5 Most successful captains in Test history
These five players uplifted the standard of their teams in the Test format with their extraordinary leadership skills.
View : 3.9K
6 Min Read
1. Steve Waugh- 71.92 win%
Cricket Australia (CA) trusted Steve Waugh to hold the reins of the Australian Test team in February 1999, following Mark Taylor's retirement from red-ball cricket. As a full-time Test skipper of the Aussie squad, he made his debut in March 1999 in a three-match Test series in the West Indies. In the foreign tour, the team played aggressively against the quality West Indies side and levelled the series by a 2-2 margin.
In the 1999-2000 home season, Australia displayed their dominance in Tests under their dynamic captain, whitewashing Pakistan and India comfortably. Against Pakistan, Waugh struggled to be among the runs but against the Sachin Tendulkar-led side, he delivered decent batting numbers to his team, racking up 276 runs with a century and fifty in five innings of three Tests.
Waugh's Australia looked sensational from October 1999 to February 2001 and set the world record 16 consecutive Test match victories. In July 2001, Australia toured England for the Ashes series and the biggest challenge for the visitors was to keep England away from the urn. Living upto the expectations, Australia looked dominant over the hosts and clinched the urn with their 4-1 triumph. The Australia batting legend bid adieu to international cricket in January 2004, leaving a scintillating captaincy record of 41 wins in 57 Tests with a win percentage of 71.92%.
Download Our App