to be carried into the middle. But a couple of months past his 38th birthday he recognized with an admirable clarity that his unique powers were waning.
No doubt he could have continued.
He has been the fulcrum of South Africa’s team for almost 20 years, and the
selector has not been born who could have told him his time had come.
Kallis has known no other life
but big cricket. As a man of gentle and amiable disposition, he was perfectly
suited to its relentless demands. Not for Kallis the self-centered worrying
about travelling, upheaval and an artificial life. He simply got on with the
job, the only job he had ever known. Loyal, diligent, he might have been
reporting for work as a filing clerk.
Little fuss is attending
Kallis’s final Test at Durban, which is also where it all started in 1995,
despite the fact that, on 78 not out in South Africa’s first-innings score of
299 for 5 in reply to India’s 334, he is on course for a 45th Test hundred.
Compare it to the exhibition match-cum-festival that Sachin Tendulkar’s 200th
and final match became in Mumbai two months ago.
Kallis’s feats in the game are
barely less distinguished, yet it has been his undeserving fate to be somehow
undervalued, like those artists whose stuff sells for millions only after they
are long gone. Tendulkar probably went on longer than he should have, though no
one dared mention it. Graeme Swann, not quite so formidable in achievement, has
been criticised on the other hand for retiring too soon.
But Swann saw the awful truth
and acted on it. According to some he should have stayed until the end of this
Ashes series, yet he realised he had nothing left to offer. That he walked
before he was pushed is enviable in many ways.
The greatest tennis player of
all, Roger Federer, arrived in Brisbane yesterday to start preparing for the
Australian Open, which he has won four times. There is a growing chorus
insisting he has gone on for too long, but he said: “I’m playing because I love
the game.”
Which seems to be reason
enough. Kallis, by contrast, has given up Test cricket because he wants to keep
playing one-day cricket. His intention is to play in his sixth World Cup in
Australia in 2015, when he will be in his 40th year.
Kallis did not say as much, but
he may well have been persuaded by his recent Test batting form. It is not only
that 22 innings have passed since he last scored a hundred, or even that six of
his most recent eight innings have been in single figures. He has been out lbw
in six of his past seven innings (it took 84 innings before that for him to lbw
as many times), which is invariably a sign that the eyes are going or that the
bat is coming down the wrong way. Kallis has decided that the fault cannot be rectified.
His place in the pantheon is
assured. A year or so ago, Kevin Pietersen said of Kallis: “I truly believe he
is the best cricketer ever. He is truly phenomenal.”
Before his final match in
Durban, Kallis had scored 13,174 Test runs at an average of 55.12, taken 292
wickets at 32.53 and taken 199 catches. Only three players have scored more
runs, none at a higher average, only 28 have taken more wickets, only one has
caught more catches.
It is difficult to recall
Kallis truly taking a game by its scruff. He is one of those players who will
not be truly appreciated until he is no longer playing. There was nothing
spectacular about his cover drive, his respectably paced away-swing, or the
sheer speed of his reflexes at slip. It all looked so easy, so inevitable, so
calm. There was never the remotest controversy, save that he might be too
one-paced or fail to meet the immediate demands of the team. But South Africa
lost only three of the 44 Tests in which he scored a hundred.
He was never captaincy material,
claiming neither tactical astuteness nor natural leadership skills. But as a
colleague he was pure gold. One of the great cricketers has left the crease.
So that no problem in future we
are not see the great player kallis and that we are not any six and four of his
batting on test, but we are never forgot Kallis.
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