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Friday, September 30, 2005

ST LOUIS 1904 : Games of the III Olympiad

ST LOUIS 1904 : Games of the III Olympiad

The 1904 St. Louis Olympics organizers repeated all of the mistakes of 1900. The Olympic competitions, spread out over four and a half months, were lost in the chaos of a World’s Fair. Of the 94 events generally considered to have been part of the Olympic program, only 42 included athletes who were not from the United States. The 1904 Olympics did have a few highlights. They were the first at which gold, silver and bronze medals were awarded for first, second and third place. Boxing and freestyle wrestling made their debuts. Marathon runners Len Tau and Jan Mashiani, Tswana tribesmen who were in St. Louis as part of the Boer War exhibit at the World’s Fair, became the first Africans to compete in the Olympics. One of the most remarkable athletes was the American gymnast George Eyser, who won six medals even though his left leg was made of wood. Chicago runner James Lightbody won the steeplechase and the 800m and then set a world record in the 1,500m.

12 NOCs (Nations)

651 athletes (6 women, 645 men)

91 events

CEREMONIES:

Saint-Louis 1904. F.J.V. Skiff, Director of Exhibits, presenting the Skiff Cup to Archie HAHN of the United States, donated as a prize to winner of the 100m dash.

Official opening of the Games by: Mr David Francis, president of Louisiana Purchase Exposition

Lighting the Olympic Flame by: The Olympic flame was first lit during the opening ceremony of the 1928 Olympic Games in Amsterdam.

Olympic Oath by: The first athletes' oath was sworn at the 1920 Olympic Games in Antwerp, Belgium.

Official Oath by: The first officials' oath was sworn at the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich.

HIGHLIGHTS
In the discus, the American Martin Sheridan (opposite picture) won the decider and claimed the goldmedal. After he had thrown exactly the same distance as his compatriot, Ralph Rose (39.28m), the judges gave them both an extra throw to decide the winner.

THE MILWAUKEE METEOR

Archie Hahn (USA-athletics), the Milwaukee Meteor, was champion in the 60m, 100m and 200m. In this last race, he set a new Olympic record in 21.6 seconds, a record broken only 28 years later.

AN OLYMPIC GOLD MEDAL DECIDER

In the discus, the American Martin Sheridan (opposite picture) won the decider and claimed the goldmedal. After he had thrown exactly the same distance as his compatriot, Ralph Rose (39.28m), the judges gave them both an extra throw to decide the winner.

DID YOU KNOW?

Four new sports were included in the Olympic Games at the 1901 IOC Session in Paris: boxing, dumbbells, freestyle wrestling and decathlon.
NEW SPORTS

Four new sports were included in the Olympic Games at the 1901 IOC Session in Paris: boxing, dumbbells, freestyle wrestling and decathlon.

A MARATHON DRIVE

Thomas Hicks of the United States won the marathon after the disqualification of his fellow countryman Fred Lorz (opposite picture, caricatured by Hugo Ewerien), who had covered a large part of the 42 kilometres in a car. He did at least get out just before the finish!

KEY FACTS

Opening date: 01 July 1904

Closing date: 23 November 1904

Country of the host city: United States of America (USA)

Candidate cities: Chicago, Illinois. (Chicago was chosen initially but it was decided to transfer to St Louis after a vote of 14 for and 2 against)

Sports:17

Sports on the program

Aquatics ,Archery ,Athletics ,Basketball ,Boxing ,Cycling ,Fencing ,Football ,Golf
Gymnastics ,Lacrosse ,Roque ,Rowing ,Tennis ,Tug of War ,Weightlifting ,Wrestling

HEROES OF THE 1904 GAMES

Ray EWRY :The Standing Jumper

Ray Ewry won eight Olympic gold medals in 1900, 1904 and 1908, yet he is almost unknown today because his unprecedented feats were performed in events that are no longer held: the standing high jump, the standing long jump and the standing triple jump. Born 14 October 1873, Ewry contracted polio as a young boy. Confined to a wheelchair, it was thought that he might be paralysed for life. However, he began exercising on his own and grew up to be a superb athlete. Ewry won all three standing jump events at the 1900 Olympics in Paris. He defended all three titles in 1904. The standing triple jump was dropped from the Olympic program in 1908, but Ewry won both the standing high jump and the standing long jump for a third time. All standing jumps were dropped from the Olympics after 1912.

John Jesus FLANAGAN :Triple hammer Champion

Irish-born John Flanagan was already the world record holder for the hammer throw when he emigrated to the United States in 1897. Like so many champion weight throwers during that era, he became a policeman in New York City and represented the US in international sporting events. At the 1900 Paris Olympics, Flanagan won the hammer throw easily, outdistancing fellow American Truxton Hare by 4.75m. Four years later, at the St. Louis Olympics, in an competition devoid of foreign entries, Flanagan successfully defended his title, although he was given a good test by John DeWitt, and won by less than a metre. A week later, Flanagan picked up a silver medal in the 56-pound (25.4-kg) weight throw. At the 1908 London Games, Flanagan overcame world record holder Matt McGrath with his last attempt to win his third straight hammer throw gold medal. He also competed in the tug-of-war. On 24 July 1909, Flanagan threw the hammer 56.18m to become the oldest world record breaker in the history of athletics. He was 41 years, 196 days old. Flanagan returned to Ireland in 1911 and lived there until his death in 1938.

Archie HAHN :The Mildwaukee meteor

Archie Hahn, who came to be known as "The Milwaukee Meteor," was quite small for a sprinter: 1.65m tall and only 59kg. He did not seriously take up competitive running until he was nineteen years old. The following year, 1900, he was recruited by representatives of the University of Michigan, who saw him win a race at a county fair. At the 1904 St. Louis Olympics, Hahn earned three gold medals. He began by winning the 60m dash in 7.0 seconds. Next, he won the 200m, leading the final from start to finish, in a time of 21.6 seconds. Finally, Hahn shot out to a fast start in the 100m final and held on to defeat fast-finishing Nate Cartmell by about two metres. Running into a strong wind, Hahn's time was 11.0 seconds. Two years later, Hahn traveled to Athens for the 1906 Intercalated Games. Taking advantage of his usual quick start, he led the final from start to finish and beat fellow American Fay Moulton by one metre. Hahn studied law at university, but never practiced his profession. Instead he devoted his life to coaching young runners. His book How to Sprint was considered a classic text.

Martin SHERIDAN :Early Discus Star

Irish-American Martin Sheridan was the world's finest all-round athlete until the arrival of Jim Thorpe, and the greatest discus thrower until Al Oerter. In addition to winning the discus at the 1904, 1906 and 1908 Olympic Games, Sheridan won the shot put in 1906 and the Greek-style discus in 1908. To these five gold medals he added three silver medals in 1906 in the stone throw and the standing jumps and a bronze medal in the standing long jump in 1908. Between 1904 and 1911, he won 11 AAU titles at a variety of events including three in the All-Around Championship, in which he broke the world record all three times. He was at his best before world records were officially recognized but from 1902 to 1911 he set no less than 15 new "World Bests" in the discus. Irish-born, he emigrated to the USA at the age of 16 and he eventually died from pneumonia on the eve of his 37th birthday while serving with the New York Police Department.

St Louis 1904:The poster



Credit: IOC / Olympic Museum Collections

It shows a view of the host city, enhanced by the use of a "fish's eye" effect. It is the reproduction of the cover of the programme of the Games.

St Louis 1904: The medal


Obverse
Credit: IOC / Olympic Museum Collections

On the obverse, an athlete standing on some steps, holding in his right hand a laurel crown, symbol of victory, and raising his left arm. In the background, a bas relief illustrating the sports disciplines from Antiquity. Behind, a Greek temple. Above the figure of the athlete, the inscription "OLYMPIAD" and on the rock bottom right "1904".
On the reverse, the goddess Nike, goddess of victory, standing on a globe. She is holding a laurel crown in her left hand and a palm leaf in her right hand. In front of her, a great crown, with in the centre a space for putting the name of the sports discipline. Behind Nike, the bust of Zeus on a plinth. The inscription "UNIVERSAL EXPOSITION ST.-LOUIS U.S.A". The design of these two sides was inspired by the medal of the 1896 Athens Games and 1900 Paris Games.

St Louis 1904:The medal

Reverse

Thursday, September 29, 2005

Games of the II Olympiad PARIS 1900

Games of the II Olympiad PARIS 1900

The Games of 1900 were held in Paris as part of the Exposition Universelle Internationale - the Paris World’s Fair. The exposition organizers spread the events over five months and de-emphasized their Olympic status to such an extent that many athletes died without ever knowing that they had participated in the Olympics. Women made their first appearance in the modern Games. The first to compete were Mme. Brohy and Mlle. Ohnier of France in croquet. The first female champion was in tennis: Charlotte Cooper of Great Britain. Tennis was one of five sports in which athletes from different nations competed on the same team. The others were football, polo, rowing and tug of war. Alvin Kraenzlein won four athletics events in three days and, on 16 July, Ray Ewry, who had overcome childhood polio, won three championships in one day - all in the standing jump events.

24 NOCs (Nations)

997 athletes (22 women, 975 men)

95 events


CEREMONIES

Paris 3 June 1900, Games of the II Olympiad. Gymnasts parade in the "Vélodrome de Vincennes" during the Federal Meeting of the Union of Gymnastics Associations of France.

Official opening of the Games by: No official opening.

Lighting the Olympic Flame by: The Olympic flame was first lit during the opening ceremony of the 1928 Olympic Games in Amsterdam.

Olympic Oath by: The first athletes' oath was sworn at the 1920 Olympic Games in Antwerp, Belgium.

Official Oath by: The first officials' oath was sworn at the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich.

HIGHLIGHTS

Charlotte Cooper (GBR-tennis) was the first woman to take the title of Olympic champion. We are not talking of gold medals as they were not yet awarded at these Games.

FOUR VICTORIES



Alvin Kraenzlein (USA-athletics) won the 60m, the 110m hurdles and 200m hurdles, and the long jump. His record of four individual victories at one Games still stands for a track & field athlete.

Discover Alvin Kraenzlein's biography

FIRST OLYMPIC TENNIS TITLE

Charlotte Cooper (GBR-tennis) was the first woman to take the title of Olympic champion. We are not talking of gold medals as they were not yet awarded at these Games.

DID YOU KNOW?

After the preliminary rounds, Myer Prinstein (USA-athletics) was leading in the long jump competition. Because of his religious beliefs, he refused to take part in the final as this was scheduled for a Sunday. In the final, his compatriot and rival Alvin Kraenzlein beat him by one centimetre. Prinstein was allegedly so angry that he attacked and punched Kraenzlein in the face.

KEY FACTS

Opening date:14 May 1900

Closing date:28 October 1900

Country of the host city:France (FRA)

Candidate cities:No candidate cities

Sports:18

Paris 1900: Sports on the program

Aquatics ,Archery ,Athletics ,Basque Pelota ,Cricket ,Croquet ,Cycling ,Equestrian
Fencing ,Football ,Golf ,Gymnastics ,Polo ,Rowing ,Rugby ,Sailing ,Shooting ,Tennis
Tug of War

James CONNOLLY The First Champion of the Modern Olympics

On 6 April 1896, James Connolly won the triple jump (then two hops and a jump), and thus became the first Olympic champion in 1527 years. He also placed second in the high jump and third in the long jump. A 27-year-old undergraduate student, Connolly dropped out of Harvard University and traveled to Athens by freighter and train, arriving the day before the Olympics began. Connolly later became a well-known journalist and novelist and was offered an honorary doctorate by Harvard, which he turned down.

Ray EWRY The Standing Jumper

Ray Ewry won eight Olympic gold medals in 1900, 1904 and 1908, yet he is almost unknown today because his unprecedented feats were performed in events that are no longer held: the standing high jump, the standing long jump and the standing triple jump. Born 14 October 1873, Ewry contracted polio as a young boy. Confined to a wheelchair, it was thought that he might be paralysed for life. However, he began exercising on his own and grew up to be a superb athlete. Ewry won all three standing jump events at the 1900 Olympics in Paris. He defended all three titles in 1904. The standing triple jump was dropped from the Olympic program in 1908, but Ewry won both the standing high jump and the standing long jump for a third time. All standing jumps were dropped from the Olympics after 1912.

John Jesus FLANAGAN Triple hammer Champion

Irish-born John Flanagan was already the world record holder for the hammer throw when he emigrated to the United States in 1897. Like so many champion weight throwers during that era, he became a policeman in New York City and represented the US in international sporting events. At the 1900 Paris Olympics, Flanagan won the hammer throw easily, outdistancing fellow American Truxton Hare by 4.75m. Four years later, at the St. Louis Olympics, in an competition devoid of foreign entries, Flanagan successfully defended his title, although he was given a good test by John DeWitt, and won by less than a metre. A week later, Flanagan picked up a silver medal in the 56-pound (25.4-kg) weight throw. At the 1908 London Games, Flanagan overcame world record holder Matt McGrath with his last attempt to win his third straight hammer throw gold medal. He also competed in the tug-of-war. On 24 July 1909, Flanagan threw the hammer 56.18m to become the oldest world record breaker in the history of athletics. He was 41 years, 196 days old. Flanagan returned to Ireland in 1911 and lived there until his death in 1938.

Alvin KRAENZLEIN Four Gold Medals in Three Days

At the 1900 Games Alvin Kraenzlein of the United States won the 60m dash, the 110m hurdles and 200m hurdles and the long jump, His four individual gold medals remain the record for a track & field athlete at one Games, and he accomplished the feat over a period of only three days. Kraenzlein's pioneering technique of straight-leg hurdling brought him two world hurdle records in addition to his five world records in the long jump. The long jump records were all set in 1899, three in April at the Penn Relays, and two in May at the IC4A Championships. Kraenzlein's great rival was the Syracuse athlete, Meyer Prinstein. At the 1900 Paris Olympics Prinstein led after the qualifying round in long jump, but was forbidden from competing in the finals by his coach because they were held on Sunday. Prinstein lost when Kraenzlein jumped one centimetre farther in the final. Although a qualified dentist, Kraenzlein never practiced, preferring to become a track coach, notably of the German and Cuban national teams and at the University of Michigan.

Eric LEMMING Javelin Master

Eric Lemming was nineteen years old when he set a world record of 49.31m in the javelin throw in 1899. Unfortunately, the javelin was not included in the program of the 1900 Olympics, but Lemming traveled to Paris anyway and took part in six events, placing fourth in the high jump, the pole vault and the hammer throw and eighth in the discus throw. At the 1906 Intercalated Games in Athens, Lemming was even more active, competing in nine different events. He won the freestyle javelin throw with a world record performance, earned bronze medals in the shot put, the pentathlon and the tug of war, and placed fourth in the discus and in the stone throw. The javelin throw was finally accepted as an Olympic event in 1908, at which time Lemming was still the world record holder. Lemming won the freestyle javelin event (after which it was dropped from the program) and then set another world record (54.825m) in winning the regular javelin event by more than four metres. He also placed eighth in the hammer throw and participated in the discus throw and the Greek-style discus throw. At the age of 32, Lemming made a final appearance at the 1912 Olympics, which were held in his home country of Sweden. Lemming rose to the occasion, earning the gold medal by making the first javelin throw to exceed 60m, a feat that led the appreciative crowd to give him a standing ovation. Later in the Stockholm Games, he placed fourth in a one-time event in which the competitors threw the javelin with each hand, and he competed in a similar event with the discus. During his career, Lemming set ten javelin world records, culminating in a 1912 post-Olympic throw of 62.32m.

Paris 1900: Medal Table

Nation Gold Silver Bronze

1. France FRA 26 41 34
2. United States of America USA 19 14 14
3. Great Britain GBR 15 6 9
4. Mixed team ZZX 6 3 3
5. Switzerland SUI 6 2 1
6. Belgium BEL 5 5 5
7. Germany GER 4 2 2
8. Italy ITA 2 1 0
9. Australia AUS 2 0 3
10. Denmark DEN 1 3 2
11. Hungary HUN 1 3 2
12. Cuba CUB 1 1 0
13. Canada CAN 1 0 1
14. Spain ESP 1 0 0
15. Austria AUT 0 3 3
16. Norway NOR 0 2 3
17. India IND 0 2 0
18. Netherlands NED 0 1 3
19. Bohemia (TCH since 1920) BOH 0 1 1
20. Mexico MEX 0 0 1
21. Sweden SWE 0 0 1


The International Olympic Committee (IOC) does not recognise global ranking per country; the medal tables are displayed for information only.

Furthermore, the results that we publish are official and are taken from the "Official Report" - a document published for each Olympic Games by the Organising Committee. However, for the first Olympic Games (until Antwerp in 1920), it is difficult to give the exact number of medals awarded to some countries, due to the fact that teams were composed of athletes from different countries.

The medal tables by country are based on the number of medals won, with gold medals taking priority over silver and bronze. A team victory counts as one medal.

Paris 1900 :The poster
Credit: IOC / Olympic Museum Collections

During the 1900 Universal Exhibition, certain events of international physical exercise and sports competitions were recognised as Olympic and made up the programme of the second modern Olympic Games. Several posters were created-athletics, rowing, cycling, fencing and gymnastics.
Here, a female fencer holding in her right hand the three traditional weapons- foil, sword and sabre. However, it should be noted that women did not compete in the fencing competitions until 1924.

HISTORY OF PARIS OLYMPICS 1900

Paris 1900:The poster




Credit: IOC / Olympic Museum Collections

During the 1900 Universal Exhibition, certain events of international physical exercise and sports competitions were recognised as Olympic and made up the programme of the second modern Olympic Games. Several posters were created-athletics, rowing, cycling, fencing and gymnastics.
Here, a female fencer holding in her right hand the three traditional weapons- foil, sword and sabre. However, it should be noted that women did not compete in the fencing competitions until 1924.

Wednesday, September 28, 2005

HISTORY OF 1896 OLYMPICS

ATHENS 1896

Games of the I Olympiad

The revival of the ancient Olympics attracted athletes from 14 nations, with the largest delegations coming from Greece, Germany, France and Great Britain. On 6 April 1896, the American James Connolly won the triple jump to become the first Olympic champion in more than 1,500 years. Winners were awarded a silver medal and an olive branch. The German athlete Carl Schumann finished in the top five events of three different sports. The people of Athens greeted the Games with great enthusiasm. Their support was rewarded when a Greek shepherd, Spyridon Louis, won the most popular event, the marathon.

14 NOCs (Nations)

241 athletes (0 women, 241 men)

43 events

CEREMONIES

Athens 1896. Closure Ceremony. The procession of the medal-holders. At the head Spyridon Louis (GRE) 1st in the marathon.

Official opening of the Games by: His Majesty The King George I

Lighting the Olympic Flame by: The Olympic flame was first lit during the opening ceremony of the 1928 Olympic Games in Amsterdam.

Olympic Oath by: The first athletes' oath was sworn at the 1920 Olympic Games in Antwerp, Belgium.

Official Oath by: The first officials' oath was sworn at the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich.

HIGHLIGHTS

Alfréd Hajos (HUN-swimming) won the 100m and the 1,200m events. For the longer race, the swimmers were transported by boat and left to swim back to shore alone. According to Hajos, "I must say that I shivered at the thought of what would happen if I got a cramp from the cold water. My will to live completely overcame my desire to win."

KEY FACTS

Opening date:06 April 1896

Closing date:15 April 1896


Country of the host city: Greece (GRE)

Candidate cities:
The first Session of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) was held in Paris on 18-23 June 1894. It was during the first Session that the city of Athens was selected for the Games of the I Olympiad.

Sports: 9
Athens 1896 : Sports on the program

Aquatics, Athletics , Cycling ,Fencing ,Gymnastics ,Shooting ,Tennis
Weightlifting , Wrestling


Athens 1896
Medal Table



Nation Gold Silver Bronze

1. United States of America USA 11 7 2
2. Greece GRE 10 17 19
3. Germany GER 6 5 2
4. France FRA 5 4 2
5. Great Britain GBR 2 3 2
6. Hungary HUN 2 1 3
7. Austria AUT 2 1 2
8. Australia AUS 2 0 0
9. Denmark DEN 1 2 3
10. Switzerland SUI 1 2 0
11. Mixed team ZZX 1 1 1

John BOLAND
The Spectator Who Won an Olympic Championship

John Boland was an Oxford student who enjoyed the study of Greek mythology. When learned about the Olympics revival, Boland traveled to Athens to watch the Olympic Games as a spectator. However, his friend, Thrasyvoalos Manaos, Secretary of the Athens 1896 Organising Committee, entered Boland into the tennis competition. Despite competing with leather-soled shoes with heels, Boland won the competition and became an Olympic champion. He later became a Member of Parliament and an ardent proponent of Irish independence and the Irish language.

James CONNOLLY
The First Champion of the Modern Olympics

On 6 April 1896, James Connolly won the triple jump (then two hops and a jump), and thus became the first Olympic champion in 1527 years. He also placed second in the high jump and third in the long jump. A 27-year-old undergraduate student, Connolly dropped out of Harvard University and traveled to Athens by freighter and train, arriving the day before the Olympics began. Connolly later became a well-known journalist and novelist and was offered an honorary doctorate by Harvard, which he turned down.

Alfred HAJOS
My Will to Live Completely Overcame My Desire to Win

Alfred Hajos was 13 years old when he felt compelled to become a good swimmer after his father drowned in the Danube River. The first Olympic swimming contests, at the 1896 Athens Games, were held in the Bay of Zea in water with a temperature of only 13 degrees Celsius. Hajos won the 100m and the 1,200m freestyle on the same day (11 April). For the longer race, the nine entrants were transported by boat to the open water and left alone to swim back to shore. According to Hajos, "I must say that I shivered from the thought of what would happen if I got a cramp from the cold water. My will to live completely overcame my desire to win". In 1924 Hajos won a prize in the architectural division of the Olympic Art Contest.

Spyridon LOUIS
The First Marathon Champion of the Modern Games

Born on 12 January 1873 in Maroussi near Athens, Spyridon Louis, a 24-year-old Greek shepherd, became the real hero of the 1896 Games. There was no event that the Greek hosts wanted more to win than the 40,000m marathon race, which was created to honor the legend of Pheidippides, who allegedly carried the news of the Greek victory at the Battle of Marathon in 490 BC by running from Marathon to Athens. On 10 April 1896, Louis, wearing shoes that had been donated by his fellow villagers, set off from Marathon with sixteen other runners. He took the lead four kilometres from the Panathenaic Stadium and, to the great joy of the 100,000 spectators in and around the stadium, won the race by more than seven minutes. Forty years later, Louis recalled the moments after his victory: "That hour was something unimaginable and it still appears to me in my memory like a dream…. Twigs and flowers were raining down on me. Everybody was calling out my name and throwing their hats in the air…."

Paul MASSON
Cycling Champion and Pioneer

Born in 1874, Frenchman Paul Masson won three of the six cycling events (1km time trial, 10km track race, 1,000m sprint) at the inaugural 1896 Olympics. After the Athens Games, he turned professional and changed his name to Paul Nossam (Masson spelled backwards). He placed third in the world professional sprint championship in 1897.

Carl SCHUMANN
Champion of Both Gymnastics and Wrestling

Carl Schumann won three events in gymnastics (individual horse vault and horizontal bar and parallel bars team competitions) en 1896. He also won the Greco-Roman wrestling tournament in a major upset. Schumann also competed in three events in athletics (long jump, triple jump and shot put) and in weightlifting.

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) does not recognise global ranking per country; the medal tables are displayed for information only.

Furthermore, the results that we publish are official and are taken from the "Official Report" - a document published for each Olympic Games by the Organising Committee. However, for the first Olympic Games (until Antwerp in 1920), it is difficult to give the exact number of medals awarded to some countries, due to the fact that teams were composed of athletes from different countries.

The medal tables by country are based on the number of medals won, with gold medals taking priority over silver and bronze. A team victory counts as one medal.

Athens 1896
The poster

Credit: IOC / Olympic Museum Collections

No official poster was made for the 1896 Olympic Games, but the cover page of the official report is often used to refer to the Games of the I Olympiad. The inscription "776-1896", like the drawing as a whole: the Olympic stadium in a newly designed horseshoe shape, the Acropolis, the girl personifying the goddess Athena and presenting the branch of wild olive intended for the victor, mark the bond between the Games of Antiquity and the first Games of the modern era.

Tuesday, September 27, 2005

ANCIENT OLYMPICS

The Ancient Olympic Games (776 B.C. - 393 A.D.)

HISTORY

According to historical records, the first ancient Olympic Games can be traced back to 776 BC. They were dedicated to the Olympian gods and were staged on the ancient plains of Olympia. They continued for nearly 12 centuries, until Emperor Theodosius decreed in 393 A.D. that all such “pagan cults” be banned.

ANCIENT OLYMPIC GAMES

OLYMPIA

Olympia, the site of the ancient Olympic Games, is in the western part of the Peloponnese which, according to Greek mythology, is the island of "Pelops", the founder of the Olympic Games. Imposing temples, votive buildings, elaborate shrines and ancient sporting facilities were combined in a site of unique natural and mystical beauty.

Olympia functioned as a meeting place for worship and other religious and political practices as early as the 10th century B.C. The central part of Olympia was dominated by the majestic temple of Zeus, with the temple of Hera parallel to it. The ancient stadium in Olympia could accommodate more than 40,000 spectators, while in the surrounding area there were auxiliary buildings which developed gradually up until the 4th century B.C. and were used as training sites for the athletes or to house the judges of the Games.

THE GAMES AND RELIGION

The Olympic Games were closely linked to the religious festivals of the cult of Zeus, but were not an integral part of a rite. Indeed, they had a secular character and aimed to show the physical qualities and evolution of the performances accomplished by young people, as well as encouraging good relations between the cities of Greece. According to specialists, the Olympic Games owed their purity and importance to religion.

VICTORY CEREMONIES

The Olympic victor received his first awards immediately after the competition. Following the announcement of the winner's name by the herald, a Hellanodikis (Greek judge) would place a palm branch in his hands, while the spectators cheered and threw flowers to him. Red ribbons were tied on his head and hands as a mark of victory.
The official award ceremony would take place on the last day of the Games, at the elevated vestibule of the temple of Zeus. In a loud voice, the herald would announce the name of the Olympic winner, his father's name, and his homeland. Then, the Hellanodikis placed the sacred olive tree wreath, or kotinos, on the winner's head.

MYTHOLOGY

The oldest myth which concerns the beginning of the Olympic Games is that of Idaios Daktylos Herakles. According to other myths, Zeus, the father of humanity, fought and defeated Cronus in a struggle for the throne of the gods. Finally, the well-known demigod Herakles is mentioned he staged games in Olympia in honour of Zeus, because the latter had helped him conquer Elis when he went to war against Augeas.

ANCIENT OLYMPIC GAMES

ZEUS

Zeus was considered the most important of all the Olympic gods. He was originally worshipped as a god of meteorological change. He quickly became the god of fertility however, and was worshipped as Zeus the "infernal" (hthonios) or "farmer" (georgos). As Zeus the possessor (ktisios), he offered a good harvest; as Zeus the father (pater), he protected the family and all who lived nearby. He was thus honoured on the altar in the courtyard. As Zeus the brother (fratius), he protected blood relations and as Zeus the patron saint (poliouhos), the whole town. Before long, Zeus was worshipped as a Supreme Being of prudence and wisdom who determined the fate of man and justly set the moral order of the world.

HERA

Hera was the sister and wife of Zeus and was worshipped all over Greece, but especially in the region of Argos. She was thus also called "Argeia". The epithets "perfect", "balanced", "wedded" were used to describe her because she was considered the protector of marriage and the marital bond. Homer depicts Hera in her dual capacity as the most important female deity, but also the official spouse of the father of the gods.

ATHENA

The ancient Greeks believed that Athena was miraculously born out of the head of Zeus. She was first worshipped in the palaces of the Achaean rulers in the Pre-Hellenistic period. In Homer’s work, she is depicted as a warrior goddess wearing full armour from the prehistoric era. She was as important as Aris, the god of war, and favoured the prudent outcome of confrontations.

APOLLO
Apollo was the god of moral order and music, but his main capacity was to protect the art of divination. This is revealed by the plethora of oracles in various regions of Greece, the most famous being the oracle of Delphi, in Fokis. Apollo is also seen as a pastoral god, protecting his flock from the wolves. He was worshipped by the farmers as the god of the harvest. From Antiquity onwards, he had the reputation of a god of healing.

OLYMPIC TRUCE
The idea of a truce symbolises the spirit of the Ancient Olympic Games. Warring Greek cities assembled in ancient Olympia, where they realised they had more in common with their adversaries than they had thought.

HISTORY


The tradition of the Olympic Truce dates back to the 9th century BC, in Ancient Greece. The International Olympic Committee (IOC) decided to revive this ancient concept in order to protect the interests of the athletes and sport in general.

THE IDEA

The tradition of the “Truce” or “Ekecheiria” was established in ancient Greece in the 9th century BC by the signature of a treaty between three kings. During the Truce period, the athletes, artists and their families, as well as ordinary pilgrims, could travel in total safety to participate in or attend the Olympic Games and return afterwards to their respective countries. As the opening of the Games approached, the sacred truce was proclaimed and announced by citizens of Elis who travelled throughout Greece to pass on the message.

ITS RELEVANCE FOR TODAY

Taking into account the global political reality in which sport and the Olympic Games exist, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) decided to revive the ancient concept of the Olympic Truce with the view to protecting, as far as possible, the interests of the athletes and sport in general, and to contribute to searching for peaceful and diplomatic solutions to the conflicts around the world.

Through this global and symbolic concept, the IOC aims to:
- raise awareness and encourage political leaders to act in favour of peace;
- mobilise youth for the promotion of the Olympic ideals;
- establish contacts between communities in conflict;
- offer humanitarian support in countries at war;

And more generally:
- to create a window of opportunities for dialogue, reconciliation and the resolution of conflicts.
The IOC undertakings for the Olympic Truce extend beyond the period of the Olympic Games and have led to the implementation of a series of activities in favour of peace through its National Olympic Committees.

"The IOC wishes that this peaceful gathering of all Olympic athletes in Salt Lake City will inspire peace in the world"
Dr Jacques Rogge, IOC President, November 2001

THE SYMBOL

The Olympic Truce is symbolised by the dove of peace with the traditional Olympic flame in the background. In a world that is plagued by wars and animosity, the peace-dove symbol represents one of the IOC's ideals to build a peaceful and better world through sport and the Olympic ideal. The Olympic flame has brought warm friendship to all the people of the world through sharing and global togetherness. In the symbol, the flame is made up of colourful effervescent elements - reminiscent of festivities experienced in the celebration of the human spirit. These elements represent people of all races coming together for the observance of the Truce.

TEN YEARS OF INITIATIVE FOR PEACE

In 1992, the first initiatives were launched by the IOC, in collaboration with the United Nations, allowing athletes of the former Republic of Yugoslavia to participate in the Barcelona Games. In 2000, during the Opening Ceremony of the Sydney Games, the South and North Korean delegations paraded in the stadium together under the flag of the Korean peninsula.

TEN YEARS OF INITIATIVE FOR PEACE

UNITED NATIONS SUPPORT


The first initiatives were launched by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in 1992. In order for the project to have a greater impact, the IOC relayed it to the United Nations (UN). Since 1993, the UN General Assembly has repeatedly expressed its support for the IOC by unanimously adopting, every two years, one year before each edition of the Olympic Games, a resolution entitled "Building a peaceful and better world through sport and the Olympic ideal". Through this symbolic resolution, the UN invites its member States to observe the Olympic Truce individually or collectively, and to seek, in conformity with the goals and principles of the United Nations Charter, the peaceful settling of all international conflicts through peaceful and diplomatic means, and recognising the importance of the IOC initiatives for human well-being and international understanding.

"Olympic ideals are also United Nations ideals: tolerance, equality, fair play and, most of all, peace. Together, the Olympics and the United Nations can be a winning team. But the contest will not be won easily. War, intolerance and deprivation continue to stalk the earth. We must fight back. Just as athletes strive for world records, so must we strive for world peace"
Kofi A. Annan, United Nations Secretary General, September 2000

CHRONOLOGY
Independent athletes of Yugoslavia, parading in a uniform bearing the Olympic rings
1992: the IOC launched an Appeal for the observance of the Olympic Truce and negotiated with the United Nations to allow athletes of the former Republic of Yugoslavia to participate in the Games of the XXIII Olympiad in Barcelona.

The Appeal


1993: the first resolution on the observance of the Olympic Truce was adopted by the 48th session of the UN General Assembly.

The resolution

The IOC delegation upon it's arrival in Sarajevo
1994: the year was proclaimed the International Year of Sport and the Olympic Ideal by the UN. The appeal for the observance of the Olympic Truce allowed the participation of athletes from the former Republic of Yugoslavia in the Olympic Winter Games in Lillehammer. An IOC delegation visited Sarajevo, which was at war, to extend its solidarity with the city that hosted the XIV Olympic Winter Games in 1984.

1995: The IOC president attended the UN General Assembly for the first time in history.

1998: The Olympic Truce was taken into consideration by member States during the Olympic Winter Games in Nagano and contributed, to a certain extent, to avoid war in Iraq and to set up a mediation mission by the UN Secretary General, which led to the signature of a memorandum of understanding between the UN and the Iraqi government.

1999: A record number of 180 member States were co-sponsors of the resolution on the Olympic Truce.

The resolution

2000: The United Nations Millennium Summit, held in New York with the participation of more than 150 heads of state and government, adopted a Millennium Declaration that included a paragraph on the observance of the Olympic Truce. During the Opening Ceremony of the Games of the XXVII Olympiad in Sydney, the South and North Korean delegations paraded in the stadium together under the flag of the Korean peninsula.

2001: The 56th UN General Assembly adopted a resolution on the Olympic Truce in preparation for the Olympic Winter Games in Salt Lake City.


INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC TRUCE FOUNDATION

In July 2000, the International Olympic Truce Foundation (IOTF) was created with a view to promoting peace through sport and the Olympic ideal.

INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC TRUCE FOUNDATION


OBJECTIVES
Kofi Annan during the presentation of the Olympic Truce sculpture

In the framework of promoting peace through sport and the Olympic ideal, the IOC established an International Olympic Truce Foundation (IOTF) in July 2000.
As a non-governmental organisation belonging to the Olympic Movement, the IOTF defines its actions around the following objectives:

- To promote the Olympic ideals to serve peace, friendship and understanding in the world, and in particular, to promote the ancient Greek tradition of the Olympic Truce;
- To initiate conflict prevention and resolution through sport, culture and the Olympic ideals, by cooperating with all inter and non-governmental organisations specialised in this field, by developing educational and research programmes, and by launching communications campaigns to promote the Olympic Truce.

INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC TRUCE CENTRE

To meet these objectives, the IOTF established an International Olympic Truce Centre (IOTC), which is responsible for the implementation of projects related to the global promotion of a culture of peace through sport and the Olympic ideal, in accordance with the principles and policies established by the Foundation. The Centre's main headquarters are located in Athens, Greece, with a liaison office in Lausanne, Switzerland, and a symbolic office in Olympia, Greece.

The IOTF is administered by a Board composed of personalities from the world of sports and politics, and meets once a year

THE ATHLETE

Through the 12 centuries of the Olympic Games, many wonderful athletes competed in the stadium and the hippodrome of ancient Olympia's sacred area, moving the crowds with their great achievements. Although mortal, their Olympic victories immortalised them. Of the best athletes who left their mark on the sacred valley of Olympia, some surpassed all limits and became legends by winning in successive Olympic Games and remaining at the forefront of their sport for more than a decade. It is worth mentioning some of their extraordinary achievements, which, even by today's standards, would be the envy of athletes such as Nurmi, Zatopek or Lewis.

LES PARTICIPANTS
All free male Greek citizens were entitled to participate in the ancient Olympic Games, regardless of their social status. Orsippos, a general from Megara; Polymnistor, a shepherd; Diagoras, member of a royal family from Rhodes; Alexander I, son of Amyndas and King of Macedonia; and Democritus, a philosopher, were all participants in the Games.

Married women were not allowed to participate in, or to watch, the ancient Olympic Games. However, unmarried women could attend the competition, and the priestess of Demeter, goddess of fertility, was given a privileged position next to the Stadium altar.

Although the ancient Olympic Games did not allow female participation, the Herean Games, staged every four years to honour Hera, wife of Zeus, gave female athletes the chance to compete.

ASTYLOS OF CROTON

Astylos of Kroton in southern Italy won a total of six victory olive wreaths in three Olympiads (488-480 B.C.) in the stade and the diaulos (twice the stade) events. In the first Olympiad, he ran for Kroton and his compatriots honoured and glorified him. In the two successive Olympiads, however, he took part as a citizen of Syracuse. The people of Kroton punished him by demolishing his statue in their city and converting his house into a prison.

MILON OF KROTON


Milon, a pupil of the philosopher Pythagoras, was one of the most famous athletes in Antiquity. He came from the Greek city of Kroton in southern Italy. He was six times Olympic wrestling champion. He first won in 540 B.C., in the youth wrestling event, and then five times in men's wrestling. This is a unique achievement even in today's competition context. He also won seven times in the Pythian Games, nine times in the Nemean Games, ten times in the Isthmian Games and innumerable times in small competitions. In the 67th Olympiad (512 B.C.), in his seventh attempt for the championship, he lost to a younger athlete, Timasitheus. There are many accounts of his achievements.

LEONIDAS OF RHODES

Leonidas of Rhodes was one of the most famous runners in Antiquity. His was a unique achievement, even by today's standards. For four consecutive Olympiads (164-152 B.C.), he won three races, - the stade race, the diaulos race and the armour race. He won a total of 12 Olympic victory wreaths. He was acclaimed as a hero by his compatriots.

MELANKOMAS OF KARIA
Melankomas of Karia was crowned Olympic boxing champion in 49 B.C., and was a winner in many other events. He went down in history for the way in which he fought. His movements were light, simple and fascinating. He would defeat his opponents without ever being hit himself, nor ever dealing a blow. He was reputed to fight for two days holding his arms out without ever lowering them. He attained his excellent competitive form through continuous and strenuous exercise.

KYNISKA OF SPARTA

Kyniska, daughter of King Archidamos of Sparta, was the first woman to be listed as an Olympic victor in Antiquity. Her chariot won in the four-horse chariot race in the 96th and 97th Olympiads, (396 B.C. and 392 B.C. respectively). In the Olympic Games, it was forbidden for women to be present and Kyniska broke with tradition, since, in the equestrian events, the victory wreath, or kotinos, was won by the owner, not the rider, of the horse.

THE SPORTS EVENTS


The ancient Olympic Games were initially a one-day event until 684 BC, when they were extended to three days. In the 5th century B.C., the Games were extended again to cover five days.

The ancient Games included running, long jump, shot put, javelin, boxing, pankration and equestrian events.

Find out more about the sports events

The ancient Olympic Games included the following events:

PENTATHLON

The Pentathlon became an Olympic sport with the addition of wrestling in 708 B.C. and included the following:

Modern Pentathlon Olympic sport since 1912

ABOUT

A young French cavalry officer of the 19th century was sent on horseback to deliver a message. He rode across the uneven terrain, through enemy lines, and was confronted by a soldier with his sword drawn. Challenged to a duel, the officer won, only to have his horse shot out from under him by another enemy soldier.

After felling that soldier with a single shot, the officer ran on. He swam across a raging river, and then finally he delivered the message. So, legend has it, was born the modern pentathlon.

The brainchild of Baron Pierre de Coubertin, founder of the modern Olympic Games, the event was based upon the unlucky officer and introduced into the Stockholm Games of 1912. Only remotely resembling the ancient pentathlon inspired by the warmongering Spartans, modern pentathletes shoot, fence, swim, compete in show jumping and run - five events testing endurance as well as athletic versatility.

RUNNING

Running contests included:
- the stade race, which was the pre-eminent test of speed, covering the Olympia track from one end to the other (200m foot race),
- the diaulos (two stades - 400m foot race),
- dolichos (ranging between 7 and 24 stades).

JUMPING

Athletes used stone or lead weights called halteres to increase the distance of a jump. They held onto the weights until the end of their flight, and then jettisoned them backwards.

DISCUS THROW

The discus was originally made of stone and later of iron, lead or bronze. The technique was very similar to today's freestyle discus throw.

ABOUT

Athletics is, in many ways, the embodiment of the Olympic motto, "Citius, Altius, Fortius", meaning faster, higher, stronger.

Athletics (or track and field) is about running faster, jumping higher and throwing further than your competitors. The ancient Games at Olympia began simply with foot races, only occasionally complicated by dressing the runners in infantry armour or making them carry soldiers' shields. Today, athletics remains one of the most popular Olympic sports. From the 100m dash to the 42.195km marathon, from the hammer throw to the high jump, it contains many of the Olympic Games' blue-ribbon events and many of the highest-profile competitors.

WRESTLING

This was highly valued as a form of military exercise without weapons. It ended only when one of the contestants admitted defeat.

Wrestling Olympic sport since 1896

ABOUT

If the Olympic Games are a history of mankind, wrestling is the prologue. When the ancient Games of the Olympiad were born, wrestling already was an ancient game. Widely recognised as the world's oldest competitive sport, wrestling appeared in a series of Egyptian wall paintings as many as 5000 years ago. When the Games began in 776 BC, more than two millenniums later, it included wrestling, and, in the years that followed, wrestling featured as the main event.

The sport would return in a similar role when the Olympic Games returned after a 1500-year absence in 1896. Organisers, seeking direct links to ancient times, found a natural in the sport that had enjoyed popularity across much of the ancient world, from Greece, Assyria and Babylon to India, China and Japan. They resurrected Greco-Roman wrestling, a style they believed to be an exact carryover from the Greek and Roman wrestlers of old.

In Greco-Roman wrestling, the wrestlers used only their arms and upper bodies to attack. They could hold only those same parts of their opponents. It worked nicely from a historical perspective, but another breezier style was sweeping across Great Britain and the United States by then. Known as "catch as catch can", it had become standard fare - and popular professional entertainment - at fairs and festivals in both countries.

In 1904, the Olympic Games added the second wrestling event and called it "freestyle". Now, wrestlers could use their legs for pushing, lifting and tripping, and they could hold opponents above or below the waist.

BOXING

Boxers wrapped straps (himantes) around their hands to strengthen their wrists and steady their fingers. Initially, these straps were soft but, as time progressed, boxers started using hard leather straps, often causing disfigurement of their opponent's face.

Boxing Olympic sport since 1904

ABOUT

Boxing ranks among the Olympic Games' most illustrious sports.

When it first arrived in the Ancient Olympic Games, the tools of the trade were long strips of leather wrapped around boxers' fists. The fight continued until one man or the other went down or conceded. The Romans followed with a gladiator dimension. They used gloves studded with spikes or weighted with lead, and fights often ended in death, like other entertainment of the day.

When the modern Games resumed in 1896, the Athens organising committee omitted boxing, deciding it was too dangerous. The sport reappeared in 1904 in St. Louis, thanks to its popularity in the United States, then disappeared again in 1912 at Stockholm because Sweden's national law banned it.

Only in 1920 did boxing return to the Olympic Games to stay. Hence, Muhammad Ali (Cassius Clay at the time) and Teofilo Stevenson (a three-time gold medallist) could join names like Theagenes of Thassos and Cleitomachus of Thebes among the legends.

PANKRATION

This was a primitive form of martial art combining wrestling and boxing, and was considered to be one of the toughest sports. Greeks believed that it was founded by Theseus when he defeated the fierce Minotaur in the labyrinth.

EQUESTRIAN EVENTS

These included horse races and chariot races and took place in the Hippodrome, a wide, flat, open space.

Equestrian Olympic sport since 1900

ABOUT

Equestrian events were included in the Olympic Games for the first time in 1900 and then in 1912, in a format very similar to that which will be used at the Athens 2004 Olympic Games.

In the past, the three-day event (Eventing) was restricted to military officers, while the jumping and dressage competitions were open to civilians, but only a handful of civilian riders competed up to 1948. Up to that time, the growth of modern sport had been rapid, but relatively few competitors were involved in international competitions. They all knew each other and the judges and were accepting of local variations to the fairly simple rules which existed. With the inclusion of the sport in the Olympic Games, it became obvious that some internationally recognised rules for the three Olympic disciplines were essential. In May 1921, delegates from 10 national equestrian organisations met in Lausanne to discuss the formation of an international federation.

Equestrian consists of three disciplines: Jumping, Dressage and Eventing (Three-Day Event).

DID YOU KNOW?

The famous marathon race did not exist in the ancient Games. The starting pistol of the first Olympic marathon was fired on 14 April 1896 at 2 p.m.

Famous Greeks attended, or even participated in the ancient Olympic Games: the philosopher Socrates, Pythagoras, Plato, Aristotle and even the father of medicine, Hippocrates.

The philosopher Plato (427-347) was a double winner of the pankration.

The 14 articles of the Olympic regulations included an article on corruption: any corruption of a judge or an opponent would be punished by whipping.

Some women, who were prohibited from attending the Games, did not accept this segregation and dressed up as men, at the risk of being thrown from the mountain of Typaion, as stipulated in the rules.
Sometimes the relationship between the athlete and his teacher was somewhat ambiguous, even amorous. This was authorised by the law, which imposed rather vague boundaries.

Friday, September 23, 2005

HIGHEST INDIVIDUAL SCORES IN ODIS

194 Saeed Anwar Pakistan v India at Chennai, Independence Cup, 1996/97 [1209]
189* IVA Richards West Indies v England at Manchester, Texaco Trophy, 1984 [264]
189 ST Jayasuriya Sri Lanka v India at Sharjah, Champions Trophy, 2000/01 [1652]
188* G Kirsten South Africa v United Arab Emirates at Rawalpindi, World Cup, 1995/96 [1049]
186* SR Tendulkar India v New Zealand at Hyderabad, 2nd ODI, 1999/00 [1523]
183 SC Ganguly India v Sri Lanka at Taunton, World Cup, 1999 [1463]
181 IVA Richards West Indies v Sri Lanka at Karachi, World Cup, 1987/88 [457]
175* N Kapil Dev India v Zimbabwe at Tunbridge Wells, World Cup, 1983 [216]
173 ME Waugh Australia v West Indies at Melbourne, Carlton Series, 2000/01 [1687]
172* CB Wishart Zimbabwe v Namibia at Harare, World Cup, 2002/03 [1943]
172 AC Gilchrist Australia v Zimbabwe at Hobart, VB Series, 2003/04 [2082]
172 L Vincent New Zealand v Zimbabwe at Bulawayo, Videocon Triangular Series, 2005-06 [2272]
171* GM Turner New Zealand v East Africans at Birmingham, World Cup, 1975 [20]
169* DJ Callaghan South Africa v New Zealand at Verwoerdburg, Mandela Trophy, 1994/95 [960]
169 BC Lara West Indies v Sri Lanka at Sharjah, Champions Trophy, 1995/96 [1010]
167* RA Smith England v Australia at Birmingham, Texaco Trophy, 1993 [831]
161 AC Hudson South Africa v Netherlands at Rawalpindi, World Cup, 1995/96 [1073]
159* D Mongia India v Zimbabwe at Guwahati, 5th ODI, 2001/02 [1818]
158 DI Gower England v New Zealand at Brisbane, World Series Cup, 1982/83 [168]
156 BC Lara West Indies v Pakistan at Adelaide, VB Series, 2004/05 [2213]
154 AC Gilchrist Australia v Sri Lanka at Melbourne, Carlton & United Series, 1998/99 [1403]
153* IVA Richards West Indies v Australia at Melbourne, World Series Cup, 1979/80 [78]
153* M Azharuddin India v Zimbabwe at Cuttack, Pepsi Triangular Series, 1997/98 [1311]
153* SC Ganguly India v New Zealand at Gwalior, 3rd ODI, 1999/00 [1524]
153* CH Gayle West Indies v Zimbabwe at Bulawayo, 1st ODI, 2003/04 [2065]
153 BC Lara West Indies v Pakistan at Sharjah, Champions Trophy, 1993/94 [845]
153 R Dravid India v New Zealand at Hyderabad, 2nd ODI, 1999/00 [1523]
153 HH Gibbs South Africa v Bangladesh at Potchefstroom, 1st ODI, 2002/03 [1890]
152* DL Haynes West Indies v India at Georgetown, 5th ODI, 1988/89 [563]
152* CH Gayle West Indies v South Africa at Johannesburg, 5th ODI, 2003/04 [2096]
152 CH Gayle West Indies v Kenya at Nairobi (Simb), 1st ODI, 2001 [1745]
152 SR Tendulkar India v Namibia at Pietermaritzburg, World Cup, 2002/03 [1964]
152 AJ Strauss England v Bangladesh at Nottingham, NatWest Series, 2005 [2252]
151* ST Jayasuriya Sri Lanka v India at Mumbai, Independence Cup, 1996/97 [1207]
150 S Chanderpaul West Indies v South Africa at East London, 2nd ODI, 1998/99 [1393]
149 IVA Richards West Indies v India at Jamshedpur, 4th ODI, 1983/84 [229]
148 DL Haynes West Indies v Australia at St John's, 1st ODI, 1977/78 [48]
148 MS Dhoni India v Pakistan at Visakhapatnam, 2nd ODI, 2004/05 [2236]
146* BC Lara West Indies v New Zealand at Port-of-Spain, 3rd ODI, 1995/96 [1086]
146 SR Tendulkar India v Zimbabwe at Jodhpur, 3rd ODI, 2000/01 [1658]
146 SR Tendulkar India v Kenya at Paarl, Standard Bank Series, 2001/02 [1764]
146 ML Hayden Australia v Pakistan at Nairobi (Gymk), PSO Tri-Nation Tournament, 2002/03 [1868]
145* DL Haynes West Indies v New Zealand at Berbice, 3rd ODI, 1984/85 [326]
145* NJ Astle New Zealand v United States of America at The Oval, ICC Champions Trophy, 2004 [2169]
145 DM Jones Australia v England at Brisbane, World Series, 1990/91 [653]
145 PA de Silva Sri Lanka v Kenya at Kandy, World Cup, 1995/96 [1074]
145 RT Ponting Australia v Zimbabwe at Delhi, Pepsi Triangular Series, 1997/98 [1313]
145 R Dravid India v Sri Lanka at Taunton, World Cup, 1999 [1463]
145 A Flower Zimbabwe v India at Colombo (RPS), ICC Champions Trophy, 2002/03 [1876]

MOST RUNS IN ODI

Name Mat I NO Runs HS Ave SR 100 50 Ct St Team

SR Tendulkar 348 339 32 13642 186* 44.43 86.15 38 69 104 - IND
Inzamam-ul-Haq 347 322 47 10971 137* 39.89 74.28 10 81 102 - PAK/ASIA-XI
SC Ganguly 279 270 21 10123 183 40.65 73.79 22 60 96 - IND/ASIA-XI
ST Jayasuriya 339 330 15 10122 189 32.13 88.55 18 58 105 - SL/ASIA-XI
M Azharuddin 334 308 54 9378 153* 36.92 73.99 7 58 156 - IND
BC Lara 256 249 26 9354 169 41.94 79.50 19 57 106 - WI/ICC-XI
PA de Silva 308 296 30 9284 145 34.90 81.13 11 64 95 - SL
Saeed Anwar 247 244 19 8823 194 39.21 80.66 20 43 42 - PAK
DL Haynes 238 237 28 8648 152* 41.37 63.09 17 57 59 - WI
ME Waugh 244 236 20 8500 173 39.35 76.83 18 50 108 - AUS
R Dravid 262 241 29 8383 153 39.54 69.87 10 62 157 14 IND/ASIA-XI
RT Ponting 232 226 28 8290 145 41.86 77.96 18 45 93 - AUS/ICC-XI
JH Kallis 217 208 37 7682 139 44.92 70.98 13 53 89 - RSA/AFRICA-XI
SR Waugh 325 288 58 7569 120* 32.90 75.91 3 45 111 - AUS
MS Atapattu 231 225 27 7543 132* 38.09 67.14 11 53 64 - SL
A Ranatunga 269 255 47 7456 131* 35.84 77.91 4 49 63 - SL
Javed Miandad 233 218 41 7381 119* 41.70 66.99 8 50 71 2 PAK
AC Gilchrist 219 213 9 7362 172 36.08 95.36 11 42 321 42 AUS/ICC-XI
Saleem Malik 283 256 38 7170 102 32.88 76.41 5 47 81 - PAK
MG Bevan 232 196 67 6912 108* 53.58 74.16 6 46 69 - AUS
SP Fleming 240 231 19 6873 134* 32.41 70.84 6 40 114 - NZ/ICC-XI
G Kirsten 185 185 19 6798 188* 40.95 72.04 13 45 61 1 RSA
A Flower 213 208 16 6786 145 35.34 74.60 4 55 141 32 ZIM
Yousuf Youhana 202 191 27 6761 141* 41.22 75.20 11 43 45 - PAK/ASIA-XI
IVA Richards 187 167 24 6721 189* 47.00 90.20 11 45 100 - WI
Ijaz Ahmed 250 232 29 6564 139* 32.33 80.30 10 37 90 - PAK
GW Flower 219 212 18 6536 142* 33.69 67.54 6 40 86 - ZIM
AR Border 273 252 39 6524 127* 30.62 71.40 3 39 127 - AUS
NJ Astle 196 192 12 6354 145* 35.30 72.48 15 37 74 - NZ
RB Richardson 224 217 30 6248 122 33.41 63.74 5 44 75 - WI
DM Jones 164 161 25 6068 145 44.61 72.56 7 46 54 - AUS
DC Boon 181 177 16 5964 122 37.04 65.21 5 37 45 - AUS
JN Rhodes 245 220 51 5935 121 35.11 80.91 2 33 105 - RSA
Rameez Raja 198 197 15 5841 119* 32.09 63.32 9 31 33 - PAK
CL Hooper 227 206 43 5761 113* 35.34 76.63 7 29 120 - WI
WJ Cronje 188 175 31 5565 112 38.64 76.48 2 39 73 - RSA
HH Gibbs 169 168 13 5507 153 35.52 81.63 15 22 71 - RSA
A Jadeja 196 179 36 5359 119 37.47 69.76 6 30 59 - IND
S Chanderpaul 178 166 21 5281 150 36.42 69.58 3 35 54 - WI
ADR Campbell 188 184 14 5185 131* 30.50 66.19 7 30 76 - ZIM
RS Mahanama 213 198 23 5162 119* 29.49 60.59 4 35 109 - SL
CG Greenidge 128 127 13 5134 133* 45.03 64.92 11 31 45 - WI
CL Cairns 208 187 23 4807 115 29.31 83.80 4 25 64 - NZ/ICC-XI
DPMD Jayawardene 186 172 19 4791 128 31.31 73.27 6 25 95 - SL/ASIA-XI
Aamer Sohail 156 155 5 4780 134 31.86 65.36 5 31 49 - PAK
MD Crowe 143 140 18 4704 107* 38.55 72.62 4 34 66 - NZ
Shahid Afridi 211 202 9 4678 109 24.23 108.08 4 26 79 - PAK/ASIA-XI
AJ Stewart 170 162 14 4677 116 31.60 68.36 4 28 159 15 ENG
DR Martyn 181 157 48 4604 144* 42.23 78.24 5 30 57 - AUS
NS Sidhu 136 127 8 4413 134* 37.08 69.72 6 33 20 - IND

TEST BATSMEN HIGHEST INDIVIDUAL SCORES

400* BC Lara West Indies v England at St John's, 4th Test, 2003/04 [1696]
380 ML Hayden Australia v Zimbabwe at Perth, 1st Test, 2003/04 [1661]
375 BC Lara West Indies v England at St John's, 5th Test, 1993/94 [1259]
365* GS Sobers West Indies v Pakistan at Kingston, 3rd Test, 1957/58 [450]
364 L Hutton England v Australia at The Oval, 5th Test, 1938 [266]
340 ST Jayasuriya Sri Lanka v India at Colombo (RPS), 1st Test, 1997/98 [1374]
337 Hanif Mohammad Pakistan v West Indies at Bridgetown, 1st Test, 1957/58 [446]
336* WR Hammond England v New Zealand at Auckland, 2nd Test, 1932/33 [226]
334* MA Taylor Australia v Pakistan at Peshawar, 2nd Test, 1998/99 [1426]
334 DG Bradman Australia v England at Leeds, 3rd Test, 1930 [196]
333 GA Gooch England v India at Lord's, 1st Test, 1990 [1148]
329 Inzamam-ul-Haq Pakistan v New Zealand at Lahore, 1st Test, 2002 [1600]
325 A Sandham England v West Indies at Kingston, 4th Test, 1929/30 [193]
317 CH Gayle West Indies v South Africa at St John's, 4th Test, 2004/05 [1750]
311 RB Simpson Australia v England at Manchester, 4th Test, 1964 [564]
310* JH Edrich England v New Zealand at Leeds, 3rd Test, 1965 [593]
309 V Sehwag India v Pakistan at Multan, 1st Test, 2003/04 [1693]
307 RM Cowper Australia v England at Melbourne, 5th Test, 1965/66 [601]
304 DG Bradman Australia v England at Leeds, 4th Test, 1934 [236]
302 LG Rowe West Indies v England at Bridgetown, 3rd Test, 1973/74 [734]
299* DG Bradman Australia v South Africa at Adelaide, 4th Test, 1931/32 [215]
299 MD Crowe New Zealand v Sri Lanka at Wellington, 1st Test, 1990/91 [1162]
291 IVA Richards West Indies v England at The Oval, 5th Test, 1976 [781]
287 RE Foster England v Australia at Sydney, 1st Test, 1903/04 [78]
285* PBH May England v West Indies at Birmingham, 1st Test, 1957 [439]
281 VVS Laxman India v Australia at Calcutta, 2nd Test, 2000/01 [1535]
280* Javed Miandad Pakistan v India at Hyderabad (Sind), 4th Test, 1982/83 [946]
278 DCS Compton England v Pakistan at Nottingham, 2nd Test, 1954 [388]
277 BC Lara West Indies v Australia at Sydney, 3rd Test, 1992/93 [1208]
277 GC Smith South Africa v England at Birmingham, 1st Test, 2003 [1651]
275* DJ Cullinan South Africa v New Zealand at Auckland, 1st Test, 1998/99 [1446]
275 G Kirsten South Africa v England at Durban, 3rd Test, 1999/00 [1480]
274* SP Fleming New Zealand v Sri Lanka at Colombo (PSS), 1st Test, 2003 [1641]
274 RG Pollock South Africa v Australia at Durban, 2nd Test, 1969/70 [671]
274 Zaheer Abbas Pakistan v England at Birmingham, 1st Test, 1971 [687]
271 Javed Miandad Pakistan v New Zealand at Auckland, 3rd Test, 1988/89 [1116]
270* GA Headley West Indies v England at Kingston, 4th Test, 1934/35 [241]
270 DG Bradman Australia v England at Melbourne, 3rd Test, 1936/37 [257]
270 R Dravid India v Pakistan at Rawalpindi, 3rd Test, 2003/04 [1697]
270 KC Sangakkara Sri Lanka v Zimbabwe at Bulawayo, 2nd Test, 2004 [1699]
268 GN Yallop Australia v Pakistan at Melbourne, 4th Test, 1983/84 [973]
267* BA Young New Zealand v Sri Lanka at Dunedin, 1st Test, 1996/97 [1358]
267 PA de Silva Sri Lanka v New Zealand at Wellington, 1st Test, 1990/91 [1162]
267 Younis Khan Pakistan v India at Bangalore, 3rd Test, 2004/05 [1743]
266 WH Ponsford Australia v England at The Oval, 5th Test, 1934 [237]
266 DL Houghton Zimbabwe v Sri Lanka at Bulawayo, 2nd Test, 1994/95 [1271]
262* DL Amiss England v West Indies at Kingston, 2nd Test, 1973/74 [732]
261* RR Sarwan West Indies v Bangladesh at Jamaica, 2nd Test, 2004 [1703]
261 FMM Worrell West Indies v England at Nottingham, 3rd Test, 1950 [325]

WORLDS HIGHEST TEST RUN GETTERS

Test Career Batting - Most Runs


Based on all matches up to and including
Test # 1767: Zimbabwe v India at Harare, 2nd Test, 20/09/2005


Name Mat I NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 Ct St Team

AR Border 156 265 44 11174 205 50.56 27 63 156 - AUS
SR Waugh 168 260 46 10927 200 51.06 32 50 112 - AUS
BC Lara 117 206 6 10818 400* 54.09 30 46 148 - WI
SR Tendulkar 123 198 21 10134 248* 57.25 34 41 77 - IND
SM Gavaskar 125 214 16 10122 236* 51.12 34 45 108 - IND
GA Gooch 118 215 6 8900 333 42.58 20 46 103 - ENG
Javed Miandad 124 189 21 8832 280* 52.57 23 43 93 1 PAK
IVA Richards 121 182 12 8540 291 50.23 24 45 122 - WI
AJ Stewart 133 235 21 8463 190 39.54 15 45 263 14 ENG
DI Gower 117 204 18 8231 215 44.25 18 39 74 - ENG
G Boycott 108 193 23 8114 246* 47.72 22 42 33 - ENG
GS Sobers 93 160 21 8032 365* 57.78 26 30 109 - WI
ME Waugh 128 209 17 8029 153* 41.81 20 47 181 - AUS
R Dravid 91 153 18 7871 270 58.30 20 38 127 - IND
MA Atherton 115 212 7 7728 185* 37.69 16 46 83 - ENG
MC Cowdrey 114 188 15 7624 182 44.06 22 38 120 - ENG
Inzamam-ul-Haq 101 168 18 7620 329 50.80 22 39 76 - PAK
CG Greenidge 108 185 16 7558 226 44.72 19 34 96 - WI
MA Taylor 104 186 13 7525 334* 43.49 19 40 157 - AUS
CH Lloyd 110 175 14 7515 242* 46.67 19 39 90 - WI
DL Haynes 116 202 25 7487 184 42.29 18 39 65 - WI
DC Boon 107 190 20 7422 200 43.65 21 32 99 - AUS
JH Kallis 93 155 26 7337 189* 56.87 22 37 89 - RSA
RT Ponting 93 152 20 7309 257 55.37 23 28 107 - AUS
G Kirsten 101 176 15 7289 275 45.27 21 34 83 - RSA
WR Hammond 85 140 16 7249 336* 58.45 22 24 110 - ENG
GS Chappell 87 151 19 7110 247* 53.86 24 31 122 - AUS
JL Langer 93 160 9 7001 250 46.36 22 28 60 - AUS
DG Bradman 52 80 10 6996 334 99.94 29 13 32 - AUS
L Hutton 79 138 15 6971 364 56.67 19 33 57 - ENG
DB Vengsarkar 116 185 22 6868 166 42.13 17 35 78 - IND
KF Barrington 82 131 15 6806 256 58.67 20 35 58 - ENG
GP Thorpe 100 179 28 6744 200* 44.66 16 39 105 - ENG
ST Jayasuriya 100 170 14 6580 340 42.17 14 29 73 - SL
PA de Silva 93 159 11 6361 267 42.97 20 22 43 - SL
RB Kanhai 79 137 6 6227 256 47.53 15 28 50 - WI
M Azharuddin 99 147 9 6215 199 45.03 22 21 105 - IND
RN Harvey 79 137 10 6149 205 48.41 21 24 64 - AUS
GR Viswanath 91 155 10 6080 222 41.93 14 35 63 - IND
S Chanderpaul 88 149 21 6069 203* 47.41 14 35 36 - WI
SP Fleming 96 165 10 6050 274* 39.03 8 40 140 - NZ
ML Hayden 72 127 11 6039 380 52.06 21 20 87 - AUS
RB Richardson 86 146 12 5949 194 44.39 16 27 90 - WI
DCS Compton 78 131 15 5807 278 50.06 17 28 49 - ENG
Saleem Malik 103 154 22 5768 237 43.69 15 29 65 - PAK
N Hussain 96 171 16 5764 207 37.18 14 33 67 - ENG
CL Hooper 102 173 15 5762 233 36.46 13 27 115 - WI
MD Crowe 77 131 11 5444 299 45.36 17 18 71 - NZ
JB Hobbs 61 102 7 5410 211 56.94 15 28 17 - ENG
KD Walters 74 125 14 5357 250 48.26 15 33 43 - AUS

ODI AVERAGE OF THE INDIAN BOWLERS

Name Mat Balls M R W Ave Best 4w 5w SR Econ

S Abid Ali 5 336 10 187 7 26.71 2-22 - - 48.0 3.33
AB Agarkar 140 6957 71 5912 217 27.24 6-42 9 1 32.0 5.09
M Amarnath 85 2730 17 1971 46 42.84 3-12 - - 59.3 4.33
S Amarnath 3 - - - - - - - - - -
PK Amre 37 2 0 4 0 - - - - - 12.00
SA Ankola 20 807 4 615 13 47.30 3-33 - - 62.0 4.57
Arshad Ayub 32 1769 19 1216 31 39.22 5-21 - 1 57.0 4.12
B Arun 4 102 0 103 1 103.00 1-43 - - 102.0 6.05
J Arun Lal 13 - - - - - - - - - -
KBJ Azad 25 390 4 273 7 39.00 2-48 - - 55.7 4.20
M Azharuddin 334 552 1 479 12 39.91 3-19 - - 46.0 5.20
HK Badani 40 183 0 149 3 49.66 1-7 - - 61.0 4.88
SV Bahutule 8 294 0 283 2 141.50 1-31 - - 147.0 5.77
L Balaji 29 1417 11 1312 34 38.58 4-48 1 - 41.6 5.55
ST Banerjee 6 240 4 202 5 40.40 3-30 - - 48.0 5.05
SB Bangar 15 442 2 384 7 54.85 2-39 - - 63.1 5.21
AC Bedade 13 - - - - - - - - - -
BS Bedi 10 590 17 340 7 48.57 2-44 - - 84.2 3.45
A Bhandari 2 106 0 106 5 21.20 3-31 - - 21.2 6.00
Bhupinder Singh snr 2 102 1 78 3 26.00 3-34 - - 34.0 4.58
RMH Binny 72 2957 37 2260 77 29.35 4-29 3 - 38.4 4.58
GK Bose 1 66 2 39 1 39.00 1-39 - - 66.0 3.54
BS Chandrasekhar 1 56 0 36 3 12.00 3-36 - - 18.6 3.85
VB Chandrasekhar 7 - - - - - - - - - -
U Chatterjee 3 161 0 117 3 39.00 2-35 - - 53.6 4.36
CPS Chauhan 7 - - - - - - - - - -
RK Chauhan 35 1634 12 1216 29 41.93 3-29 - - 56.3 4.46
N Chopra 39 1835 21 1286 46 27.95 5-21 1 1 39.8 4.20
V Dahiya 19 - - - - - - - - - -
SS Das 4 - - - - - - - - - -
D Dasgupta 5 - - - - - - - - - -
NA David 4 192 1 133 4 33.25 3-21 - - 48.0 4.15
P Dharmani 1 - - - - - - - - - -
MS Dhoni 19 - - - - - - - - - -
SS Dighe 23 - - - - - - - - - -
DR Doshi 15 792 8 524 22 23.81 4-30 2 - 36.0 3.96
R Dravid 261 186 1 170 4 42.50 2-43 - - 46.5 5.48
FM Engineer 5 - - - - - - - - - -
AD Gaekwad 15 48 0 39 1 39.00 1-39 - - 48.0 4.87
G Gambhir 5 - - - - - - - - - -
DJ Gandhi 3 - - - - - - - - - -
D Ganesh 1 30 0 20 1 20.00 1-20 - - 30.0 4.00
SC Ganguly 278 4123 29 3470 93 37.31 5-16 1 2 44.3 5.04
RS Gavaskar 11 72 0 74 1 74.00 1-56 - - 72.0 6.16
SM Gavaskar 108 20 0 25 1 25.00 1-10 - - 20.0 7.50
RS Ghai 6 275 1 260 3 86.66 1-38 - - 91.6 5.67
KD Ghavri 19 1033 12 708 15 47.20 3-40 - - 68.8 4.11
Gursharan Singh 1 - - - - - - - - - -
Harbhajan Singh 107 5721 44 3983 127 31.36 5-43 2 1 45.0 4.17
Harvinder Singh 16 686 6 609 24 25.37 3-44 - - 28.5 5.32
ND Hirwani 18 960 6 719 23 31.26 4-43 3 - 41.7 4.49
A Jadeja 196 1248 2 1094 20 54.70 3-3 - - 62.4 5.25
Joginder Sharma 3 126 3 99 1 99.00 1-28 - - 126.0 4.71
SB Joshi 69 3386 33 2509 69 36.36 5-6 1 1 49.0 4.44
M Kaif 97 - - - - - - - - - -
AV Kale 1 - - - - - - - - - -
VG Kambli 104 4 0 7 1 7.00 1-7 - - 4.0 10.50
HH Kanitkar 34 1006 4 803 17 47.23 2-22 - - 59.1 4.78
N Kapil Dev 225 11202 235 6945 253 27.45 5-43 3 1 44.2 3.71
AR Kapoor 17 900 5 612 8 76.50 2-33 - - 112.5 4.08
SS Karim 34 - - - - - - - - - -
KKD Karthik 2 - - - - - - - - - -
M Kartik 19 1032 7 880 19 46.31 3-36 - - 54.3 5.11
Z Khan 99 4915 50 3985 141 28.26 4-19 6 - 34.8 4.86
SC Khanna 10 - - - - - - - - - -
GK Khoda 2 - - - - - - - - - -
AR Khurasiya 12 - - - - - - - - - -
SMH Kirmani 49 - - - - - - - - - -
P Krishnamurthy 1 - - - - - - - - - -
NM Kulkarni 10 402 3 357 11 32.45 3-27 - - 36.5 5.32
RR Kulkarni 10 444 4 345 10 34.50 3-42 - - 44.4 4.66
T Kumaran 8 378 4 348 9 38.66 3-24 - - 42.0 5.52
A Kumble 262 13997 106 10010 326 30.70 6-12 8 2 42.9 4.29
A Kuruvilla 25 1131 18 890 25 35.60 4-43 1 - 45.2 4.72
R Lamba 32 19 0 20 1 20.00 1-9 - - 19.0 6.31
VVS Laxman 85 42 0 40 0 - - - - - 5.71
S Madan Lal 67 3164 44 2137 73 29.27 4-20 2 - 43.3 4.05
AO Malhotra 20 6 1 0 0 - - - - - 0.00
Maninder Singh 59 3133 33 2066 66 31.30 4-22 1 - 47.4 3.95
SV Manjrekar 74 8 0 10 1 10.00 1-2 - - 8.0 7.50
AV Mankad 1 35 0 47 1 47.00 1-47 - - 35.0 8.05
JJ Martin 10 - - - - - - - - - -
PL Mhambrey 3 126 1 120 3 40.00 2-69 - - 42.0 5.71
A Mishra 3 84 1 67 2 33.50 1-29 - - 42.0 4.78
DS Mohanty 45 1996 21 1662 57 29.15 4-56 1 - 35.0 4.99
D Mongia 51 400 1 370 8 46.25 3-31 - - 50.0 5.55
NR Mongia 140 - - - - - - - - - -
KS More 94 - - - - - - - - - -
SP Mukherjee 3 174 2 98 2 49.00 1-30 - - 87.0 3.37
SS Naik 2 - - - - - - - - - -
SV Nayak 4 222 4 161 1 161.00 1-51 - - 222.0 4.35
A Nehra 69 3462 38 2777 90 30.85 6-23 2 2 38.4 4.81
GK Pandey 2 78 1 60 0 - - - - - 4.61
CS Pandit 36 - - - - - - - - - -
JV Paranjpe 4 - - - - - - - - - -
GAHM Parkar 10 - - - - - - - - - -
AK Patel 8 360 4 263 7 37.57 3-43 - - 51.4 4.38
BP Patel 10 - - - - - - - - - -
PA Patel 14 - - - - - - - - - -
RGM Patel 1 60 1 58 0 - - - - - 5.80
IK Pathan 38 2009 22 1671 63 26.52 5-27 1 1 31.8 4.99
SM Patil 45 864 9 589 15 39.26 2-28 - - 57.6 4.09
RR Powar 2 60 0 52 0 - - - - - 5.20
M Prabhakar 130 6360 76 4534 157 28.87 5-33 4 2 40.5 4.27
BKV Prasad 161 8129 79 6332 196 32.30 5-27 3 1 41.4 4.67
MSK Prasad 17 - - - - - - - - - -
S Raina 3 26 0 27 1 27.00 1-23 - - 26.0 6.23
LS Rajput 4 42 0 42 0 - - - - - 6.00
SLV Raju 53 2770 16 2014 63 31.96 4-46 2 - 43.9 4.36
WV Raman 27 162 2 170 2 85.00 1-23 - - 81.0 6.29
S Ramesh 24 36 0 38 1 38.00 1-23 - - 36.0 6.33
Randhir Singh 2 72 0 48 1 48.00 1-30 - - 72.0 4.00
V Rathour 7 - - - - - - - - - -
A Ratra 12 - - - - - - - - - -
SS Raul 2 36 1 27 1 27.00 1-13 - - 36.0 4.50
V Razdan 3 84 0 77 1 77.00 1-37 - - 84.0 5.50
B Reddy 3 - - - - - - - - - -
AM Salvi 4 172 3 120 4 30.00 2-15 - - 43.0 4.18
BS Sandhu 22 1110 15 763 16 47.68 3-27 - - 69.3 4.12
RL Sanghvi 10 498 1 399 10 39.90 3-29 - - 49.8 4.80
Sarandeep Singh 5 258 1 180 3 60.00 2-34 - - 86.0 4.18
V Sehwag 121 2637 11 2315 59 39.23 3-25 - - 44.6 5.26
TAP Sekhar 4 156 0 128 5 25.60 3-23 - - 31.2 4.92
AK Sharma 31 1140 5 875 15 58.33 3-41 - - 76.0 4.60
C Sharma 65 2835 19 2336 67 34.86 3-22 - - 42.3 4.94
G Sharma 11 486 1 361 10 36.10 3-29 - - 48.6 4.45
PH Sharma 2 - - - - - - - - - -
SK Sharma 23 979 6 813 22 36.95 5-26 - 1 44.5 4.98
RJ Shastri 150 6613 56 4650 129 36.04 5-15 2 1 51.2 4.21
LR Shukla 3 114 0 94 1 94.00 1-25 - - 114.0 4.94
NS Sidhu 136 4 0 3 0 - - - - - 4.50
RP Singh 1 48 1 44 2 22.00 2-44 - - 24.0 5.50
RP Singh 2 82 1 77 1 77.00 1-58 - - 82.0 5.63
RR Singh 136 3734 28 2985 69 43.26 5-22 - 2 54.1 4.79
L Sivaramakrishnan 16 756 5 538 15 35.86 3-35 - - 50.4 4.26
RS Sodhi 18 462 3 365 5 73.00 2-31 - - 92.4 4.74
ED Solkar 7 252 4 169 4 42.25 2-31 - - 63.0 4.02
S Somasunder 2 - - - - - - - - - -
K Srikkanth 146 712 3 641 25 25.64 5-27 - 2 28.4 5.40
J Srinath 229 11935 137 8847 315 28.08 5-23 7 3 37.8 4.44
TE Srinivasan 2 - - - - - - - - - -
S Sriram 8 324 1 274 9 30.44 3-43 - - 36.0 5.07
R Sudhakar Rao 1 - - - - - - - - - -
SR Tendulkar 348 7139 23 6017 139 43.28 5-32 4 2 51.3 5.05
PS Vaidya 4 184 1 174 4 43.50 2-41 - - 46.0 5.67
DB Vengsarkar 129 6 0 4 0 - - - - - 4.00
S Venkataraghavan 15 868 7 542 5 108.40 2-34 - - 173.6 3.74
M Venkataramana 1 60 0 36 2 18.00 2-36 - - 30.0 3.60
Y Venugopal Rao 6 - - - - - - - - - -
R Vijay Bharadwaj 10 372 3 307 16 19.18 3-34 - - 23.2 4.95
GR Viswanath 25 - - - - - - - - - -
S Viswanath 22 - - - - - - - - - -
AL Wadekar 2 - - - - - - - - - -
AS Wassan 9 426 0 283 11 25.72 3-28 - - 38.7 3.98
Jai P Yadav 7 216 3 174 3 58.00 1-34 - - 72.0 4.83
NS Yadav 7 330 3 228 8 28.50 2-18 - - 41.2 4.14
V Yadav 19 - - - - - - - - - -
Yashpal Sharma 42 201 0 199 1 199.00 1-27 - - 201.0 5.94
B Yograj Singh 6 244 4 186 4 46.50 2-44 - - 61.0 4.57
T Yohannan 3 120 1 122 5 24.40 3-33 - - 24.0 6.10
Yuvraj Singh 126 1521 10 1270 33 38.48 4-6 1 - 46.0 5.00

ODI AVERAGE OF THE INDIAN BOWLERS

Name Mat Balls M R W Ave Best 4w 5w SR Econ

S Abid Ali 5 336 10 187 7 26.71 2-22 - - 48.0 3.33
AB Agarkar 140 6957 71 5912 217 27.24 6-42 9 1 32.0 5.09
M Amarnath 85 2730 17 1971 46 42.84 3-12 - - 59.3 4.33
S Amarnath 3 - - - - - - - - - -
PK Amre 37 2 0 4 0 - - - - - 12.00
SA Ankola 20 807 4 615 13 47.30 3-33 - - 62.0 4.57
Arshad Ayub 32 1769 19 1216 31 39.22 5-21 - 1 57.0 4.12
B Arun 4 102 0 103 1 103.00 1-43 - - 102.0 6.05
J Arun Lal 13 - - - - - - - - - -
KBJ Azad 25 390 4 273 7 39.00 2-48 - - 55.7 4.20
M Azharuddin 334 552 1 479 12 39.91 3-19 - - 46.0 5.20
HK Badani 40 183 0 149 3 49.66 1-7 - - 61.0 4.88
SV Bahutule 8 294 0 283 2 141.50 1-31 - - 147.0 5.77
L Balaji 29 1417 11 1312 34 38.58 4-48 1 - 41.6 5.55
ST Banerjee 6 240 4 202 5 40.40 3-30 - - 48.0 5.05
SB Bangar 15 442 2 384 7 54.85 2-39 - - 63.1 5.21
AC Bedade 13 - - - - - - - - - -
BS Bedi 10 590 17 340 7 48.57 2-44 - - 84.2 3.45
A Bhandari 2 106 0 106 5 21.20 3-31 - - 21.2 6.00
Bhupinder Singh snr 2 102 1 78 3 26.00 3-34 - - 34.0 4.58
RMH Binny 72 2957 37 2260 77 29.35 4-29 3 - 38.4 4.58
GK Bose 1 66 2 39 1 39.00 1-39 - - 66.0 3.54
BS Chandrasekhar 1 56 0 36 3 12.00 3-36 - - 18.6 3.85
VB Chandrasekhar 7 - - - - - - - - - -
U Chatterjee 3 161 0 117 3 39.00 2-35 - - 53.6 4.36
CPS Chauhan 7 - - - - - - - - - -
RK Chauhan 35 1634 12 1216 29 41.93 3-29 - - 56.3 4.46
N Chopra 39 1835 21 1286 46 27.95 5-21 1 1 39.8 4.20
V Dahiya 19 - - - - - - - - - -
SS Das 4 - - - - - - - - - -
D Dasgupta 5 - - - - - - - - - -
NA David 4 192 1 133 4 33.25 3-21 - - 48.0 4.15
P Dharmani 1 - - - - - - - - - -
MS Dhoni 19 - - - - - - - - - -
SS Dighe 23 - - - - - - - - - -
DR Doshi 15 792 8 524 22 23.81 4-30 2 - 36.0 3.96
R Dravid 261 186 1 170 4 42.50 2-43 - - 46.5 5.48
FM Engineer 5 - - - - - - - - - -
AD Gaekwad 15 48 0 39 1 39.00 1-39 - - 48.0 4.87
G Gambhir 5 - - - - - - - - - -
DJ Gandhi 3 - - - - - - - - - -
D Ganesh 1 30 0 20 1 20.00 1-20 - - 30.0 4.00
SC Ganguly 278 4123 29 3470 93 37.31 5-16 1 2 44.3 5.04
RS Gavaskar 11 72 0 74 1 74.00 1-56 - - 72.0 6.16
SM Gavaskar 108 20 0 25 1 25.00 1-10 - - 20.0 7.50
RS Ghai 6 275 1 260 3 86.66 1-38 - - 91.6 5.67
KD Ghavri 19 1033 12 708 15 47.20 3-40 - - 68.8 4.11
Gursharan Singh 1 - - - - - - - - - -
Harbhajan Singh 107 5721 44 3983 127 31.36 5-43 2 1 45.0 4.17
Harvinder Singh 16 686 6 609 24 25.37 3-44 - - 28.5 5.32
ND Hirwani 18 960 6 719 23 31.26 4-43 3 - 41.7 4.49
A Jadeja 196 1248 2 1094 20 54.70 3-3 - - 62.4 5.25
Joginder Sharma 3 126 3 99 1 99.00 1-28 - - 126.0 4.71
SB Joshi 69 3386 33 2509 69 36.36 5-6 1 1 49.0 4.44
M Kaif 97 - - - - - - - - - -
AV Kale 1 - - - - - - - - - -
VG Kambli 104 4 0 7 1 7.00 1-7 - - 4.0 10.50
HH Kanitkar 34 1006 4 803 17 47.23 2-22 - - 59.1 4.78
N Kapil Dev 225 11202 235 6945 253 27.45 5-43 3 1 44.2 3.71
AR Kapoor 17 900 5 612 8 76.50 2-33 - - 112.5 4.08
SS Karim 34 - - - - - - - - - -
KKD Karthik 2 - - - - - - - - - -
M Kartik 19 1032 7 880 19 46.31 3-36 - - 54.3 5.11
Z Khan 99 4915 50 3985 141 28.26 4-19 6 - 34.8 4.86
SC Khanna 10 - - - - - - - - - -
GK Khoda 2 - - - - - - - - - -
AR Khurasiya 12 - - - - - - - - - -
SMH Kirmani 49 - - - - - - - - - -
P Krishnamurthy 1 - - - - - - - - - -
NM Kulkarni 10 402 3 357 11 32.45 3-27 - - 36.5 5.32
RR Kulkarni 10 444 4 345 10 34.50 3-42 - - 44.4 4.66
T Kumaran 8 378 4 348 9 38.66 3-24 - - 42.0 5.52
A Kumble 262 13997 106 10010 326 30.70 6-12 8 2 42.9 4.29
A Kuruvilla 25 1131 18 890 25 35.60 4-43 1 - 45.2 4.72
R Lamba 32 19 0 20 1 20.00 1-9 - - 19.0 6.31
VVS Laxman 85 42 0 40 0 - - - - - 5.71
S Madan Lal 67 3164 44 2137 73 29.27 4-20 2 - 43.3 4.05
AO Malhotra 20 6 1 0 0 - - - - - 0.00
Maninder Singh 59 3133 33 2066 66 31.30 4-22 1 - 47.4 3.95
SV Manjrekar 74 8 0 10 1 10.00 1-2 - - 8.0 7.50
AV Mankad 1 35 0 47 1 47.00 1-47 - - 35.0 8.05
JJ Martin 10 - - - - - - - - - -
PL Mhambrey 3 126 1 120 3 40.00 2-69 - - 42.0 5.71
A Mishra 3 84 1 67 2 33.50 1-29 - - 42.0 4.78
DS Mohanty 45 1996 21 1662 57 29.15 4-56 1 - 35.0 4.99
D Mongia 51 400 1 370 8 46.25 3-31 - - 50.0 5.55
NR Mongia 140 - - - - - - - - - -
KS More 94 - - - - - - - - - -
SP Mukherjee 3 174 2 98 2 49.00 1-30 - - 87.0 3.37
SS Naik 2 - - - - - - - - - -
SV Nayak 4 222 4 161 1 161.00 1-51 - - 222.0 4.35
A Nehra 69 3462 38 2777 90 30.85 6-23 2 2 38.4 4.81
GK Pandey 2 78 1 60 0 - - - - - 4.61
CS Pandit 36 - - - - - - - - - -
JV Paranjpe 4 - - - - - - - - - -
GAHM Parkar 10 - - - - - - - - - -
AK Patel 8 360 4 263 7 37.57 3-43 - - 51.4 4.38
BP Patel 10 - - - - - - - - - -
PA Patel 14 - - - - - - - - - -
RGM Patel 1 60 1 58 0 - - - - - 5.80
IK Pathan 38 2009 22 1671 63 26.52 5-27 1 1 31.8 4.99
SM Patil 45 864 9 589 15 39.26 2-28 - - 57.6 4.09
RR Powar 2 60 0 52 0 - - - - - 5.20
M Prabhakar 130 6360 76 4534 157 28.87 5-33 4 2 40.5 4.27
BKV Prasad 161 8129 79 6332 196 32.30 5-27 3 1 41.4 4.67
MSK Prasad 17 - - - - - - - - - -
S Raina 3 26 0 27 1 27.00 1-23 - - 26.0 6.23
LS Rajput 4 42 0 42 0 - - - - - 6.00
SLV Raju 53 2770 16 2014 63 31.96 4-46 2 - 43.9 4.36
WV Raman 27 162 2 170 2 85.00 1-23 - - 81.0 6.29
S Ramesh 24 36 0 38 1 38.00 1-23 - - 36.0 6.33
Randhir Singh 2 72 0 48 1 48.00 1-30 - - 72.0 4.00
V Rathour 7 - - - - - - - - - -
A Ratra 12 - - - - - - - - - -
SS Raul 2 36 1 27 1 27.00 1-13 - - 36.0 4.50
V Razdan 3 84 0 77 1 77.00 1-37 - - 84.0 5.50
B Reddy 3 - - - - - - - - - -
AM Salvi 4 172 3 120 4 30.00 2-15 - - 43.0 4.18
BS Sandhu 22 1110 15 763 16 47.68 3-27 - - 69.3 4.12
RL Sanghvi 10 498 1 399 10 39.90 3-29 - - 49.8 4.80
Sarandeep Singh 5 258 1 180 3 60.00 2-34 - - 86.0 4.18
V Sehwag 121 2637 11 2315 59 39.23 3-25 - - 44.6 5.26
TAP Sekhar 4 156 0 128 5 25.60 3-23 - - 31.2 4.92
AK Sharma 31 1140 5 875 15 58.33 3-41 - - 76.0 4.60
C Sharma 65 2835 19 2336 67 34.86 3-22 - - 42.3 4.94
G Sharma 11 486 1 361 10 36.10 3-29 - - 48.6 4.45
PH Sharma 2 - - - - - - - - - -
SK Sharma 23 979 6 813 22 36.95 5-26 - 1 44.5 4.98
RJ Shastri 150 6613 56 4650 129 36.04 5-15 2 1 51.2 4.21
LR Shukla 3 114 0 94 1 94.00 1-25 - - 114.0 4.94
NS Sidhu 136 4 0 3 0 - - - - - 4.50
RP Singh 1 48 1 44 2 22.00 2-44 - - 24.0 5.50
RP Singh 2 82 1 77 1 77.00 1-58 - - 82.0 5.63
RR Singh 136 3734 28 2985 69 43.26 5-22 - 2 54.1 4.79
L Sivaramakrishnan 16 756 5 538 15 35.86 3-35 - - 50.4 4.26
RS Sodhi 18 462 3 365 5 73.00 2-31 - - 92.4 4.74
ED Solkar 7 252 4 169 4 42.25 2-31 - - 63.0 4.02
S Somasunder 2 - - - - - - - - - -
K Srikkanth 146 712 3 641 25 25.64 5-27 - 2 28.4 5.40
J Srinath 229 11935 137 8847 315 28.08 5-23 7 3 37.8 4.44
TE Srinivasan 2 - - - - - - - - - -
S Sriram 8 324 1 274 9 30.44 3-43 - - 36.0 5.07
R Sudhakar Rao 1 - - - - - - - - - -
SR Tendulkar 348 7139 23 6017 139 43.28 5-32 4 2 51.3 5.05
PS Vaidya 4 184 1 174 4 43.50 2-41 - - 46.0 5.67
DB Vengsarkar 129 6 0 4 0 - - - - - 4.00
S Venkataraghavan 15 868 7 542 5 108.40 2-34 - - 173.6 3.74
M Venkataramana 1 60 0 36 2 18.00 2-36 - - 30.0 3.60
Y Venugopal Rao 6 - - - - - - - - - -
R Vijay Bharadwaj 10 372 3 307 16 19.18 3-34 - - 23.2 4.95
GR Viswanath 25 - - - - - - - - - -
S Viswanath 22 - - - - - - - - - -
AL Wadekar 2 - - - - - - - - - -
AS Wassan 9 426 0 283 11 25.72 3-28 - - 38.7 3.98
Jai P Yadav 7 216 3 174 3 58.00 1-34 - - 72.0 4.83
NS Yadav 7 330 3 228 8 28.50 2-18 - - 41.2 4.14
V Yadav 19 - - - - - - - - - -
Yashpal Sharma 42 201 0 199 1 199.00 1-27 - - 201.0 5.94
B Yograj Singh 6 244 4 186 4 46.50 2-44 - - 61.0 4.57
T Yohannan 3 120 1 122 5 24.40 3-33 - - 24.0 6.10
Yuvraj Singh 126 1521 10 1270 33 38.48 4-6 1 - 46.0 5.00