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Shoring up the top order

Series in which a team's partnerships for the last five wickets added more runs than those for the first five, like Pakistan's did against England

Umar Akmal and Mohammad Amir hauled Pakistan over the winning line, adding 16 runs in eight overs, England v Pakistan, 3rd Test, The Oval, August 21, 2010

Pakistan gained more runs from their lower-order partnerships than their top-order partnerships during the Tests in England  •  Getty Images

Here's an oddity from the recent Test series between England and Pakistan, spotted by Peter Smyth: Pakistan's lower-order partnerships contributed more than their top-order partnerships in the four Tests. Their first five wickets totalled 623 runs in 40 stands at an average of 15.57 each, while their last five added 684 runs in 37 stands at an average of 19 per wicket. It's not an uncommon occurrence in a Test but we thought it worth investigating how many times it's happened over an entire series. Turns out that lower-order partnerships have outscored top-order ones several times, but rarely in series with more than three Tests.
When Australia toured Sri Lanka in 1992, their partnerships for the last five wickets accumulated 1124 runs compared to 754 added by their first five wickets. Only twice in six innings did Australia get to 110 without losing five wickets, and yet they won the three-Test series 1-0. Australia's top batsman - Mark Taylor, Mark Waugh and David Boon - fared poorly but Dean Jones, Ian Healy and Allan Border shored up the innings and had substantial lower-order partnerships. They found a steady ally in Greg Matthews, who was a part of Australia's three century stands in the series - two for the sixth wicket, one for the seventh - and four of their half-century partnerships. Matthews was the highest run-scorer with 329 at an average of nearly 55. The series was Sri Lanka's first at home since a bomb blast in Colombo in 1987 and it was Australia's first victory on the subcontinent since 1969-70.
India were thrashed 5-0 during their tour of the Caribbean in 1961-62 and the fact that their last five partnerships out-scored their top five over 50 stands contributed significantly to the result. Fourteen out of India's 21 partnerships of more than 40 were for the sixth wicket or lower. The top five wickets added 1086 at an average of 21.72, while the last five made 1035 at 26.10.
Largest difference in series runs between last five partnership wickets and first five - Tests (min 2 matches)
Team Mat Top 5 Wkts DisAve Bot 5 Wkts Dis Ave Diff Series Season
Australia 3754 30 25.13 1124 24 46.83370 v Sri Lanka 1992
Pakistan3 420 20 21.00 742 1261.83 322 v New Zealand 1955/56
New Zealand 3 597 30 19.90 83730 27.90 240 v Australia 1999/00
Zimbabwe 2 380 12 31.66604 7 86.28 224 v Bangladesh2001/02
India 5 1086 5021.72 1305 50 26.10 219 v West Indies 1961/62
Pakistan 3 44021 20.95 651 16 40.68 211 v South Africa 1997/98
New Zealand 3684 28 24.42 879 23 38.21195 v South Africa 2005/06
Zimbabwe2 328 20 16.40 520 2026.00 192 v India 2005/06
England 3 600 30 20.00 78230 26.06 182 v Australia 1979/80
Zimbabwe 2 348 20 17.40529 20 26.45 181 v New Zealand1997/98
West Indies 5 1217 4228.97 1378 32 43.06 161 v Australia 1984/85
England 5 74337 20.08 903 33 27.36 160 v Australia 1902
Zimbabwe 2518 20 25.90 670 16 41.87152 v West Indies 2003/04
Pakistan3 652 25 26.08 796 2433.16 144 v West Indies 1999/00
Bangladesh 2 263 15 17.53 40515 27.00 142 v Zimbabwe 2003/04
New Zealand 2 405 10 40.50531 9 59.00 126 v Zimbabwe2005/06
New Zealand 2 380 2019.00 503 20 25.15 123 v Pakistan 1996/97
Pakistan 3 52328 18.67 644 25 25.76 121 v England 1967
Pakistan 2386 10 38.60 503 10 50.30117 v Zimbabwe 1996/97
West Indies2 286 20 14.30 397 2019.85 111 v Sri Lanka 2005
Quite a few of the runs in the partnerships above were made by a top-order player batting with the tail. So, in the table below, we've listed series in which the difference between the aggregate runs scored by lower-order batsmen (8-11) and the top-order batsmen (1-7) was the least.
No team's top seven batsmen have ever been out-scored by its last four in a whole series. The closest the lower order has come to matching the top was in the 1886-87 Ashes, which England won 2-0 because their tail contributed 201 to bolster the 285 made by their top seven. In the first Test at the SCG, England were 17 for 6 in the first innings and they were eventually out for 45. In the second innings, they were 103 for 7 but their tail carried them to 184 to set up a tense victory. In the next Test, also in Sydney, England's tail more than doubled the first-innings total after it was 73 for 7, and in the second, they stretched 98 for 7 to 154. The lower order averaged 15.46 per dismissal in the series, while the top-order figure was 10.55.
Most runs scored by the last four batsmen in comparison to the first seven in a series - Tests (min 2 matches)
Team MatTop 7 Dis Ave Tail Dis AveDiff Series Season
England 2 285 27 10.55 20113 15.46 -84 v Australia 1886/87
Pakistan 2 483 14 34.50375 6 62.50 -108 v Zimbabwe1996/97
Zimbabwe 2 398 2814.21 286 12 23.83 -112 v South Africa 2004/05
Australia 3 30442 7.23 186 18 10.33 -118 v England 1888
South Africa 2215 26 8.26 65 14 4.64-150 v England 1888/89
South Africa3 420 42 10.00 258 1814.33 -162 v England 1912
Bangladesh 2 421 23 18.30 2599 28.77 -162 v India 2007
Zimbabwe 2 391 28 13.96209 12 17.41 -182 v South Africa1999/00
New Zealand 2 342 2116.28 155 7 22.14 -187 v India 1995/96
New Zealand 2 31121 14.80 120 9 13.33 -191 v England 1958/59
Bangladesh 2621 28 22.17 424 11 38.54-197 v West Indies 2004
Australia2 333 27 12.33 84 136.46 -249 v England 1886/87
India 2 374 28 13.35 12312 10.25 -251 v New Zealand 2002/03
England 3 421 27 15.59168 13 12.92 -253 v Australia1888
Zimbabwe 2 483 2817.25 230 12 19.16 -253 v Sri Lanka 2004
England 2 35016 21.87 94 4 23.50 -256 v New Zealand 1954/55
Zimbabwe 2403 27 14.92 146 13 11.23-257 v New Zealand 2005/06
Zimbabwe2 522 27 19.33 263 1320.23 -259 v India 2005/06
New Zealand 2 452 18 25.11 1766 29.33 -276 v Sri Lanka 1982/83
Bangladesh 2 410 28 14.64132 12 11.00 -278 v New Zealand2001/02
It's harder for the last five wickets of a team to score more than the first five in a one-day series because it's unlikely that the lower order will get adequate chances consistently in limited-overs contests. Scotland's top order, however, was so brittle during the 1999 World Cup that they gave the lower order ample opportunity to bat, and were comprehensively out scored by them.
Scotland's three 50-plus stands in the tournament were by Gavin Hamilton and a No. 8 or 9 for the sixth and seventh wickets. The largest top-order stand was 35 for the fourth wicket followed by 19 for the first. By the time they were eliminated in the first round, Scotland's first five wickets had added 266 runs at an average of 10.64, while their last five had added 434 at an average of 19.72.
Largest difference in series runs between last five partnership wickets and the first five - ODIs (min 2 matches)
Team Mat Top 5 Wkts Dis Ave Bot 5 WktsDis Ave Diff Series Season
Scotland 5 266 2510.64 434 22 19.72 168 ICC World Cup 1999
Africa XI 3 20115 13.40 353 15 23.53 152 v Asia XI 2005
Zimbabwe 2110 10 11.00 259 6 43.16149 v South Africa 2009/10
India2 110 10 11.00 245 830.62 135 v England 1982
Scotland 3 165 15 11.00 28812 24.00 123 ICC World Cup 2006/07
Scotland 3 215 15 14.33327 12 27.25 112 ICC World Cup Qualifiers2009
Zimbabwe 3 152 1510.13 254 11 23.09 102 v Bangladesh 2008/09
Zimbabwe 2 9910 9.90 197 7 28.14 98 v South Africa 1995/96
Africa XI 3407 15 27.13 500 12 41.6693 v Asia XI 2007
Bangladesh3 176 15 11.73 262 1418.71 86 v South Africa 2002/03
Bangladesh 3 155 15 10.33 23915 15.93 84 v Australia 2003
Canada 2 77 10 7.70155 9 17.22 78 ICC Tri-Series (in West Indies)2006
Bangladesh 2 68 106.80 138 10 13.80 70 ICC Champions Trophy 2002/03
West Indies 2 19510 19.50 257 9 28.55 62 v Australia 1977/78
New Zealand 2107 10 10.70 167 10 16.7060 Compaq Cup 2009
Kenya5 495 25 19.80 554 2423.08 59 v Zimbabwe 2008/09
Zimbabwe 2 140 10 14.00 19810 19.80 58 ICC Champions Trophy 2004
Sri Lanka 3 227 15 15.13283 9 31.44 56 Tri-Nation Tournament in Bangladesh2008/09
Zimbabwe 3 243 1516.20 297 10 29.70 54 v South Africa 2004/05
Kenya 3 20815 13.86 262 15 17.46 54 v Bangladesh 2006
If there's a particular List you would like to see, email us with your comments and suggestions.

Travis Basevi is a cricket statistician and UK Senior Programmer for Cricinfo and other ESPN sports websites. George Binoy is an Assistant Editor at Cricinfo