England v Pakistan: James Anderson becomes first fast bowler to 600 Test wickets
Last updated on .From the section Cricket
England's James Anderson has become the first fast bowler to reach 600 Test wickets.
The 38-year-old achieved the milestone by having Azhar Ali caught at first slip on the fifth day of the final Test against Pakistan at the Ageas Bowl.
The Lancashire man made his Test debut in 2003 and has earned 156 caps.
He is fourth on the all-time list of Test wicket-takers, behind spinners Muttiah Muralitharan, Shane Warne and Anil Kumble.
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Anderson began the third Test in Southampton on 593 wickets and bowled beautifully, exhibiting his mastery of swing and seam.
After taking 5-56 in the first innings and trapping Abid Ali lbw in Pakistan's second innings, Anderson faced an anxious wait while stranded on 599.
Bad light and rain ended play early on day four, with further wet weather preventing any action until 16:15 BST on Tuesday.
The frustration was compounded by the fact Anderson had seen four catches dropped off his bowling during the match.
However, with his 14th delivery of the day, he found some extra bounce, with Azhar fending to Joe Root.
The performance in the drawn third Test is the best of what has been a difficult year for Anderson. Injuries meant he was only able to bowl four overs in last summer's Ashes series, then he was forced home early from England's tour of South Africa.
Following the first Test against Pakistan, when he was below his best in returning match figures of 1-97, Anderson reiterated his desire to continue playing for England, saying he was still "hungry".
Now he has achieved something that no bowler of his kind has done before, as well as joining one of cricket's most exclusive clubs.
His milestone comes in the same summer that his long-term new-ball partner Stuart Broad took his 500th Test wicket.
Most Test wickets | ||
---|---|---|
Bowler | Wickets | Tests |
Muttiah Muralitharan (SL & ICC) | 800 | 133 |
Shane Warne (Aus) | 708 | 145 |
Anil Kumble (Ind) | 619 | 132 |
James Anderson (Eng) | 600 | 156 |
Glenn McGrath (Aus) | 563 | 124 |
"It's just a phenomenal achievement," Broad told BBC Sport. "He has got better with age and is someone who has inspired me throughout my career.
"He's a role model to follow for every English cricketer and young cricketer coming through.
"He's always searching to be better and better and 600 won't be the stopping of him."
Anderson made his Test debut against Zimbabwe 17 years ago and has played under eight different captains, as well as being part of four Ashes-winning teams.
"We are witnessing true greatness," said Michael Vaughan, who captained Anderson in 21 Tests.
"I'd be lying if I said we thought we had a bowler that would get this many wickets. We thought we had a bowler of great promise and skill.
"I never in my wildest dreams thought 17 years later we'd be talking about him getting to 600."
Australian legend Glenn McGrath previously held the record for most wickets taken by a fast bowler with 563, a mark Anderson passed in 2018.
"I didn't have the skill level that Jimmy has," said McGrath. "When he's swinging that ball, both ways, in control, there's no one better."
McGrath also compared Anderson to India legend Sachin Tendulkar, the leading run-scorer in Test cricket.
"He's set the bar a bit like Sachin has," said McGrath.
"No one is ever going to catch Sachin in Test cricket for the amount of runs he's scored and the matches he's played.
"Jimmy's done the same for fast bowling."
Anderson has also played 194 one-day internationals and 19 Twenty20s for England.
Overall, he has taken 887 international wickets across the three formats, which is sixth on the all-time list.
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CricketFan
Celt1970
dickie
Elsewhere on this website there's a clip of Anderson taking his first test wicket (Mark Vermuelen, Zimbabwe, clean bowled).
The commentator says that, if he goes on to take 400 test wickets, this will be a moment that he will always remember.
boating-voter
The problem with any "best of all time" is that comparing eras is impossible. Pitches prepared differently, covered/uncovered, different batsmen, fields, laws & playing conditions.
Who was the best? Barnes? Larwood? Lindwall? Hall? Trueman? Lillee? Snow? Holding? Roberts? Kapil Dev? Imran? Hadlee? Pollock? Willis? Anderson? Or many, many more. Each was/is a great of his age.
SLR
Avalon
Those thinking about him getting to 700, based on average wickets per game of 5 that would be 25 more games, in a normal year England play 6/7 home tests, and 6 away tests, in the pandemic expect that number to drop. So he needs 3 years to get there, and will be pushing 42.
Rajiv Mukerjee
Funny thing is that in any talk about best all time quicks this guy isn't even in the conversation
Of course this has a lot to do with the fact that England plays considerably more Tests than anyone else
danguee
Dr Dan Druff Hair Specialist
sibley
jennings(plays spin well!)
crawley
root
stokes
pope
foakes
buttler
woakes
s.curran
rashid
bess
leach
parkinson
broad
burns
denly(i like the dig in mentality which has won me over, like sibley he has that bat all day mentality&i wouldn't bin him yet but i expect criticism for this view!),
england are starting to have a good mentality in test batting & i hope it continues
Dr Dan Druff Hair Specialist
but!, i would only play him where he gets the help from the pitch/conditions he needs!, at his age now his head goes down if he has to flog a dead horse!, he should be a must pick squad member in england &certain other tours but i wouldn't take him to india for example!.
be strong & smart root/england