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Best Test, ODI and T20I XIs of 2021

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https://www.hindustantimes.com/cricket/no-virat-kohli-in-aakash-chopra-s-test-team-of-2021-four-indian-players-included-101639370567722.html

Former India international Aakash Chopra has picked his Test team of the year, featuring the likes of Rohit Sharma and Ravichandran Ashwin. The cricketer-turned-commentator picked Kane Williamson as the skipper, with Axar Patel and Rishabh Pant as the other two Indians in his Test XI of the year.

Sharing the team on his YouTube channel, Chopra picked Rohit as his first opener and underlined the senior opener's ton in Chennai, which was followed by impressive outings in England. He further named Sri Lanka's Dimuth Karunaratne as the second opener.

"The first name coming to my mind is Rohit Sharma. It was a huge year for him, it was the year in which he fell in love with the longest format. He played amazing knocks, whether it was the century in Chennai and the consistent performances in England," said Chopra.

"My second opener is Sri Lanka's Dimuth Karunaratne. He has also made runs which also includes a double century. He was playing well against West Indies also. He might not be too pleasing on the eye but scores runs."

Chopra's next two picks were Joe Root and Kane Williamson. While Root shattered many batting records including most Test runs for England in a calendar year, Williamson led his side to the coveted World Test Championship (WTC) trophy and also scored a double century against Pakistan.

"There was no contest at No.3. Joe Root is part of this team. He is the best Test batter of 2021, miles above the rest. He is just in a different league altogether. He gave amazing performances, whether it was the double century in India or Sri Lanka.

"At No.4, I have got Williamson. He scored a double century against Pakistan and he won his team the final. He played a very important knock in the final as well. Kane Williamson is also the captain of this team," Chopra further said.

Chopra also picked Fawad Alam, who became the fastest Pakistan batter to record five hundreds. He scored his fifth Test ton only in his 22nd innings. Rishabh Pant's performances on the Australian soil made Chopra pick the young wicketkeeper-batter in Test XI. Pant notched up 706 runs at an impressive average of 41.52 this year.

"My team has Fawad Alam. It is a story of persistence, that he will keep on playing whether you select him or not. He has made runs, the noticeable performances being 109 against South Africa, 140 against Zimbabwe and 124 against West Indies."

"The keeper is Rishabh Pant. I was thinking about Jos Buttler as well but no one was close to him. The sort of performances Rishabh Pant has given - 101 against England, 89 at Gabba and a ninety in Sydney as well. He has been very very good."

Chopra next picked Kyle Jamieson, who is handy with the bat as well, followed by two Indian spinners -- Ravichandran Ashwin and Axar Patel. Ashwin is the leading Test wicket-taker this year with 52 plucks in eight matches. Axar, who had a memorable debut series against England, has 21 wickets to his name in just six innings.

"After that, I am picking two Indians. Ravichandran Ashwin - he has taken a lot of wickets. He was brilliant in India against England. He made a century against England as well. He is the no.1 spinner in Test cricket, there is no doubt about it."

Chopra went with James Anderson and Shaheen Afridi as his final two picks. "I have picked two fast bowlers apart from Jamieson. Jimmy Anderson - he took 32 wickets this year. He did well in India, took a five-wicket haul in Sri Lanka and did well against India again at home.

"Last but not the least, I have got Shaheen Afridi. His performances this year have been very good. He was also taking five-wicket hauls like Axar. It will also give a left-armer, he is tall, pitches the ball up and makes it swing," he said.

Aakash Chopra's Test XI of the year: Rohit Sharma, Dimuth Karunaratne, Joe Root, Kane Williamson (c), Fawad Alam, Rishabh Pant, Kyle Jamieson, Ravichandran Ashwin, Axar Patel, James Anderson, Shaheen Afridi

Fair enough team selected by Chopra, hard to argue with most of it. I'd probably make one change and replace Anderson with Ollie Robinson.
 
Good team but instead of Fawad, he can go with Rizwan. Or maybe Marnus Labuschagne.

Also, Kane at 3 and Root at 4.
 
Best Test and T20I XIs of 2021

What is your best XI for test and t20I for performances in 2021.
(please consider stats from 1 Jan 2021)

my team..

Tests
Dimuth Karunaratne
Rohit Sharma
Marnus Labuschagne
Joe Root *
Fawad Alam
Rishab Pant (w)
Kyle Jamieson
Ravi Ashwin
Axar Patel
Hasan Ali
Shaheen Afridi
Ollie Robinson (12th)


T20Is
Mohammad Rizwan (w)
Jos Buttler
Babar Azam *
Mitchell Marsh
Devon Conway
Aiden Markram
Wanindu Hasaranga
Tabraiz Shamsi
Adam Zampa
Josh Hazlewood
Shaheen Afridi
Shadab Khan (12th)


I didn't make team for ODIS as very few ODIS were played among top teams.
What are your XIs ?
 
Test XI:

Dimuth Karunaratne
Rohit Sharma
Marnus Labuschagne
Joe Root (c)
Fawad Alam
Rishab Pant (wk)
Kyle Jamieson
Axar Patel
Jasprit Bumrah
Shaheen Afridi

=========================

T20I XI:

Mohammad Rizwan (wk)
Jos Butler
Babar Azam
Kane Williamson (c)
Asif Ali
James Neesham
Wanindu Hasaranga
Rashid Khan
Josh Hazlewood
Shaheen Afridi.
 
Tests

Dimuth Karunaratne
Rohit Sharma
Labuschagne
Root
Fawad Alam
Rizwan
Jamiieson
Ashwin
Hassan Ali
Shaheen
Bumrah

T20s
Rizwan
Buttler
Babae Azam
Marsh
Asif Ali
Neesham
Shadab
Wanindu Hasaranga
Hazlewood
Shaheen
Bumrah

Zampa
 
I always enjoy threads like this, so let's see. Btw, the team picked by Chopra as a test XI is not as bad as I thought it would be. Not sure about Jimmy being in it but it's not bad.

I'd go with:

Test XI:
1. Rohit Sharma IND
2. Dimuth Karunaratne SL
3. Kane Williamson NZ c (in for his captaincy alone)
4. Joe Root ENG
5. Fawad Alam PAK
6. Muhammad Rizwan wk
7. Ravi Ashwin IND
8. Hasan Ali PAK
9. Kyle Jamieson NZ
10. Shaheen Afridi PAK
11. Embuldeniya SL

ODI XI:
1. Fakhar Zaman PAK
2. Shikhar Dhawan IND
3. Babar Azam PAK c
4. Johnny Bairstow ENG
5. Janneman Malan SA
6. Rishab Pant IND wk
7. Shakib Hasan BANG
8. Adil Rashid ENG
9. Shaheen Afridi PAK
10. Jasprit Bumrah IND
11. Mustaf Rahman BANG

A hodge podge XI with so little ODI matches this year.

T20 XI:
1. Babar Azam PAK c
2. Muhammad Rizwan PAK wk
3. Liam Livingstone ENG
4. Aiden Markram SA
5. Jos Buttler ENG
6. Mitch Marsh AUS
7. Shadab Khan PAK
8. Tabraiz Shamsi SA
9. Haris Rauf PAK
10. Shaheen Afridi PAK
11. Adam Zampa AUS
 
Wisden asked me to send in my Test XI based on the period 1 December 2020 to 31 December 2021.

I've gone for:

Dimuth Karunaratne
R Sharma
K Williamson
J Root
F Alam
M Rizwan
R Ashwin
Hassan Ali
K Jamieson
Axar Patel
Shaheen Afridi
 
Former Pakistan spinner Danish Kaneria picked his T20I XI of the year 2021 where he named three Indians but opted to leave out India T20I skipper Rohit Sharma and star batter Virat Kohli.

Former Pakistan spinner Danish Kaneria has picked his T20I XI of the year 2021 where he named three Indian players but opted to leave out India T20I skipper Rohit Sharma and star batter Virat Kohli. The three Indian players who made it to Kaneria's XI are all-rounder- Ravindra Jadeja, off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin, and pacer Jasprit Bumrah. Pakistan opening pair Mohammad Rizwan and Babar Azam are the openers in his lineup while England wicketkeeper-batter Jos Buttler has got the No.3 spot followed by England's Liam Livingstone at No.4 and Mitchell Marsh at No.5.

Pakistan's Mohammad Rizwan and Babar Azam are the top-two run-getters in T20Is in 2021.

Rizwan has scored 1,326 runs in 29 matches at an average of 75.06 that is the most in a year by any player in the format history. He is also the only player to score more than 1,000 T20I runs in a calendar year.

On the other hand, Rizwan's opening partner and Pakistan captain Babar Azam has 939 runs to his name in 29 matches in 2021.

Kaneria lauded Rizwan and Babar's performance in 2021.

"Mohammad Rizwan and Babar Azam are my openers as performed really well throughout 2021. They were outstanding in the T20 World Cup (2021) and they played well in the recently concluded series against West Indies as well," said Kaneria on his YouTube channel.

On choosing Buttler over Rohit and Kohli for the No.3 spot, the former spinner said, "People will say at one down it should be Rohit Sharma or KL Rahul or Virat Kohli but no I have a different opinion, I will go with Jos Buttler. He (Buttler) played really well and he had also scored a hundred in World Cup. So, he deserves the spot."

Indian wicketkeeper Rishabh Pant is the 12th man in Kaneria's lineup.

Danish Kaneria's T20 XI Of 2021:

Babar Azam, Mohammad Rizwan, Jos Buttler, Liam Livingstone, Mitchell Marsh, Ravindra Jadeja, Ravi Ashwin, Shaheen Afridi, Trent Boult, Jasprit Bumrah, Adam Zampa

Rishabh Pant (12th Man)
 
Best XI: Cricket.com.au's Test team of the year

From run machines to match-winners with the ball, there was no shortage of players to pick from in this combined side from 2021. Here's where we landed...

1. Rohit Sharma (India)

M: 11 | Inns: 21 | Runs: 906 | Ave: 47.68 | 100s: 2 | 50s: 4 | HS: 161

Having dominated white-ball cricket and his home conditions for years, Rohit Sharma conquered his final frontier this year by showing he can score big Test runs outside of Asia. And a strong 2021 that saw him finish behind only Joe Root for most runs could have been even better if the classy right-hander had translated multiple strong starts into big hundreds. He reached 20 or more in 14 of his 19 completed innings but posted two centuries – 161 in a total of 329 to set up a win in Chennai and a patient 127 at The Oval, his maiden Test hundred away from home.

2. Dimuth Karunaratne (Sri Lanka) (c)

M: 7 | Inns: 13 | Runs: 902 | Ave: 69.38 | 100s: 4 | 50s: 3 | HS: 244

No opening batter has scored more Test runs in the past seven years than Karunaratne and the left-hander enjoyed another prolific year at the top of the order having taken over the captaincy. Having started 2021 with a rear-guard 103 out of 211 against South Africa in Johannesburg, Sri Lanka's skipper produced a match-saving four-hour knock in Antigua before a prolific campaign at home, highlighted by a score of 244 against Bangladesh, as he led his side to series wins over the Tigers and the Windies.

3. Marnus Labuschagne (Australia)

M: 5 | Inns: 9 | Runs: 526 | Ave: 65.75 | 100s: 2 | 50s: 4 | HS: 108

Play Video
Labuschagne lives dangerously to compile maiden Ashes ton
It's a measure of just how good Marnus Labuschagne was this year that he wins a spot in this side despite Australia playing just five Tests in 2021. The right-hander passed 50 in six of his nine innings, highlighted by hundreds against India in Brisbane and England in Adelaide, as he surged to top spot in the ICC's Test batting rankings. While Labuschagne's run of scores immediately after he returned to the Test side two-and-a-half years ago could have been passed off as simply a purple patch, an average of 70 from 16 Tests since his recall cannot. He's undisputedly one of the best batters in the world and appears to be only getting better.

4. Joe Root (England)

M: 15 | Inns: 29 | Runs: 1708 | Ave: 61.00 | 100s: 6 | 50s: 4 | HS: 228 | Wkts: 14 | Ave: 30.50 | BBI: 5-8

Play Video
Brisbane: Root leads fightback but can't crack ton
For a moment, let's forget about England's annus horribilis and reflect only on one of the great years ever produced by a batter in Test cricket. Joe Root's 2021 began with an extraordinary streak of 228, 186 and 218 in consecutive Tests on the subcontinent before he enjoyed another run of centuries in back-to-back-to-back games against India in the middle of the year. A hundred in Australia remains frustratingly out of reach, but Root is the leading run-scorer after three Ashes Tests, and he finished the year with the third-best tally of any batter in Test history. And he did all this with little or no support from his batting teammates.

5. Fawad Alam (Pakistan)

M: 9 | Inns: 13 | Runs: 571 | Ave: 57.10 | 100s: 3 | 50s: 2 | HS: 140

One of the great comeback stories continued in 2021 as Fawad Alam established himself as a consistent source of runs more than a decade after making a century on his Test debut. After celebrating the end of his 11-year Test exile with a hundred in New Zealand in late 2020, the unorthodox left-hander showed he's a man for all conditions by adding hundreds in Karachi, Harare and Kingston to finish the year as one of only three men to score three or more centuries.

6. Rishabh Pant (India) (wk)

M: 12 | Inns: 21 | Runs: 748 | Ave: 39.36 | 100s: 1 | 50s: 5 | HS: 101 | Ct: 30 | St: 6

Play Video
Pant's pressure-packed masterclass sinks the Aussies
One century and an average below 40 completely undersells Rishabh Pant's impact this year, especially in the first three months of 2021. The dynamic left-hander's numbers would look considerably better if he'd been able to turn scores of 97 (in Sydney), 89no (in Brisbane) and 91 (in Chennai) into hundreds but, as ever with a player as destructive as Pant, the numbers only tell half the story anyway. The way he dismantled Australia and England at the start of the year rightfully earned him comparisons with the great Adam Gilchrist and while his tour of England was one he'd rather forget, 2021 may one day be viewed as the year a modern great truly arrived on the world stage.

7. Ravichandran Ashwin (India)

M: 9 | Wkts: 54 | Ave: 16.64 | SR: 43.0 | BBI: 6-61 | BBM: 9-207 | 5W: 3 | 10W: 0 | Runs: 355 | Ave: 25.35 | 100s: 1 | HS: 106

It's a measure of just how prolific Ravichandran Ashwin has become that another sensational year, when he took more Test wickets than anyone else, would be tinged with some disappointment. Dominant as ever at home (where he took 46 of his 54 wickets), the off-spinner missed India's series-sealing win in Brisbane due to injury and was then surprisingly overlooked for their series in England as selectors preferred the extra batting punch provided by Ravindra Jadeja. But another year of 50-plus wickets is certainly worth celebrating, as is a fifth Test hundred and the crucial cameo he made with the bat in India's famous draw at the SCG.

8. Kyle Jamieson (New Zealand)

M: 5 | Wkts: 27 | Ave: 17.51 | SR: 41.8 | BBI: 6-48 | BBM: 11-117 | 5W: 3 | 10W: 1

Just when you thought New Zealand's pace-bowling stocks couldn't look any better, along comes Kyle Jamieson. Having burst onto the scene in 2020, the towering right-armer impressed again this year despite playing just five Tests, culminating in a match-winning seven-wicket haul in the World Test Championship final against India. He then took six wickets against India in Kanpur, showing he can thrive in the subcontinent as well, and he looks set to be a constant source of wickets for the Kiwis for many years to come.

9. Axar Patel (India)

M: 5 | Wkts: 36 | Ave: 11.86 | SR: 33.6 | BBI: 6-38 | BBM: 11-70 | 5W: 5 | 10W: 1

Bowling in favourable conditions is one thing but exploiting them to maximum effect – in your first year of Test cricket, no less – is another thing altogether. The fact Axar Patel wasn't selected for India's series opener against England in February was made all the more baffling by the carnage that followed as the left-armer bagged 27 wickets in just three Tests in one of the more memorable debut series in history. A combination of pinpoint accuracy and clever variations (the bulk of his wickets against England came from balls that didn't spin) made him a constant threat and he's another destructive spin option for India to call on for future campaigns.

10. Hasan Ali (Pakistan)

M: 8 | Wkts: 41 | Ave: 16.07 | SR: 31.0 | BBI: 5-27 | BBM: 10-94 | 5W: 5 | 10W: 1

The third seamer's spot was the most hotly contested in this side, but Pakistan's Hasan Ali gets in ahead of India's Jasprit Bumrah and England pair Jimmy Anderson and Ollie Robinson after a triumphant return to the Test arena in 2021. While 14 of his 41 wickets came against a struggling Zimbabwe side, the right-armer's numbers are hard to argue with and his 10-wicket haul in a famous win over South Africa in Rawalpindi – his first Test campaign in two years – will live long in the memory. His strike rate of 31.0, meaning he took a wicket roughly every five overs, is the best of any Test bowler in 2021.

11. Shaheen Shah Afridi (Pakistan)

M: 9 | Wkts: 47 | Ave: 17.06 | SR: 37.3 | BBI: 6-51 | BBM: 10-94 | 5W: 3 | 10W: 1

One of the most exciting talents in world cricket, Shaheen Shah Afridi delivered on his enormous potential in 2021 to finish the year as the second-highest wicket-taker in Test cricket. With blistering pace, beautiful shape and an action to die for, the left-armer led the Pakistan attack in five Test campaigns (four of them away from home), the high point being his 18 wickets in two Tests against the West Indies in Jamaica. Still just 21, Afridi went wicketless only twice in 17 innings this year, adding impressive consistency to his undoubted potency.

https://www.cricket.com.au/news/tes...en-afridi-hasan-ali-root-alam-pant/2021-12-31
 
Best XI: Cricket.com.au's Test team of the year

From run machines to match-winners with the ball, there was no shortage of players to pick from in this combined side from 2021. Here's where we landed...

1. Rohit Sharma (India)

M: 11 | Inns: 21 | Runs: 906 | Ave: 47.68 | 100s: 2 | 50s: 4 | HS: 161

Having dominated white-ball cricket and his home conditions for years, Rohit Sharma conquered his final frontier this year by showing he can score big Test runs outside of Asia. And a strong 2021 that saw him finish behind only Joe Root for most runs could have been even better if the classy right-hander had translated multiple strong starts into big hundreds. He reached 20 or more in 14 of his 19 completed innings but posted two centuries – 161 in a total of 329 to set up a win in Chennai and a patient 127 at The Oval, his maiden Test hundred away from home.

2. Dimuth Karunaratne (Sri Lanka) (c)

M: 7 | Inns: 13 | Runs: 902 | Ave: 69.38 | 100s: 4 | 50s: 3 | HS: 244

No opening batter has scored more Test runs in the past seven years than Karunaratne and the left-hander enjoyed another prolific year at the top of the order having taken over the captaincy. Having started 2021 with a rear-guard 103 out of 211 against South Africa in Johannesburg, Sri Lanka's skipper produced a match-saving four-hour knock in Antigua before a prolific campaign at home, highlighted by a score of 244 against Bangladesh, as he led his side to series wins over the Tigers and the Windies.

3. Marnus Labuschagne (Australia)

M: 5 | Inns: 9 | Runs: 526 | Ave: 65.75 | 100s: 2 | 50s: 4 | HS: 108

Play Video
Labuschagne lives dangerously to compile maiden Ashes ton
It's a measure of just how good Marnus Labuschagne was this year that he wins a spot in this side despite Australia playing just five Tests in 2021. The right-hander passed 50 in six of his nine innings, highlighted by hundreds against India in Brisbane and England in Adelaide, as he surged to top spot in the ICC's Test batting rankings. While Labuschagne's run of scores immediately after he returned to the Test side two-and-a-half years ago could have been passed off as simply a purple patch, an average of 70 from 16 Tests since his recall cannot. He's undisputedly one of the best batters in the world and appears to be only getting better.

4. Joe Root (England)

M: 15 | Inns: 29 | Runs: 1708 | Ave: 61.00 | 100s: 6 | 50s: 4 | HS: 228 | Wkts: 14 | Ave: 30.50 | BBI: 5-8

Play Video
Brisbane: Root leads fightback but can't crack ton
For a moment, let's forget about England's annus horribilis and reflect only on one of the great years ever produced by a batter in Test cricket. Joe Root's 2021 began with an extraordinary streak of 228, 186 and 218 in consecutive Tests on the subcontinent before he enjoyed another run of centuries in back-to-back-to-back games against India in the middle of the year. A hundred in Australia remains frustratingly out of reach, but Root is the leading run-scorer after three Ashes Tests, and he finished the year with the third-best tally of any batter in Test history. And he did all this with little or no support from his batting teammates.

5. Fawad Alam (Pakistan)

M: 9 | Inns: 13 | Runs: 571 | Ave: 57.10 | 100s: 3 | 50s: 2 | HS: 140

One of the great comeback stories continued in 2021 as Fawad Alam established himself as a consistent source of runs more than a decade after making a century on his Test debut. After celebrating the end of his 11-year Test exile with a hundred in New Zealand in late 2020, the unorthodox left-hander showed he's a man for all conditions by adding hundreds in Karachi, Harare and Kingston to finish the year as one of only three men to score three or more centuries.

6. Rishabh Pant (India) (wk)

M: 12 | Inns: 21 | Runs: 748 | Ave: 39.36 | 100s: 1 | 50s: 5 | HS: 101 | Ct: 30 | St: 6

Play Video
Pant's pressure-packed masterclass sinks the Aussies
One century and an average below 40 completely undersells Rishabh Pant's impact this year, especially in the first three months of 2021. The dynamic left-hander's numbers would look considerably better if he'd been able to turn scores of 97 (in Sydney), 89no (in Brisbane) and 91 (in Chennai) into hundreds but, as ever with a player as destructive as Pant, the numbers only tell half the story anyway. The way he dismantled Australia and England at the start of the year rightfully earned him comparisons with the great Adam Gilchrist and while his tour of England was one he'd rather forget, 2021 may one day be viewed as the year a modern great truly arrived on the world stage.

7. Ravichandran Ashwin (India)

M: 9 | Wkts: 54 | Ave: 16.64 | SR: 43.0 | BBI: 6-61 | BBM: 9-207 | 5W: 3 | 10W: 0 | Runs: 355 | Ave: 25.35 | 100s: 1 | HS: 106

It's a measure of just how prolific Ravichandran Ashwin has become that another sensational year, when he took more Test wickets than anyone else, would be tinged with some disappointment. Dominant as ever at home (where he took 46 of his 54 wickets), the off-spinner missed India's series-sealing win in Brisbane due to injury and was then surprisingly overlooked for their series in England as selectors preferred the extra batting punch provided by Ravindra Jadeja. But another year of 50-plus wickets is certainly worth celebrating, as is a fifth Test hundred and the crucial cameo he made with the bat in India's famous draw at the SCG.

8. Kyle Jamieson (New Zealand)

M: 5 | Wkts: 27 | Ave: 17.51 | SR: 41.8 | BBI: 6-48 | BBM: 11-117 | 5W: 3 | 10W: 1

Just when you thought New Zealand's pace-bowling stocks couldn't look any better, along comes Kyle Jamieson. Having burst onto the scene in 2020, the towering right-armer impressed again this year despite playing just five Tests, culminating in a match-winning seven-wicket haul in the World Test Championship final against India. He then took six wickets against India in Kanpur, showing he can thrive in the subcontinent as well, and he looks set to be a constant source of wickets for the Kiwis for many years to come.

9. Axar Patel (India)

M: 5 | Wkts: 36 | Ave: 11.86 | SR: 33.6 | BBI: 6-38 | BBM: 11-70 | 5W: 5 | 10W: 1

Bowling in favourable conditions is one thing but exploiting them to maximum effect – in your first year of Test cricket, no less – is another thing altogether. The fact Axar Patel wasn't selected for India's series opener against England in February was made all the more baffling by the carnage that followed as the left-armer bagged 27 wickets in just three Tests in one of the more memorable debut series in history. A combination of pinpoint accuracy and clever variations (the bulk of his wickets against England came from balls that didn't spin) made him a constant threat and he's another destructive spin option for India to call on for future campaigns.

10. Hasan Ali (Pakistan)

M: 8 | Wkts: 41 | Ave: 16.07 | SR: 31.0 | BBI: 5-27 | BBM: 10-94 | 5W: 5 | 10W: 1

The third seamer's spot was the most hotly contested in this side, but Pakistan's Hasan Ali gets in ahead of India's Jasprit Bumrah and England pair Jimmy Anderson and Ollie Robinson after a triumphant return to the Test arena in 2021. While 14 of his 41 wickets came against a struggling Zimbabwe side, the right-armer's numbers are hard to argue with and his 10-wicket haul in a famous win over South Africa in Rawalpindi – his first Test campaign in two years – will live long in the memory. His strike rate of 31.0, meaning he took a wicket roughly every five overs, is the best of any Test bowler in 2021.

11. Shaheen Shah Afridi (Pakistan)

M: 9 | Wkts: 47 | Ave: 17.06 | SR: 37.3 | BBI: 6-51 | BBM: 10-94 | 5W: 3 | 10W: 1

One of the most exciting talents in world cricket, Shaheen Shah Afridi delivered on his enormous potential in 2021 to finish the year as the second-highest wicket-taker in Test cricket. With blistering pace, beautiful shape and an action to die for, the left-armer led the Pakistan attack in five Test campaigns (four of them away from home), the high point being his 18 wickets in two Tests against the West Indies in Jamaica. Still just 21, Afridi went wicketless only twice in 17 innings this year, adding impressive consistency to his undoubted potency.

https://www.cricket.com.au/news/tes...en-afridi-hasan-ali-root-alam-pant/2021-12-31

This is exactly same team i mentioned above.
10/10 to me. Lol
 
Any test XI which doesn't have Bumrah and Shami in it, doesn't get my vote. These 2 have won tests on their own in opposition's den.
 
By that token, entire NZ XI should be test XI of the year as they won the WTC, no?
 
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