Cricket Records Ka Adda – क्रिकेट रेकॉर्ड्स का अड्डा

Unbeatable Cricket Records

Unbeatable Cricket Records | Cricket Records That Are Almost Impossible to Break

Cricket Records Impossible to Break: Don Brandman, an Australian cricket legend, has a 99.94 batting average over the course of his Test cricket career. This is surely the most unbelievable record in the history of cricket. Sachin Tendulkar, a big name in Indian cricket, has scored 100 centuries, and Sri Lankan spinner Muttiah Muralitharan has taken 800 wickets in his career. Both of these records belong on the list of the most unbeatable in cricket.

Unbeatable cricket records in all format of cricket

10. Jack Hobbs Runs and Centuries in 1st Class

At number 10 on the list of Unbeatable Cricket Records, Jack Hobbs’ batting stats in First-Class cricket are just mind-boggling. In his First-Class career, Jack Hobbs got 61,237 runs, including 197 centuries.

Jack Hobbs was over 50 when he played First-Class cricket. His career numbers are now so high that it seems like no one can beat them. I think that his runs and centuries in First-Class cricket are the 10 best records that can’t be broken.

9. Don Bradman 974 Runs in a Test Series

Wally Hammond must have been proud of himself when he scored 905 runs on the 1928-29 Australian tour, which is the next record that can’t be broken. In the next Ashes Series, which was played in England, one of the best batsmen, Don Bradman, beat that record by scoring 974 runs over the course of five games.

His scores at Trent Bridge were 8 and 131, at Lord’s they were 254 and 1, at Headingley they were 334, in Manchester they were 14, and at the Oval they were 232. Vivian Richards scored 829 runs against the same opponent in 1976, which was the closest anyone has come to breaking Bradman’s record.

8. Phil Simmons’ Economy Rate in an ODI

In a one-day international, if you bowl for ten overs, a good performance is when you give up fewer than four runs per over, or less than 40 runs total.

Look at Phil Simmons. In a 1992 one-day international match against Pakistan, he only gave away three runs, or 0.3 runs per over. Now, ODIs are much more focused on offence, so Simmons’ record is unlikely to be broken.

7. Graham Gooch’s 456 Runs in a Test Match

At the Lords, the former English captain hit 333 runs in the first innings against India. In the second inning, he hit 123 runs quickly on 113 balls. In this match, he got 456 runs, which had never been done before and seems like an impossible record to beat.

Even though one of the best left-handed batsmen, Brian Lara, later got 400 runs against England, Gooch’s record hasn’t been broken yet.

6. Chaminda Vaas’ Bowling Figures in ODIs

Chaminda Vaas took 8 wickets for 19 runs against Zimbabwe. Only bowler in ODI history to take 8 wickets. Given the batsman-centric structure of ODIs, more than eight wickets would be miraculous.

This spell is among the finest in ODI history. With this spell, he joined the pantheon of great fast bowlers.

5. Australia’s Consecutive Test Wins

Australia won 16 straight Test matches twice, once under Steve Waugh from 1999 to 2001 and again under Ricky Ponting from 2005 to 2008.

They did it during their “Golden Years,” when McGrath, Shen Warne, and Jason Gillespie were part of their bowling attack and Steve Waugh, Ricky Ponting, Matthew Hayden, and Adam Gilchrist were part of their batting line-up.

4. Jim Laker’s Test Match Bowling Figures

In 1956, the English off-spinner Jim Laker took 19 wickets for 90 runs against Australia at Old Trafford. He missed only one of the 20 wickets he was going for. He got rid of 10 batsmen in the first innings and 9 in the second. Anil Kumble has taken 10 wickets in a Test innings before, and he did it again in 1999 against Pakistan. But 19 wickets in a match?

We probably won’t ever see it again. Also, this spell had one of the best bowling figures ever in a test match.

3. Muttiah Muralitharan’s International Wickets

Murali was 20 when he first bowled for Sri Lanka. Soon confused batsmen worldwide.

He has 800 Test wickets, 534 ODI wickets, and 13 T20I wickets. Unbeatable with 1347 international wickets.

2. Tendulkar’s International Matches, Runs, and Centuries

Sachin Tendulkar’s batting records are mountainous. He’s scored 15,837 runs in 198 test matches and 18,426 in 463 ODIs.

His 34,273 international runs are unlikely to be surpassed. He was also the greatest cricketer ever.

1. Don Bradman’s Test Career Batting Average

Don Bradman, or ‘The Don,’ averaged 99.94 in 80 Test cricket innings. The next Test batter averaged just over 60. These figures suggest that Bradman is one of the game’s top batsmen.

Bradman’s 99.94 Test average is a shorthand for his talent. His 95.14 first-class average won’t be topped either.

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