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Alastair Cook Equals The Record Of Alan Border
By CricShots - May 24, 2018 7:47 pm
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The legendary Australian cricketer Allan Border praised Alastair Cook as an amazing batsman as the “amazing” batsman as Cook equaled his record of playing 153 consecutive Tests in the series opener against Pakistan at Lord’s on Thursday. This was the 154th Test of opener Cook’s career — with only illness after he made a century on debut against India at Nagpur in 2006 preventing a sequence where he has never been dropped by the selectors.

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Alastair Cook

Border and Cook are both gritty left-handed batsmen, each having scored more than 11,000 runs in Test matches and captained their respective countries to Ashes success. The other common thing between them is that they both have won a County Championship title with Essex.

But at 33, Alastair is some five years younger than when Border played his 153rd Test, a reflection both of England’s heavy programme and the increasingly hectic schedule of modern international cricket.

Allan Border

Talking to Britain’s Daily Mirror newspaper, Border said, “I didn’t realize anyone was getting that close in terms of consecutive Test matches, but it is an amazing thing. I’ve been a great fan of his from a distance over the years. I don’t know him well, but we’ve got that Essex connection. I spent two fantastic years playing there and so I’ve watched his progress as a former player from the club. To have stayed fit and able to play that many consecutive games are remarkable.”

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But despite his knock 244 not out against Australia in the fourth Test at Melbourne in December 2017, Cook came into the two-match Pakistan series under immense pressure. The past year has seen Cook score two double-centuries but only a further 216 Test runs at an average of 13.5 since last August.

Border, however, forecast Cook’s Test career could run for a while yet. He said, “There is no reason why he can’t keep going for a few years yet. The number he ends up with could be something quite extraordinary. When I finished I was 38. Cook is only 33 so he will understand his game well enough to know where he is at when it comes to his performances. The Ashes (a 2019 series in England) are only just over a year away, so he’ll be 34 and could have a great series, and then he might even fancy coming back to Australia again. He’s the only who will know.”