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The List

The world's best Twenty20 players

If you were choosing a Twenty20 XI, whose name would you scribble first on the team sheet?



Misbah-ul-Haq took the opposition by surprise with his versatility © AFP
If you were choosing a Twenty20 XI, whose name would you scribble first on the team sheet? Someone who averages in the early twenties and strikes at 180 per 100 balls? How about one of a rare species - a bowler who concedes less than six an over? This week's column looks at the best Twenty20 players - calculated by multiplying the average with the strike-rate for batsmen, and economy-rate with the strike-rate for bowlers. We have included both international and domestic matches in our calculations.
When Pakistan picked Misbah-ul-Haq in their Twenty20 squad, the decision was criticised by many. Mohammad Yousuf had been Pakistan's premier batsman and all Misbah had going for him was a prolific domestic Twenty20 season during which he scored 345 runs in ten innings. He has surpassed expectations with two thrilling fifties in the ICC World Twenty20 plus a forty in the final, and his average of 49.66 combined with a strike-rate of 130.70 makes him fifth in our table of most valuable batsmen.
Matthew Hayden hasn't played any domestic Twenty20s and only seven international matches, which is why he doesn't appear in the table below (our cut-off is ten innings). He has been phenomenal at the top in the ODI format in 2007 and has carried on in the same vein during the World Twenty20, averaging a whopping 88.33 with a strike-rate of 144.80 and four unbeaten half-centuries in the tournament.
Best Twenty20 batsmen (inc domestic) - runs squared divided by the product of dismissals and balls faced (qualification: 10 innings)
Player Span Mat Inns Runs HS Ave SR Calc
A Symonds 2003-2007 23 21 675 112 45.00 191.21 86.04
RP Sharma 2007-2007 12 11 340 101* 56.66 145.92 82.68
CL White 2005-2007 23 23 847 141* 49.82 165.75 82.58
BJ Hodge 2003-2007 39 36 1465 106 45.78 142.37 65.17
Misbah-ul-Haq 2006-2007 22 19 596 107* 49.66 130.70 64.91
TL Tsolekile 2004-2006 18 12 266 52 53.20 118.22 62.89
GA Hick 2004-2007 28 27 929 116* 37.16 165.00 61.31
IJ Harvey 2003-2006 32 31 993 109 35.46 169.74 60.19
Imran Farhat 2005-2006 11 11 363 115 36.30 165.00 59.89
Shoaib Malik 2005-2007 26 25 853 88* 47.38 126.18 59.79
JL Langer 2006-2007 16 16 583 97 38.86 149.87 58.25
ME Trescothick 2004-2007 10 10 395 76 39.50 147.38 58.21
Asif Hussain 2005-2006 19 19 658 84 41.12 141.20 58.06
SM Katich 2003-2007 18 17 533 59* 44.41 128.74 57.18
J Mubarak 2004-2007 13 12 367 94* 40.77 139.54 56.90
L Klusener 2004-2007 37 34 814 111* 40.70 139.14 56.63
Abdul Razzaq 2003-2007 12 11 327 63 36.33 150.00 54.50
NANN Perera 2004-2007 10 10 312 78* 34.66 150.72 52.25
TL Penney 2003-2005 15 14 322 52 35.77 144.39 51.66
GC Smith 2004-2007 24 24 779 105 37.09 137.87 51.14
MS Dhoni 2006-2007 12 11 277 73* 34.62 147.34 51.01
Click here for the full tables.
Daniel Vettori and Stuart Clark are the hottest properties on the bowling circuit. Vettori had not played any Twenty20 internationals before the tournament, but ended with eleven wickets at an average of 11.63 and an incredible economy-rate of 5.33. And while Clark might never fill Glenn McGrath's boots completely, even McGrath might not have matched Clark's 12 wickets at 12.00 apiece and economy-rate of 6.00. The most miserly bowler in Twenty20 internationals, however, is Pakistan's Umar Gul, who has conceded only 5.28 an over in eight matches.
Dinuka Hettiarachchi, a Sri Lankan left-arm spinner who played a solitary Test against England in 2001, has the best combination of average and strike-rate among all Twenty20 bowlers, international and domestic. He has bowled 221 balls on the Sri Lankan circuit and conceded just 186 runs at an economy-rate of just over five an over. Chris Schofield also ranks highly on our table for he has impressed on the county circuit, though he has struggled to translate that form into success at the World Twenty20, taking just four wickets in as many games and conceding 7.16 an over.
Best Twenty20 bowlers (inc domestic) - runs conceded squared divided by the product of wickets and balls bowled (qualification: 200 balls bowled)
Player Span Mat Balls Runs Wkts BBI Ave Econ Calc
D Hettiarachchi 2004-2007 14 221 186 19 3/0 9.78 5.04 8.23
LJP Gunaratne 2004-2007 17 268 249 20 4/21 12.45 5.57 11.56
CP Schofield 2003-2007 23 281 291 25 4/12 11.64 6.21 12.05
Fawad Alam 2005-2007 16 232 246 21 5/27 11.71 6.36 12.42
Sohail Ahmed 2005-2006 14 304 312 25 4/20 12.48 6.15 12.80
WA Deacon 2004-2007 23 516 475 34 3/10 13.97 5.52 12.86
Umar Gul 2005-2007 16 362 357 26 4/21 13.73 5.91 13.54
Mushtaq Ahmed 2003-2007 29 591 580 42 5/11 13.80 5.88 13.55
ML Lewis 2006-2007 14 305 350 29 4/10 12.06 6.88 13.84
Mohammad Aslam 2005-2006 11 236 256 18 4/13 14.22 6.50 15.42
T Tshabalala 2004-2007 23 409 445 31 4/13 14.35 6.52 15.61
JT Billa 2007-2007 9 212 245 18 4/26 13.61 6.93 15.72
J Ormond 2003-2005 12 264 259 16 5/26 16.18 5.88 15.88
Imran Khalid 2005-2006 19 408 431 28 4/21 15.39 6.33 16.26
AR Griffith 2006-2006 12 261 289 19 3/14 15.21 6.64 16.84
ST Jayasuriya 2004-2007 14 262 319 23 4/24 13.86 7.30 16.88
Shoaib Malik 2005-2007 26 215 249 17 5/13 14.64 6.94 16.96
Click here for the full tables.
To come up with the list of leading Twenty20 allrounders, we've subtracted the bowling calculation from the batting figure (figures in table 1 - table 2) and the top allrounders are primarily batsmen who bowl spin part-time with varying degrees of success. While Andrew Symonds is no surprise near the top of the list, Australia's second-choice allrounder Shane Watson's Twenty20 record hardly compares with that of Cameron White, who has two domestic hundreds and bowls legspin.
Best Twenty20 allrounders (inc domestic) - difference between the batting formula and the bowling formula (qualification: 10 innings and 200 balls bowled)
Player Span Mat Ave SR Bat Ave Econ Bowl Diff
CL White 2005-2007 23 49.82 165.75 82.58 21.94 8.35 30.53 52.04
A Symonds 2003-2007 23 45.00 191.21 86.04 29.88 7.67 38.23 47.81
Shoaib Malik 2005-2007 26 47.38 126.18 59.79 14.64 6.94 16.96 42.83
Imran Farhat 2005-2006 11 36.30 165.00 59.89 14.50 7.31 17.68 42.21
BJ Hodge 2003-2007 39 45.78 142.37 65.17 19.17 7.73 24.72 40.45
Fawad Alam 2005-2007 16 42.00 112.50 47.25 11.71 6.36 12.42 34.82
ST Jayasuriya 2004-2007 14 28.58 159.53 45.60 13.86 7.30 16.88 28.71
Abdul Razzaq 2003-2007 12 36.33 150.00 54.50 21.93 7.65 27.96 26.53
IJ Harvey 2003-2006 32 35.46 169.74 60.19 25.57 8.05 34.31 25.88
JM Kemp 2004-2007 29 35.62 129.54 46.15 18.21 7.75 23.55 22.59
PA Hitchcock 2006-2007 11 31.72 146.63 46.52 22.07 6.86 25.24 21.28
HH Streak 2004-2007 23 27.75 169.89 47.14 22.37 7.67 28.60 18.53
Click here for the full tables.
If there's a particular List that you would like to see, email us with your comments and suggestions.

Travis Basevi is the man who built Statsguru. George Binoy is an editorial assistant on Cricinfo