Not only is there a disproportionate number of 100-Test players from Australia, India and England, but those careers and legacies are increasingly built on matches against each other. Fifty-two percent of Smith’s Tests have come against England and India; nearly 44% of Stokes’ Tests are against the other two; half of Cheteshwar Pujara’s and 45% of Root’s.It stands in contrast to the greater spread of opponents that, say, the Waugh twins or Mike Atherton or Sourav Ganguly faced, but it mimics the narrowness of an older era. Colin Cowdrey, for example, played about 38% of his Tests against Australia and Geoff Boycott 35%, but in a time when there were fewer teams to play against. Which is to say, Test cricket was a narrow, exclusionary sport back then and it remains one now.It remains a taxing sport, no matter how players get there, or how long it takes them. When Boycott got to the mark, one Test before Headingley ’81, he had been playing Tests for 17 of his 41 years at that stage. Cook and Root, the quickest two in terms of time taken to play their 100th Test, had spent roughly a quarter of their lives doing so when they got to the mark. What takes more out of you, the sprint or the marathon?The relentlessness of schedules and the burgeoning of the club in the 2000s has rather muddied what used to be the indisputable mark of greatness attached to 100 Test caps. One can pick through some modern entrants on the list and find one context or another to dispute their credentials, in part because the modern dissection is more energetic, rigorous and enlightened: soft runs, cheap wickets, not enough hundreds or five-fors, poor conversion, weak opponents, home-track bullies, poor away records, third-innings stat-padders, fourth-innings flops. But it’s worth keeping in sight one guiding, timeless truth, which is that nobody gets to 100 Tests by accident.

About the Author

+300
+500
+1200
+1500
+750
$
JOIN NOW
Buddy Bonus
Sports Free Bets
Bonus