An analysis of the survival rate of the top Test batsmen today

Himanish Ganjoo19-Sep-2019The 2015 Delhi Test between India and South Africa was the first I ever watched live. Eclipsed by India’s most comprehensive win in terms of runs was a rearguard blockathon for the ages, orchestrated by Hashim Amla, AB de Villiers and Faf du Plessis. Well into the T20 era, a sparse but dedicated crowd watched as 143 runs were made in 143 overs. People even counted ball milestones and celebrated them. Deliveries, rather than runs, had become the counter of achievement.For a batsman, Test cricket is about surviving the tough periods. The ability to occupy the crease is essential. It helps in building partnerships, wearing the ball and the bowlers down, and setting yourself up for the chance to capitalise on easier conditions.And yet, while the value of eating up deliveries is recognised, it is seldom given enough importance in terms of conventional statistics. The batting average is always in focus, but there is no simultaneous mention of the balls faced per innings. If the bowling strike rate is an important measure of a bowler’s efficacy, why are the balls per dismissal not discussed when talking of batsmen?Test batting has never been more difficult than today. The pitches offer some assistance to bowlers, and batsmen come to the format after making easy runs in white-ball cricket. In 2019, a wicket falls every 51 balls, the lowest since 1911. Surviving at the crease is a vanishing skill and lapses of concentration are more common. Why not look at the quality of individual batting by considering players’ chances of staying at the crease beyond the average player, who falls every 50 balls or so?Let’s consider the 50-ball threshold as the average survival rate. This corresponds to roughly 25 runs, a figure denoting a “start”. It is well known that batsmen are vulnerable at the start of their innings, and thus, reaching the milestone of 50 balls can be counted as having “got in”: being set at the crease after having weathered the initial hazardous period.This 50-ball line is going to be central in this piece. We will consider stats from the start of 2015 to the third Test of the 2019 Ashes and players who have played more than 40 innings in this period.The first question is: How often do successful batsmen cross this 50-ball barrier? Who crosses it most often?