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This is an archive article published on March 9, 2000

Legends put Gilchrist ahead of Knott

NEW DELHI, MARCH 8: Some 15 years or so after they triggered off the debate on who among them is the best, the all-round deeds of the quar...

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NEW DELHI, MARCH 8: Some 15 years or so after they triggered off the debate on who among them is the best, the all-round deeds of the quartet of Ian Botham, Imran Khan, Sir Richard Hadlee and Kapil Dev were finally evaluated. A pity, skipper Greg Chappell will have only two of these in his armoury when his World Cup All Star XI, is jotted down on the scorecards.

Now, should Botham and Kapil sulk after missing the bus? Take a look at the selection panel and you would realise that neither the two nor their die-hard fans would dare question the cricketing credibility of the living legends who got together last evening to pen down their dream one-day team, post World Cup era.

There may not have been much to choose between the four but if you want to know how the Sultans of Swing and Cut, Imran and Hadlee, pipped two of the hardest-hitters of the cricket ball, Botham and Kapil, just switch on the sports channels on your TV sets during the International Cricket Council’s April 2 to 9 Cricket Week. The entire `selection’ proceedings will be televised during that period.

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"We thought there was nothing wrong in people knowing the mind of the selectors and they can know their reasoning by watching the telecast," ICC chief Jagmohan Dalmiya, while reading out the XI, said today. You can also find out why even the likes of Brian Lara, Desmond Haynes or Javed Miandad failed to make the grade. Or, why Aussie Adam Gilchrist was preferred over English wicketkeeper Alan Knott.

Chappell’s winning the crown over the Black Cat Clive Lloyd too was nothing short of a surprise. Didn’t Lloyd revolutionise the very concept of cricket? Never mind, the `selectors’ have named Lloyd in the XI and Chappell can bank on him for advice. Even with the sort of talent at his disposal, Chappell has a task at hand. Like, deciding the new-ball pair from amongst Imran, Hadlee, Joel Garner and Wasim Akram.

The Wizard of Oz Shane Warne will take care of spin bowling. If need be, Sir Vivian Richards can also bowl a bit of his fastish off breaks but it will be as the one-drop batsman that Viv will be feared the most.

First, the openers. India’s Sachin Tendulkar was the unanimous choice and will have Gilchrist for company, followed by Viv. Pity the rival bowlers! If at all they get past the first three, Chappell, Dean Jones and Lloyd take over. No respite still, as Imran, Hadlee, Akram and even Warne can also hit the ball hard with Garner, probably the weakest batting link.

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How about a XI to play against them? West Indians Gordon Greenidge, Haynes and Lara can fill up the opening three slots and Miandad at number four and skipper Steve Waugh should make the batting order. Three allrounders — Botham, Kapil and Lance Klusener — can smack the ball while the cheeky Knott holds good even at a lowly number nine. With leg-spinner Abdul Qadir and Dennis Lillee also in, the All Stars XI will be hard pressed to quell this challenge.

ALL STARS XI:

Greg Chappell (capt), Sachin Tendulkar, Adam Gilchrist, Vivian Richards, Dean Jones, Clive Lloyd, Imran Khan, Richard Hadlee, Wasim Akram, Shane Warne and Joel Garner

SELECTION PANEL

Sir Garfield Sobers, Neil Harvey, Barry Richards, Bishan Singh Bedi, John Reid, Mushtaq Muhammad, Duleep Mendis, Andy Pycroft, Dicky Bird. MODERATOR: Ravi Shastri

HOW ABOUT PITTING THEM AGAINST:

Steve Waugh (capt), Gordon Greenidge, Desmond Haynes, Brian Lara, Javed Miandad, Ian Botham, Kapil Dev, Lance Klusener, Alan Knott, Abdul Qadir and Dennis Lillee.

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