Who is the king of googly?
Shahid Afridi: The king of googly.
Shane Warne - Remembering the King of Spin.
Bernard Bosanquet, born October 13, 1877, was the first man to bowl a ball with a leg-spinner's action and make it break from the off. Arunabha Sengupta looks back at the career and life of the man who invented one of the most intriguing weapons of cricket — the googly. July 20, 1900.
Shahid Afridi: King of googly.
Lasith Malinga, the king of yorkers.
Shoaib Akhtar has bowled the fastest ball in cricket history at a speed of 161.3kmph against England in 2003 Cricket World Cup.
The delivery was invented by Pakistani domestic cricketer Prince Aslam Khan and popularised by Pakistani international cricketer Saqlain Mushtaq. A variety of bowlers have made considerable use of the doosra in international cricket.
Abdul Qadir took 236 wickets in 67 Test matches and has the best figures for a Pakistan bowler in Test cricket: 9/56 against England in 1987. He had a bag of tricks up his sleeve, a well-disguised googly being the most lethal of them all, with which he wreaked havoc on opposition teams throughout the 1980s.
Shane Warne obituary: Larger than life, the king of leg spin, and England's scourge across multiple Ashes series. Shane Warne was a larger-than-life character and a masterful leg-spin bowler, qualities that helped him transcend cricket.
Anil Kumble
He took some time to perfect the googly but it became an effective delivery for a man who achieved the rare feat of taking all ten wickets in a test match innings.
Who is the No 1 spin bowler in the world?
Name | Muttiah Muralitharan |
---|---|
Age | 50 years |
Cricketing Career (National Team) | 1992-2011 |
Nationality | Sri Lanka |
Matches Played (Test/ODI) | 133/350 |
Bernard Bosanquet, died at his home in Surrey on October 12, the day before the 59th anniversary of his birth. A capable allround cricketer at Eton and Oxford and also for Middlesex, Bosanquet enjoyed chief claim to fame as the acknowledged inventor of the googly.

In the game of cricket, a googly refers to a type of delivery bowled by a right-arm leg spin bowler.
Virat Kohli. Virat Kohli's cover drive on the off-side is arguably the best cricketing shot in the modern world and it is without any doubt considered as his signature shot.
Rank | Player | Rating |
---|---|---|
1 | Babar Azam Pakistan | 890 |
2 | Imam-ul-Haq Pakistan | 779 |
3 | Rassie van der Dussen South Africa | 766 |
4 | Quinton de Kock South Africa | 759 |
The king of cricket in India is unquestionably Virat Kohli with over 24212 runs across all T20, Test, and ODI's formats in international cricket.
Dwayne Bravo
However, he reinvented himself as a slower-ball specialist to get up to speed with T20 cricket. T20 is about deception and denial, and Bravo is the master of it. He can not only deceive batters with lack of pace but also with dip.
While Muralitharan has recorded 14 golden ducks in Test cricket, Malinga accumulated 13 golden ducks in ODIs. Pakistan batter Umar Akmal has registered the most golden ducks in T20 internationals. Umar Akmal has been dismissed for a golden duck six times in the cricket's shortest format.
S.No. | Player | Opponent Team |
---|---|---|
1 | Shahid Afridi | South Africa |
2 | Brett Lee | West Indies |
3 | Martin Guptill | South Africa |
4 | Liam Livingstone | Pakistan |
Shoaib Akhtar, popularly known as 'Rawalpindi Express' is considered to be the fastest bowler in the world. He clocked a speed of 161.3 kmph against England in 2003 World Cup making it one of the fastest ball in the cricket history. His average bowling speed varied between 145 to 150 kmph.
Who is the king of swing ball?
Birth of the Burewala Bombshell. There have been few more scintillating sights in cricket history than Waqar Younis in his pomp. With batters hopping and stumps flying, he and Wasim Akram took reverse swing to a new level in the early 1990s with their toe-crushing yorkers.
#1 Wasim Akram (Pakistan)
He's hailed as the 'Sultan of Swing' for that very reason. 414 wickets in 104 Test matches at 23.62 apiece; his numbers are justified what an absolute legend he is.
Shane Warne obituary: Larger than life, the king of leg spin, and England's scourge across multiple Ashes series. Shane Warne was a larger-than-life character and a masterful leg-spin bowler, qualities that helped him transcend cricket.
The bowlers with the second- and fourth-highest number of wickets in the history of Test cricket, Shane Warne and Anil Kumble, respectively, were leg spinners. One famous example of leg spin is Warne's Ball of the Century.
Lasith Malinga, the king of yorkers.
Name | Muttiah Muralitharan |
---|---|
Cricketing Career (National Team) | 1992-2011 |
Nationality | Sri Lanka |
Matches Played (Test/ODI) | 133/350 |
Wickets Taken (Test/ODI) | 800/534 |
Shane Warne: Best Leg Spinner in the World
The legend of Shane Warne is unarguably the greatest spinner of all time in the history of cricket sport. A monster at his art, Shane Warne gave cricket some of its greatest defining moments. 'The ball of the century is just one such example of such moments.
Bernard Bosanquet, died at his home in Surrey on October 12, the day before the 59th anniversary of his birth. A capable allround cricketer at Eton and Oxford and also for Middlesex, Bosanquet enjoyed chief claim to fame as the acknowledged inventor of the googly.
Shoaib Akhtar's fastest delivery came at a speed of 161.3km/hr against England during the 2003 Cricket World Cup. He is also considered as the fastest bowler in the history of cricket.
Shane Warne was on his way to an iconic 15-year career that saw him revive the art of leg-spin bowling with the mastery, elan and appeal of box office entertainment.
Who is the best googly master?
Abdul Qadir
Abdul Qadir took 236 wickets in 67 Test matches and has the best figures for a Pakistan bowler in Test cricket: 9/56 against England in 1987. He had a bag of tricks up his sleeve, a well-disguised googly being the most lethal of them all, with which he wreaked havoc on opposition teams throughout the 1980s.
Coaches in Australia want the bowling action banned in their country, terming it as cheating. Cricketing purists believe that doosra cannot be bowled with a legitimate bowling action because it is physically impossible to bowl such a delivery with a straight arm.
Bowler | Country | Fastest delivery |
---|---|---|
Shoaib Akhtar | Pakistan | 161.3 km/hr (100.2 mph) |
Shaun Tait | Australia | 161.1 km/hr (100.1 mph) |
Brett Lee | Australia | 160.8 km/hr (99.9 mph) |
Jeffrey Thomson | Australia | 160.6 km/hr (99.8 mph) |
Tich Freeman achieved it three times and three other players – W. G. Grace, Hedley Verity and Jim Laker – have done it twice. Laker (in 1956), Anil Kumble (in 1999) and Ajaz Patel (in 2021) have achieved this feat in Test cricket.