Broken Cricket Dreams Cricket Blog Logo

Ranking England’s 65 Greatest Cricketers of All Time (Men’s)

Who are the greatest English cricketers of them all?

England’s 150-year cricket history has ebbed and flowed between golden eras and long spells of frustration.

But much has changed in recent years. With new greats like Joe Root, Ben Stokes, Alastair Cook, Jimmy Anderson, and Stuart Broad cementing their legacies, and the World Cup triumphs of 2010, 2019, and 2022 redefining England’s white-ball identity, the landscape looks different now.

Which is why today, we are revisiting the legends of English cricket across formats and era— from Hobbs to Root, from Grace to Stokes— where every era left its own unforgettable mark.

Key Takeaways

  • Joe Root tops the list as the greatest English cricketer of all time, followed by legends like Ian Botham, Ben Stokes, Wally Hammond, James Anderson, Jack Hobbs, Alastair Cook, Graham Gooch, Kevin Pietersen, and Len Hutton rounding out the Top 10.
  • The Top 65 features a well-balanced mix: 10 all-rounders, 9 fast bowlers, 7 spinners, 5 wicketkeepers, and 34 specialist batters.
  • Era-wise, the list includes 26 players who featured after the year 2000, 22 players from the 1950–1990 era, and 17 pioneers from 1877 to 1950.

Table of Contents

What Metrics Do We Use to Rank the Greats?

When we first ranked The Greatest 155 Cricketers of All-Time across formats and The Top 60 Indian Cricketers, one pattern became clear: While the Top 20 were almost universal, the rankings grew more subjective after that.

To bring more structure, today we introduce a simple yet comprehensive points-based ranking system designed to fairly compare the greatest across eras, formats, and roles.

Also Read: 76 Greatest Women Cricketers, Top 50 Greatest West Indies Cricketers, Top 51 Greatest South African Cricketers of All-Time

Core 100-Point System

CategoryPointsWhat It Measures
Career Stats20Runs, wickets, averages, centuries, five-fors — overall statistical footprint.
Match-Winning Performances20Clutch innings, key spells, decisive contributions under pressure.
Big Stage Impact20Performances in World Cups, ICC finals, or major Test series like the Ashes.
Longevity15Sustained excellence across years; number of matches.
Versatility10Success across formats, roles, conditions (e.g., all-rounders).
Accolades10Major awards, ICC recognitions, Player of the Match/Series awards.
Leadership5Impact as captain, leading bowling attacks, building winning cultures or historic victories.

Bonus Points

BonusPointsWhat It Rewards
Era Bonus5For excelling in tougher eras (uncovered pitches, no World Cups, etc.).
Fielding/Wicketkeeping Bonus3Outstanding fielding, slip catching, or wicketkeeping achievements.
100-Test Bonus2Reward for longevity milestones (100+ Tests played).
  • For the Era bonus, pre-1950 players received +5, 1950-1975 got +4 (when more Tests were played), 1975-1990 players got +3 (when ODI cricket was introduced), 1990-2002 players got +2.
  • In an event of a tie, a player who played more Test matches won the tiebreaker.

The point system may still include a bit of subjectivity, but you can see my thought process with this ranking. It was difficult to differentiate between #17-35 since each player excelled in one area or the other.

Note: This ranking only considers performances in the international arena (Test, T20, ODI) and not in County Cricket, other domestic cricket, or franchise T20 leagues (even though FC stats will be provided for players from earlier eras).

Embed from Getty Images

Top 65 Greatest English Cricketers of All-Time (Ranked)

Honorable Mentions: Those Who Came Close

Players who had exceptional careers and moments but just missed the cut for the Top 65.

Those Who Just Missed Out (66-70): Keith Fletcher, Angus Fraser, Frank Tyson, Geoff Arnold, Douglas Jardine

Others Considered:

Matthew Hoggard, Mark Butcher, Matt Prior, Ashley Giles, Andy Caddick, Steve Harmison, Dominic Cork, Criag Kieswetter, Liam Plunkett, Simon Jones, Monty Panesar, Alex Hales, Ted Dexter, Robin Smith, Mike Hendrick, Fletcher, Maurice Leyland, TG Evans, Bob Taylor, Jack Russell, Stanley Jackson, Tim Bresnan, David Lloyd, Mark Wood, Chris Jordan, Graeme Hick, John Emburey, Fred Titmus, Chris Old, Mike Smith, Archie Maclaren, Alfred Shaw, Basil D’Oliveira

Possible Future Stars: Harry Brook, Jofra Archer, Ollie Pope, Sam Curran, Ben Duckett, Ollie Robinson

51-65: The Final Cut

Players who rose through the grind to leave their mark—not flawless, but unforgettable.

Embed from Getty Images

65. Mike Brearley (1976–1981, Middlesex) — 55 Points

Role: Batter (Captaincy Specialist)

Statistically not significant, Brearley makes the list on the back of his captaincy folklore. Mike Brearley led England through famous Ashes victories, maximizing the talents of those around him.

  • Matches: 39 Tests, 25 ODIs
  • Runs: 1442 (Tests), 510 (ODIs)
  • Hundreds: 0 (Tests), 0 (ODIs)
  • Player of Match Awards: 0
  • Player of Series Awards: 0
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England? ✅ (captained 31 Tests)
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Legendary captain of England’s 1981 Ashes comeback; known for bringing the best out of Ian Botham. W/L ratio of 4.5 (only second to Douglas Jardine’s 9.00). Wisden Cricketer (1977).

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
10515959530059
Embed from Getty Images

64. Dawid Malan — 60 Points (2017–2022, Middlesex and Yorkshire)

Dawid Malan rose from the fringes to become a world No. 1 in T20Is as England .

Role: Left-hand top-order batter

  • Matches: 26 (Tests), 65 (T20Is)
  • Runs: 1,254 (Tests), 2,030 (T20Is)
  • Hundreds: 1/1 (Tests/T20Is)
  • Player of Match Awards: 12
  • Player of Series Awards: 2
  • World Cup Winner? ✅ (2022 T20 WC)
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: World’s top-ranked T20I batter, played key knocks in the lead up to the 2021 & 2022 T20 World Cups

Also Read: List of 63 South African Born Cricketers Who Represented Other Nations

Watch: The Match That Made Dawid Malan

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
111515757000060
Embed from Getty Images

63. Dennis Amiss (1966–1977, Warwickshire) — 63 Points

Role: Top Order Batter

A pioneer in adapting to one-day cricket, Dennis Amiss combined classic Test match batting with groundbreaking ODI performances.

  • Matches: 50 (Tests), 18 (ODIs)
  • Runs: 3612 (Tests), 859 (ODIs)
  • Hundreds: 11 (Tests), 4 (ODIs)
  • Average: 46.30/47.72 (Tests/ODIs)
  • Player of Match Awards: 4
  • Player of Series Awards: 3
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: One of the first to score a World Cup hundred, 43423 FC/12519 List A runs, 1975 Wisden Cricketer

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
151213869040067
Embed from Getty Images

62. Jason Roy (2014–2023, Surrey) — 64 Points

Without Jason Roy, Australia would have won another ODI World Cup. Without Jason Roy, England’s white ball revolution would have been incomplete.

Role: Right-hand opening batter

  • Matches: 116 (ODIs), 64 (T20Is), 5 (Tests)
  • Runs: 4271 (ODIs), 1522 (T20Is), 187 (Tests)
  • Hundreds: 12 (ODIs)
  • Player of Match Awards: 15
  • Player of Series Awards: 1
  • World Cup Winner? ✅ (2019 ODI WC)
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: 3rd Most Hundreds in ODI cricket for England, Key figure in 2019 World Cup winning team, set multiple ODI partnership records with Jonny Bairstow.

Watch: Roy’s Hundred vs Australia, 2019 WC Semi-Final

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
151610975002064
Embed from Getty Images

61. Jonathan Trott (2009–2015, Warwickshire) — 65 Points

Role: Right-hand Top Order Batter

A rock at No. 3, Jonathan Trott’s steady, unflappable batting underpinned England’s ascent to world No. 1 in Tests during the 2009-2012 golden era.

  • Matches: 68 (ODIs), 52 (Tests), 7 (T20Is)
  • Runs: 2819 (ODIs), 3835 (Tests), 138 (T20Is)
  • Hundreds: 4 (ODIs), 9 (Tests)
  • Player of Match Awards: 5
  • Player of Series Awards: 1
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: 445 Runs in the 2010-11 Ashes, Cricketer of the Year 2011, Wisden Cricketer (2011), ICC Test Team of the Year (2011).

Watch: Boxing Day Hundred

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
171413858000065
Embed from Getty Images

60. Michael Vaughan (1999–2008, Yorkshire) — 70 Points

Role: Right-hand top-order batter, Right Arm Off Break

The architect of England’s 2005 Ashes glory, Michael Vaughan combined stylish batting with one of England’s finest captaincy reigns.

  • Matches: 86 (ODIs), 82 (Tests)
  • Runs: 1982 (ODIs), 5719 (Tests)
  • Hundreds: 18 (Tests), Average: 41.44/27.15 (Tests/ODIs)
  • Wickets: 16 (ODIs), 6 (Tests)
  • Player of Match Awards: 7
  • Player of Series Awards: 3
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Captained England to historic 2005 Ashes victory, vital figure in England’s early 2000s resurgence, Wisden Cricketer (2003). Member of 2007 ICC Test Team of the Year

Watch: Vaughan 166 at Old Trafford

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1613131058500070
Embed from Getty Images

59. Marcus Trescothick (2000–2006, Somerset) — 71 Points

Role: Left-hand Opening Batter

A fearless and free-scoring opener, Marcus Trescothick set the tone for England’s resurgence in the early 2000s with his aggressive approach at the top of the order.

  • Matches: 123 (ODIs), 76 (Tests), 3 (T20Is)
  • Runs: 4335 (ODIs), 5825 (Tests), 166 (T20Is)
  • Hundreds: 12/14 (ODI/Tests), Average: 43.79/37.37
  • Player of Match Awards: 13
  • Player of Series Awards: 4
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?(briefly in 2 Tests and 10 ODIs)
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Key architect of 2005 Ashes win, multiple ODI centuries, dominant opening partnerships, Wisden Cricketer (2005)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
161614758203071
Embed from Getty Images

58. Darren Gough (1994–2003, Yorkshire & Essex) — 72 Points

Role: Right-arm fast bowler

A fiery, charismatic fast bowler, Darren Gough carried England’s attack in the 1990s with his never-say-die spirit and reverse swing mastery.

  • Matches: 58 (Tests), 159 (ODIs)
  • Wickets: 229 (Tests), 235 (ODIs)
  • 5-Wicket Hauls: 9/0 (Tests/ODIs), Bowling Average: 28.39 (Tests)
  • Player of Match Awards: 6
  • Player of Series Awards: 3
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: First England bowler to 200 wickets in both Tests and ODIs, led 1998–99 Ashes fightback, Wisden Cricketer (1999)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1812131368200072

Embed from Getty Images

57. Chris Woakes — 72 Points (2011–Present, Warwickshire)

Role: Right-arm Fast-Medium Bowling Allrounder

A quiet achiever in England’s rise to white-ball dominance, Woakes delivered crucial spells in the 2019 World Cup semifinal and final, while offering reliable lower-order runs and new-ball consistency across formats.

  • Matches: 48 Tests, 119 ODIs, 33 T20Is
  • Wickets: 130 (Tests), 166 (ODIs), 29 (T20Is)
  • Runs: 1861 (Tests), 1526 (ODIs)
  • Hundreds: 1 (Test)
  • Player of Match Awards: 10
  • Player of Series Awards: 3
  • World Cup Winner? ✅ ✅ (2019 ODI WC, 2022 T20 WC)
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: 2019 World Cup semifinal – Player of the Match; consistent contributor in both white and red-ball cricket; one of England’s most trusted bowlers in recent years across conditions.

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1415161177002072
Embed from Getty Images

56. Moeen Ali (2014–Present, Worcestershire) — 73 Points

Role: All-Rounder (Left Arm Batter, Right Arm Off Spin)

England’s dynamic all-rounder across formats, Moeen Ali’s versatility and attacking flair made him a critical figure in both red-ball and white-ball revolutions. Part of England’s rise in limited overs cricket.

  • Matches: 138 (ODIs), 92 (T20Is), 68 (Tests)
  • Runs: 2355 (ODIs), 1229 (T20Is), 3094 (Tests)
  • Hundreds: 3/5 (Tests)
  • Wickets: 112 (ODIs), 53 (T20Is), 204 (Tests)
  • 5-fers: 5 (Tests)
  • Player of Match Awards: 20
  • Player of Series Awards: 2
  • World Cup Winner? ✅✅
  • Captained England?(captained in 12 T20Is)
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: 6th highest Player of the Match awards for England, Member of 2019 World Cup and 2022 T20 World Cup winning squads, crucial all-format contributions. Wisden Cricketer (2015),

Watch: Fastest T20I Half Century

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1218131386201073
Embed from Getty Images

55. Graeme Swann (2000–2013, Nottinghamshire) — 73 Points

Role: Right-arm off-spinner

England’s premier off-spinner of the modern era, Graeme Swann combined attacking flair with relentless consistency, playing a pivotal role in England’s rise to the No.1 Test ranking.

  • Matches: 79 (ODIs), 60 (Tests), 39 (T20Is)
  • Wickets: 104 (ODIs), 255 (Tests), 51 (T20Is)
  • 5-fers: 1 (ODIs), 17 (Tests)
  • Player of Match Awards: 9
  • Player of Series Awards: 3
  • World Cup Winner? ✅ (2010 T20 WC)
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Key bowler in England’s No. 1 Test team era, dominated 2009 and 2010–11 Ashes series, first English spinner to 50 T20I wickets. England’s fifth highest wicket-taker across formats, Wisden Cricketer (2010). Member of ICC Test Team of the Year (2010-11, 13) & 2011 ODI Team of the Year.

Watch: Swann 9-wicket haul in the Ashes

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1714131369001073
Embed from Getty Images

54. Adil Rashid (2009–Present, Yorkshire) — 74 Points

Role: Leg-Spinner

A world-class wrist spinner, Adil Rashid has been at the heart of England’s white-ball revolution, delivering consistently on the biggest stages including World Cup triumphs.

  • Matches: 19 (Tests), 132 (ODIs), 103 (T20Is)
  • Wickets: 60 (Tests), 207 (ODIs), 131 (T20Is)
  • Player of Match Awards: 11
  • Player of Series Awards: 3
  • World Cup Winner? ✅✅
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Crucial figure in England’s 2019 ODI World Cup and 2022 T20 World Cup victories; among England’s leading wicket-takers in white-ball cricket.

Watch: Best of Adil Rashid

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1714161176102074
Embed from Getty Images

53. John Edrich (1963–1976, Surrey) — 74 Points

Role: Batter

A tough, resilient opener, John Edrich combined immense patience with occasional ferocity, becoming one of England’s most reliable run-scorers during the 1960s and early 1970s.

  • Matches: 77 (Tests), 564 (FC)
  • Runs: 5,138 (Tests), 39,790 (FC)
  • Hundreds: 12/103 (Tests/FC), Average: 43.54
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?(briefly captained one Test in 1971)
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Scored 310* against New Zealand, crossed 100 first-class centuries milestone, key anchor in multiple Ashes campaigns, 1966 Wisden Cricketer.

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
151317959240074
Embed from Getty Images

52. Nasser Hussain (1990–2004, Essex) — 74 Points

Role: Right-hand middle-order batter

A combative and passionate leader, Nasser Hussain’s captaincy laid the groundwork for England’s cricketing revival in the early 2000s.

  • Matches: 96 (Tests), 88 (ODIs)
  • Runs: 5764 (Tests), 2332 (ODIs)
  • Hundreds: 14 (Tests), 1 (ODI)
  • Player of Match Awards: 3
  • Player of Series Awards: 1
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Rebuilt England’s Test culture, leading them to more consistent performances at the turn of the century, 2003 Wisden Cricketer

Watch: Hussain’s 100 in his final innings

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1512111369422074
Embed from Getty Images

51. Graham Thorpe (1993–2005, Surrey) — 74 Points

Role: Left Handed middle-order batter

A gritty, elegant craftsman, Graham Thorpe stood tall during a turbulent era for England, consistently delivering against top attacks around the world. Rest in peace.

  • Matches: 100 (Tests), 82 (ODIs)
  • Runs: 6744 (Tests). 2380 (ODIs)
  • Hundreds: 16 (Tests), Average: 44.66 (Tests)
  • Player of Match Awards: 10
  • Player of Series Awards: 2
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Stabilized England’s middle-order during the 1990s, key role in setting up the Vaughan-era resurgence, 1998 Wisden Cricketer

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1514121268023274

41-50: The Battle Hardened Greats

This tier includes battle-hardened leaders, early era greats, and players who quietly stitched together the spine of England’s teams — often without the spotlight, but never without impact.

Embed from Getty Images

50. Alec Bedser (1946–1955, Surrey) — 75 Points

Role: Bowler

  • Matches: 51 (Tests), 485 (FC)
  • Wickets: 236 (Tests), 1,924 (FC)
  • 5-Wicket Hauls: 15 (Tests), 112 (FC)
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: England’s leading Test wicket-taker at retirement, dominated the 1953 Ashes, famous for mastery of the leg-cutter, Wisden Cricketer (1947)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1715141159040075
Embed from Getty Images

49. Allan Lamb (1982–1992, Northamptonshire) 75 Points

Role: Batter

A stylish, aggressive middle-order batsman, Allan Lamb was a pillar of England’s batting through the 1980s, shining brightly in high-pressure World Cup campaigns and major Test series. Lamb’s 45 (55) kept England close in the 1987 World Cup Final. So close, yet so far.

  • Matches: 79 Tests, 122 ODIs
  • Runs: 4,656 (Tests), 4,010 (ODIs)
  • Hundreds: 14 (Tests), 4 (ODIs)
  • Player of Match Awards: 14
  • Player of Series Awards: 2
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?(briefly captained in 1990)
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Key contributor to England’s run to the 1987 ODI WC Final, critical knocks during the 1986-87 Ashes, 1981 Wisden Cricketer.

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1416121068332074
Embed from Getty Images

48. Mike Gatting (1977–1995, Middlesex) — 75 Points

Role: Right-handed Middle-Order Batter

Gritty, resilient, and unafraid to take on the fastest bowlers of his time, Gatting helped England through a turbulent era with a combination of toughness and leadership.

  • Matches: 79 (Tests), 92 (ODIs)
  • Runs: 4,409 (Tests), 2,092 (ODIs), 32,149 (First-Class)
  • Hundreds: 10 (Tests), 94 (First-Class)
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England? ✅ (led England to Ashes victory in 1986–87)
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Captained England to their last Ashes victory in Australia for 24 years (1986–87), remembered for bravery against pace and playing a key part in England’s 1980s rebuild, Wisden Cricketer (1984)

Watch: 117 at Adelaide

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1314121369431075
Embed from Getty Images

47. Kumar Ranjitsinhji (1896–1902, Sussex) — 76 Points

Role: Right-handed Batter

One of cricket’s earliest true batting artists, Ranjitsinhji dazzled with elegance, introducing the leg glance and redefining batting technique for generations to follow.

  • Matches: 15 (Tests), 307 (First-Class)
  • Runs: 989 (Tests), 24,692 (First-Class)
  • Hundreds: 2 (Tests), 72 (First-Class)
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Revolutionized batting with innovation and wristy strokeplay; scored a century on Test debut against Australia; his fluid style left a lasting legacy on the game’s evolution, Wisden Cricketer (1897)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1213131188250076
Embed from Getty Images

46. Patsy Hendren (1920–1935, Middlesex) — 76 Points

Role: Right-handed Middle-Order Batter

One of England’s most prolific and dependable batsmen between the wars, Hendren was known for his technical mastery, durability, and cheerful resilience at the crease.

  • Matches: 51 (Tests), 833 (FC)
  • Runs: 3525 (Tests), 57611 (FC) — second-most in history)
  • Hundreds: 7 (Tests), 170 (FC)
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Wisden Cricketer (1920), Scored over 57,000 first-class runs and 170 centuries; held England’s record for most Test appearances (51) until post-WWII; pivotal figure in stabilizing England’s batting during the interwar period.

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1713121458052076
Embed from Getty Images

45. Tony Greig (1972–1977, Sussex) — 76 Points

Role: Right-handed Middle-Order Batter and Right-arm Medium-Fast Bowler (Allrounder)

Charismatic and controversial, Greig was a fierce competitor who inspired England with his leadership and impactful all-round performances in the 1970s.

  • Matches: 58 (Tests), 22 (ODIs)
  • Runs: 3599 (Tests), 269 (ODIs)
  • Wickets: 141 (Tests), 19 (ODIs)
  • Hundreds: 8 (Tests), 32 (FC)
  • 5-fers: 4 (Tests), 45 (FC)
  • Player of the Series Awards: 1
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England? ✅ (led in 14 Tests, 1975–77)
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Wisden Cricketer (1975), Consistently contributed with both bat and ball; captained England through a volatile era; known for his fighting spirit and adaptability in overseas conditions, especially against West Indies and Australia.

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
141413888452076
Embed from Getty Images

44. Tom Graveney (1951-1969, Gloucestershire & Worcestershire) 76 Points

Role: Batter

A classical and elegant batsman, Tom Graveney combined grace with mountainous run-scoring, leaving behind one of the most prolific careers in English first-class history.

  • Matches: 79 (Tests), 515 (FC)
  • Runs: 4882 (Tests), 47793 (FC)
  • Hundreds: 11/122 (Tests, FC), Average: 44.37
  • Player of Match Awards: 1
  • Captained England?(captained 1 Test match)
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: 1953 Wisden Cricketer, Helped England regain the 1954-55 Ashes, Wisden Cricketer of the Year (1953)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1413121578142076
Embed from Getty Images

43. Ian Bell (2004–2015, Warwickshire) — 76 Points

Role: Right-hand middle-order batter

England’s greatest cover driver.

  • Matches: 161 (ODIs), 118 (Tests), 8 (T20Is)
  • Runs: 5416 (ODIs), 7727 (Tests), 188 (T20Is)
  • Hundreds: 4 (ODIs), 22 (Tests)
  • Player of Match Awards: 13
  • Player of Series Awards: 3
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England? ❌
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: figure in multiple Ashes wins, ICC Champions Trophy finalist, among England’s most aesthetically pleasing batters, 2008 Wisden Cricketer, 2006 Emerging Cricketer of the Year.

Watch: “Best Cover Drive Ever”, 235 vs Australia at Oval

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1816131168003276
Embed from Getty Images

42. Hedley Verity (1931–1939, Yorkshire) — 77 Points

Role: Left-arm orthodox spinner

One of the greatest spin bowlers England has ever produced, Hedley Verity’s immaculate control and devastating spells made him a giant of the pre-war era. Tragically passed away at the age of 38 as a prisoner of war.

  • Matches: 40 (Tests), 278 (FC)
  • Wickets: 144 (Tests), 1956 (FC)
  • 5-Wicket Hauls: 7/164 (Tests/FC), Bowling Average: 24.37/14.90
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Best figures in FC history (10/10), key architect of Ashes wins, Wisden Cricketer (1932)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1713151068350077
Embed from Getty Images

41. Jim Laker (1948–1959, Surrey) — 77 Points

Role: Right-arm off-spinner

A magician with the ball, Jim Laker’s pinpoint accuracy and variations culminated in one of Test cricket’s greatest feats — 19 wickets in a single match.

  • Matches: 46 (Tests), 450 (FC)
  • Wickets: 193 (Tests), 1,944 (FC)
  • 5-Wicket Hauls: 9/127 (Tests/FC)
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: 19 wickets in a single Test (Old Trafford 1956), cornerstone of England’s spin dominance in the 1950s, Wisden Cricketer (1952)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1618141258040077

31-40: The Defining Performers

Players who created decisive moments and major contributions even if not consistent dominators.

Embed from Getty Images

40. Paul Collingwood (2001–2011, Durham) — 77 Points

Role: All-Rounder

England’s ultimate team man, Paul Collingwood’s gritty batting, sharp fielding, and occasional bowling made him a pillar in all formats.

  • Matches: 197 (ODIs), 68 (Tests), 36 (T20Is)
  • Runs: 5092 (ODIs), 4259 (Tests), 583 (T20Is)
  • Hundreds: 10/5 (Tests), Average: 40.56/35.36
  • Wickets: 111 (ODIs), 17 (Tests), 16 (T20Is)
  • 5-fers: 1 (ODIs)
  • Player of Match Awards: 16
  • Player of Series Awards: 0
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: 2010 T20 World Cup-winning captain, three-time Ashes winner, known for spectacular fielding, Wisden Cricketer (2007) & Member of 2010 ICC ODI Team of the Year

Also Read: Top 32 Best Fielders in Cricket History: Jonty Rhodes, Paul Collingwood…Can You Guess The Rest?

Watch: Collingwood Hayden Catch

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1416131088503077
Embed from Getty Images

39. Les Ames (1929–1939, Kent) — 78 Points

Role: Wicketkeeper-Batter

Pioneered the wicketkeeper-batter role. Become one of England’s most reliable and stylish run-scorers in the 1930s.

  • Matches: 47 (Tests), 593 (FC)
  • Runs: 2434 (Tests), 37248 (FC)
  • Hundreds: 8 (Tests), 102 (FC)
  • Dismissals: 74 (Tests), 417 (FC)
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?(captained 1 Test match in 1939)
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: First Wicketkeeper to score 100 FC hundreds, Record holder for most Test centuries (8) by a designated keeper (stood for decades). Wisden Cricketer (1929)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1513151079153078
Embed from Getty Images

38. John Snow (1965–1976, Sussex) — 78 Points

Role: Right-arm Fast Bowler

Sharp, aggressive, and fiercely competitive, John Snow spearheaded England’s bowling attacks in the late 1960s and early 1970s, thriving in hostile conditions and big series.

  • Matches: 49 (Tests), 253 (FC)
  • Wickets: 202 (Tests), 1073 (FC)
  • 5-fers: 8/56 (Test/FC), Bowling Average: 26.66/22.73
  • Runs: 772 (Tests), 4,207 (FC)
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Lead bowler in England’s famous 1970–71 Ashes triumph; remembered for devastating spells against Australia and West Indies; among the finest hostile quicks of his generation, Wisden Cricketer (1973)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1615141168350078
Embed from Getty Images

37. Michael Atherton (1989–2001, Lancashire) — 78 Points

Role: Right-hand opening batter

A stoic and resilient opener, Michael Atherton embodied grit and determination, often leading England’s resistance against dominant oppositions in the 1990s.

  • Matches: 115 (Tests), 54 (ODIs)
  • Runs: 7728 (Tests), 1791 (ODIs)
  • Hundreds: 16 (Tests), 2 (ODIs) Average: 37.69/35.11 (Tests/ODIs)
  • Player of Match Awards: 14
  • Player of Series Awards: 6
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Led England through a turbulent era, famous for marathon innings like 185* at Johannesburg, 1991 Wisden Cricketer

Watch: Atherton’s Match Saving 185* vs South Africa

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1717101258322278
Embed from Getty Images

36. Alan Knott (1967–1981, Kent) — 78 Points

Role: Wicketkeeper

One of the finest glovemen in cricket history, Alan Knott combined acrobatic wicketkeeping with vital lower-order batting during England’s 1970s successes.

  • Matches: 95 (Tests), 20 (ODIs)
  • Runs: 4389 (Tests), 200 (ODIs)
  • Hundreds: 5 (Tests)
  • Dismissals: 269 – 250 catches/19 stumpings (Tests), 16 – 15 catches/1 stumping (ODI)
  • Fielder of Match Awards: 1
  • Player of Series Awards: 1
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Renowned for world-class wicketkeeping skills, over 250 dismissals in Test cricket, Wisden Cricketer (1970)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1513121388333078
Embed from Getty Images

35. George Lohmann (1886–1896, Surrey) — 79 Points

Role: Bowler

One of the deadliest seam bowlers in cricket history, George Lohmann dominated with relentless accuracy and unrivaled averages during the late 19th century.

  • Matches: 18 (Tests), 204 (FC)
  • Wickets: 112 (Tests), 1,841 (FC)
  • 5-Wicket Hauls: 9 (Tests), 152 (FC)
  • Captained England?(captained England twice)
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Fastest to 100 Test wickets (in just 16 matches), lowest career Test bowling average (10.75), was a menace to the batters throughout the 1890s, 1889 Wisden Cricketer

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1713121368352079
Embed from Getty Images

34. Harold Larwood (1926–1933, Nottinghamshire) — 79 Points

Role: Right-arm fast bowler

The fearsome spearhead of the Bodyline series, Harold Larwood terrorized batsmen with raw pace and precision during one of the most controversial but impactful eras in cricket history.

  • Matches: 21 (Tests), 300 (FC)
  • Wickets: 78 (Tests), 1427 (FC)
  • 5-Wicket Hauls: 4/90 (Tests/FC), Bowling Average: 28.35/17.51 (Tests/FC)
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Wisden Cricketer (1927) Bodyline architect, dominated 1932–33 Ashes with devastating bowling

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1715131268350079
Embed from Getty Images

33. Brian Statham (1951–1965, Lancashire) — 80 Points

Role: Right-arm fast bowler

The silent assassin of England’s pace attack, Brian Statham combined relentless accuracy with remarkable sportsmanship, becoming one of England’s most respected seamers.

  • Matches: 70 (Tests), 430 (FC)
  • Wickets: 252 (Tests), 2,260 (FC)
  • 5-Wicket Hauls: 9/94 (Tests/FC), Bowling Average: 24.84/16.37 (Tests/FC)
  • Captained England?(briefly captained 1 Test)
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: 250+ Test wickets, key partner to Fred Trueman in legendary new ball partnerships, Wisden Cricketer (1955).

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1715131468340080
Embed from Getty Images

32. Derek Underwood (1966–1982, Kent) — 80 Points

Role: Left-arm orthodox spinner

  • Matches: 86 (Tests), 676 (FC)
  • Wickets: 297 (Tests), 2465 (FC)
  • 5-Wicket Hauls: 17/126 (Tests/FC)
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: 297 Test wickets, decisive spells in Ashes victories, excelled on difficult pitches, Wisden Cricketer (1969)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1816141358340080
Embed from Getty Images

31. W.G. Grace (1880–1899, Gloucestershire) — 80 Points

Role: All-Rounder

The founding father of modern cricket, W.G. Grace’s innovation, charisma, and unmatched influence shaped cricket’s early history.

  • Matches: 22 (Tests)
  • Runs: 1098
  • Hundreds: 2
  • Wickets: 9
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Revolutionized batting, 54211 Runs/2809 Wickets in First-Class cricket, Wisden Cricket (1896)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1215131488451080

We are halfway there! Let’s take a breather, shall we?

If you like this content, please subscribe to never miss a new article from us!

21-30: The Masters

Complete cricketers with major achievements. Dominant stretches, trophy wins, or sustained excellence across formats.

Embed from Getty Images

30. Ray Illingworth (1958–1973, Yorkshire & Leicestershire) 80 Points

Role: Right-arm Off-Spinner and Middle-Order Batter

One of England’s most influential captains, Illingworth combined sharp tactical acumen with steady all-round performances, leading England to a dominant era in the early 1970s.

  • Matches: 61 (Tests), 787 (FC)
  • Runs: 1836 (Tests), 24134 (FC)
  • Wickets: 122 (Tests), 2072 (FC)
  • Hundreds: 2 (Tests), 23 (FC)
  • Five-fors: 3 (Tests), 152 (FC)
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England? ✅ (Captain in 31 Tests, led famous 1970–71 Ashes series victory)
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Wisden Cricketer (1960), Captained England to an unbeaten 27-Test run including winning the Ashes 1970–71 in Australia; contributed consistently with both bat and ball during his tenure; remembered as one of England’s most tactical and resilient leaders.

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1614131378540080
Embed from Getty Images

29. Bob Willis (1971–1984, Surrey & Warwickshire) — 80 Points

Role: Fast Bowler

A tireless and intimidating presence, Bob Willis spearheaded England’s attack with heart and pace, famously leading them to Ashes glory in 1981 with 29 wickets in the series.

  • Matches: 90 (Tests), 64 (ODIs)
  • Wickets: 325 (Tests), 80 (ODIs)
  • 5-fers: 16 (Tests)
  • Player of Match Awards: 2
  • Player of Series Awards: 0
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Iconic 8/43 at Headingley 1981, over 300 Test wickets, vice-captain in pivotal Ashes moments, Wisden Cricketer (1978)

Watch: Bob Willis 8/43

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1716141358430080
Embed from Getty Images

28. Peter May (1951–1961, Surrey) — 81 Points

Role: Batter

One of England’s finest classical batters, Peter May combined grace with steely resilience, leading England’s batting during a golden post-war era.

  • Matches: 66 (Tests), 304 (FC)
  • Runs: 4,537 (Tests), 27,592 (FC)
  • Hundreds: 13/85 (Tests/FC), Average: 46.77/51.00 (Tests/FC)
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Captained England to historic Ashes victories, Wisden Cricketer of the Year (1952)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1615131378540081
Embed from Getty Images

27. Denis Compton (1937–1957, Middlesex) — 81 Points

Role: Right Arm Bat, Left Arm Wrist Spin

A dashing entertainer and post-war hero, Denis Compton’s flair and match-winning ability made him one of England’s most celebrated cricketers.

  • Matches: 78 (Tests), 515 (FC)
  • Runs: 5807 (Tests), 38942 (FC)
  • Hundreds: 17/123 (Tests/FC), Average: 50.06/51.85 (Tests/FC)
  • Wickets: 25/622 (Test/FC)
  • 5-fers: 1
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Record-setting 1947 season, Ashes hero, one of the most popular and stylish cricketers of his era, Wisden Cricketer (1939)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1715141388051081
Embed from Getty Images

26. Jonny Bairstow (2012–Present, Yorkshire) — 81 Points

Role: Right-hand wicketkeeper-batter

One of England’s most versatile and dynamic players, Jonny Bairstow has delivered match-winning performances across formats, redefining England’s aggressive batting identity.

  • Matches: 107 (ODIs), 100 (Tests), 80 (T20Is)
  • Runs: 3868 (ODIs), 6042 (Tests), 1671 (T20Is)
  • Hundreds: 12/11/0 (Tests/ODIs/T20Is)
  • Average: 37.02/46.59/27.85 (Tests/ODIs/T20Is)
  • Dismissals: 55 Catches/3 Stumpings (ODIs), 242 Catches/14 Stumpings (Tests), 46 Catches/1 Stumpings (T20Is)
  • Player of Match Awards: 22
  • Player of Series Awards: 3
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Member of 2019 World Cup winning team, key figure in Bazball era, multiple match-winning innings in ICC tournaments. 2016 Wisden Cricketer, Member of 2018 ODI ICC Team of the Year & Test Team of the Year (2016, 2022)

Watch: 136 vs NZ, 2022, 2019 WC 100

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1519151179003281
Embed from Getty Images

25. Ken Barrington (1955–1968, Surrey) — 82 Points

Role: Right Arm Batter, Legbreak

A tireless accumulator, Ken Barrington adapted his game from aggressive to defensive to become England’s most reliable run machine.

  • Matches: 82 (Tests), 533 (FC)
  • Runs: 6806 (Tests), 31714 (FC)
  • Hundreds: 20/76 (Tests/FC), Average: 58.67/45.63 (Tests/FC)
  • Wickets: 29/273 (Tests/FC)
  • Batsman of Match Awards: 4
  • Player of Series Awards: 0
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Wisden Cricketer (1960), Average of 58.67.

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
2016141368041082
Embed from Getty Images

24. Sir Andrew Strauss (2004–2012, Middlesex) — 82 Points

Role: Left Handed Opening Batter

A tactically sharp captain and solid opener, Andrew Strauss was central to England’s 2005 and 2010–11 Ashes triumphs.

  • Matches: 127 (ODIs), 100 (Tests)
  • Runs: 4205 (ODIs), 7037 (Tests)
  • Hundreds: 6 (ODIs), 21 (Tests)
  • Player of Match Awards: 9
  • Player of Series Awards: 8
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Captained England to No. 1 Test ranking, captained Ashes victory in Australia (2010–11), 8 Player of the Series Awards, Wisden Cricketer (2005), Member of the 2009 ICC Test Team of the Year

Watch: 161 at Lord’s 2009, Strauss 158 vs India in 2011 ODI World Cup

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1717131078503282
Embed from Getty Images

23. Eoin Morgan (2009–2022, Middlesex) — 84 Points

Role: Left-handed middle-order batter /Captain

England’s white-ball revolutionary captain, Eoin Morgan redefined England’s ODI and T20I culture, culminating in a historic 2019 World Cup win.

  • Matches: 248 (ODIs), 115 (T20Is), 16 (Tests)
  • Runs: 7701 (ODIs), 2458 (T20Is), 700 (Tests)
  • Hundreds: 14 (ODIs), 2 (Tests)
  • Player of Match Awards: 21
  • Player of Series Awards: 4
  • World Cup Winner? ✅✅ (2010 T20 WC and 2019 ODI WC)
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: 2019 World Cup-winning captain, Highest ODI Run Scorer for England, 2nd highest ODI centurion, 2011 Wisden Cricketer

Watch: Most Sixes in an ODI Innings vs Afghanistan

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1719151159503084
Embed from Getty Images

22. Andrew Flintoff (1998–2009, Lancashire) — 84 Points

Role: Fast Bowling All Rounder

An explosive all-rounder, Andrew Flintoff captured the imagination of a generation with his power hitting, fiery pace, and larger-than-life charisma. Hope he recovers well from the horrific accident.

  • Matches: 141 (ODIs), 79 (Tests), 7 (T20Is)
  • Runs: 3394 (ODIs), 3845 (Tests), 76 (T20Is)
  • Hundreds: 3 (ODIs), 5 (Tests)
  • Wickets: 169 (ODIs), 226 (Tests), 5 (T20Is)
  • 5-fers: 2 (ODIs), 3 (Tests)
  • Player of Match Awards: 20
  • Player of Series Awards: 7
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Player of the Series in 2005 Ashes, pivotal in England’s Test and ODI resurgence, 2004 Wisden Cricketer, ICC Cricketer of the Year (2005), ODI Cricketer of the Year (2004), Member of Test Team of the Year (2005-06), ODI Team of the Year (2004-06)

Watch: Fintoff’s Spell to Kallis, Flintoff’s Magic Over vs Ponting

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1720161189201084

Embed from Getty Images

21. Alec Stewart (1989–2003, Surrey) — 84 Points

Role: Right-hand wicketkeeper-batter

An adaptable and fiercely competitive cricketer, Alec Stewart’s flexibility across roles made him a cornerstone of England’s batting and leadership for over a decade.

  • Matches: 133 (Tests), 170 (ODIs)
  • Runs: 8463 (Tests), 4677 (ODIs)
  • Hundreds: 15/4 (Tests/ODIs) Average: 39.54/31.60 (Tests/ODIs)
  • Dismissals: 277 – 263 Catches/14 Stumpings (Tests), 174 – 159 Catches/15 Stumpings
  • Player of Match Awards: 17
  • Player of Series Awards: 2
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: England’s most capped Test player for a long time, Wisden Cricketer

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1717121568223284

11-20: The Hall of Famers

Figures whose careers are the benchmarks of greatness with towering achievements, long-lasting influence, and cross-era respect.

Embed from Getty Images

20. Colin Cowdrey (1954–1975, Kent) — 85 Points

Role: Right-hand middle-order batter

A paragon of classical technique and gentlemanly spirit, Colin Cowdrey was the first cricketer to play 100 Tests and a bedrock of England’s batting for two decades.

  • Matches: 114 (Tests)
  • Runs: 7624
  • Hundreds: 22
  • Batsman of Match Awards: 1
  • Player of Series Awards: 0
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: First player to reach 100 Tests, key architect of Ashes battles in the 50s and 60s, Wisden Cricketer (1956)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1814131467443285
Embed from Getty Images

19. David Gower (1978–1992, Leicestershire & Hampshire) — 85 Points

Role: Left Handed middle-order batter

Stylish, graceful, and supremely talented, David Gower was England’s most elegant batter of the 1980s.

  • Matches: 117 (Tests), 114 (ODIs)
  • Runs: 8231 (Tests), 3170 (ODIs)
  • Hundreds: 18 (Tests), 7 (ODIs)
  • Player of Match Awards: 13
  • Player of Series Awards: 6
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Captained England to Ashes wins, fourth-highest Test runs for England at the time of retirement, Wisden Cricketer (1979)

Watch: David Gower’s Elegance

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1817141368331285
Embed from Getty Images

18. Geoffrey Boycott (1964–1982, Yorkshire) — 85 Points

Role: Right Handed Opening Batter

  • Matches: 108 (Tests), 36 (ODIs)
  • Runs: 8114 (Tests), 1082 (ODIs)
  • Hundreds: 22 (Tests), 1 (ODIs)
  • Player of Match Awards: 5
  • Player of Series Awards: 0
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Passed 8,000 Test runs, comeback century on home ground, record partnerships in Ashes battles, Wisden Cricketer (1965)

Watch: 137 vs Australia

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1815151468430285
Embed from Getty Images

17. Jos Buttler (2011–Present, Lancashire) — 86 Points

Role: Right-hand wicketkeeper-batter

England’s modern-day white-ball maestro, Jos Buttler redefined finishing in ODIs and T20Is with audacious innovation and power.

  • Matches: 187 (ODIs), 134 (T20Is), 57 (Tests)
  • Runs: 5196 (ODIs), 3535 (T20Is), 2907 (Tests)
  • Hundreds: 11 (ODIs), 1 (T20Is), 2 (Tests)
  • Dismissals: 225 Catches/37 Stumpings (ODIs), 77 Catches/13 Stumpings (T20Is), 153 Catches/1 Stumpings (Tests)
  • Player of Match Awards: 24
  • Player of Series Awards: 7
  • World Cup Winner? ✅✅
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: 2019 World Cup winner (key Super Over & keeping contribution), 2022 T20 World Cup winning captain, revolutionized England’s white-ball batting, Wisden Cricketer (2019). Member of ICC ODI Team of the Year (2016, 2018-19) & T20I Team of the Year (2021-22). Highest run scorer for England in the 2022 T20 World Cup.

Watch: 100 off 50 vs Pakistan

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
17201513610203086
Embed from Getty Images

16. Frank Woolley (1909–1934, Kent) — 86 Points

Role: All-Rounder: Left Hand Bat, Left Arm Spin

One of England’s most graceful cricketers, Frank Woolley dazzled as a flowing batsman, brilliant fielder, and reliable bowler over a staggering career.

  • Matches: 64 (Tests)
  • Runs: 3283
  • Hundreds: 5
  • Wickets: 83
  • 5-fer: 4
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: 58959 Runs with 145 tons in FC cricket and 2066 wickets. Third Longest Career, Wisden Cricketer (1911)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1516151578352086
Embed from Getty Images

15. Fred Trueman (1952–1965, Yorkshire) — 86 Points

Role: Right Arm Fast Bowler

“Fiery Fred” was England’s ultimate fast bowling force, revered for his aggression, consistency, and trailblazing wicket-taking.

  • Matches: 67 (Tests)
  • Wickets: 307
  • 5-fers: 17
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: First bowler to 300 Test wickets, dominant against top opposition, iconic figure of post-war English cricket, Wisden Cricketer (1953)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1817151368342086
Embed from Getty Images

14. Wilfred Rhodes (1899–1930, Yorkshire) — 87 Points

Role: Left-arm orthodox spinner, later opening batter

A timeless cricketing giant, Wilfred Rhodes starred as a bowler, batter, and all-rounder across one of the longest careers in cricket history.

  • Matches: 58 (Tests)
  • Runs: 2325
  • Hundreds: 2
  • Average: 26.96 (Bowling), 30.19 (Batting)
  • Wickets: 127
  • 5-fers: 6
  • Captained England?(once)
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Longest Test Career (30 years 315 days). Over 4,000 first-class wickets, opened both batting and bowling for England, Wisden Cricketer (1899)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1515161588352087

Notable Achievements: Exceptional Test average for his era, key contributor to many Ashes triumphs, famed for adaptability under pressure

Embed from Getty Images

13. Stuart Broad (2007–2023, Nottinghamshire) — 87 Points

Role: Right Arm Pace/Left Arm Batter

Tall, aggressive, and unrelenting, Stuart Broad was the ultimate Ashes warrior and a relentless match-winner for England for over 15 years. Those Spells.

  • Matches: 167 (Tests), 121 (ODIs), 56 (T20Is)
  • Wickets: 604 (Tests), 178 (ODIs), 65 (T20Is)
  • 5-fers: 20 (Tests), 1 (ODIs)
  • Runs: 3662 (Tests), 529 (ODIs), 118 (T20Is)
  • Hundreds: 1 (Test)
  • Player of Match Awards: 14
  • Player of Series Awards: 3
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?(T20I captain and briefly Test captain)
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Second-most wickets for England, Ashes hero (2015, 2019), devastating spells including 8/15 against Australia, Wisden Cricketer (2010), Selected in Test Team of the Decade, Selected as member of ICC Test Team of the Year (2009, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2023)

Also Read: Stuart Broad Retirement Tribute: Sun Sets on Legendary Career

Watch: Broad’s 8/15 Spell

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
20191414610101287
Embed from Getty Images

12. Herbert Sutcliffe (1924–1935, Yorkshire) — 88 Points

Role: Right-hand opening batter

A master of technique under pressure, Herbert Sutcliffe forged one of the most formidable opening partnerships and dominated tough batting conditions.

  • Matches: 54 (Tests)
  • Runs: 4555
  • Hundreds: 16, Batting: 60.73 Average
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Only player to score 16+ centuries with a 60+ Test average. Formed key opening partnership with Jack Hobbs, Wisden Cricketer (1920)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1816161278350085
Embed from Getty Images

11. Sydney Barnes (1901–1914, Staffordshire) — 89 Points

Role: Right Arm Fast Bowler

A revolutionary, Sydney Barnes blended pace, swing, and seam to become arguably the most unplayable bowler of his time. Consider the greatest fast bowler of the twentieth century.

  • Matches: 27 (Tests)
  • Wickets: 189
  • 5-fers: 24
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Record 189 wickets in just 27 Tests, regarded by contemporaries as the finest bowler in history, Wisden Cricketer (1910)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1819171378250089

Top 10: The Titans of English Cricket

The absolute legends. Players who did not just succeed, they transformed the game for England for generations to come.

Embed from Getty Images

10. Sir Len Hutton (1937–1955, Yorkshire) — 90 Points

Role: Right-hand opening batter

Technically brilliant and fiercely determined, Sir Leonard Hutton was England’s post-war batting rock and the first professional to captain England.

  • Matches: 79 (Tests)
  • Runs: 6971
  • Hundreds: 19, Average: 56.67
    World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Record 364* score, Ashes-winning captain, one of England’s greatest openers, Wisden Cricketer (1938)

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1816161578451090
Embed from Getty Images

9. Kevin Pietersen (2004–2014, Nottinghamshire, Hampshire, & Surrey) — 90 Points

Role: Right-handed middle order batter, Part-Time Off Spin

A fearless maverick, Kevin Pietersen’s flamboyant strokeplay and game-changing innings lit up all formats for England. Possibly England’s greatest matchwinner.

  • Matches: 136 (ODIs), 104 (Tests), 37 (T20Is)
  • Runs: 4440 (ODIs), 8181 (Tests), 1176 (T20Is)
  • Hundreds: 9 (ODIs), 23 (Tests)
  • Wickets: 7 (ODIs), 10 (Tests), 1 (T20Is)
  • Player of Match Awards: 26
  • Player of Series Awards: 5
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: 2005 Ashes hero, key performer in England’s 2010 T20 World Cup triumph, known for audacious stroke innovation. Member of ICC Test Team of the Year (2007-08), ODI Cricketer of the Year(2005, 06, 09), Wisden Cricketer (2006), ICC Emerging Player of the Year (2005), Player of the Tournament (2010 T20 WC), ICC ODI Cricketer of the Year (2005)

Watch: ODI ton vs Australia, Bristol 2005, 158 – 2005 Ashes, 1st ODI hundred vs South Africa, 142 (157) vs Sri Lanka

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
18201810910101290
Embed from Getty Images

8. Graham Gooch (1975–1995, Essex) — 91 Points

Role: Top Order Batter, Part-Time Right Arm Medium Pace

One of England’s most prolific run-scorers, Graham Gooch combined physical fitness and mental toughness to dominate bowling attacks for two decades. Took England to the 1992 ODI World Cup Final.

  • Matches: 125 (ODIs), 118 (Tests)
  • Runs: 4290 (ODIs), 8900 (Tests)
  • Hundreds: 20/8 (Tests/ODIs), Average: 42.58/36.98 (Test/ODI)
  • Wickets: 36 (ODIs), 23 (Tests)
  • Player of Match Awards: 20
  • Player of Series Awards: 9
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Wisden Cricketer of the Year (1980), Epic 333 against India, England’s leading scorer for years, captained England to a World Cup final (1992). 44,846 FC runs, 22,211 List A Runs.

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1720151558333291
Embed from Getty Images

7. Sir Alastair Cook (2006–2018, Essex) — 91 Points

Role: Left Hand Opening Batter/Captain

Relentless and unbreakable, Sir Alastair Cook became England’s most prolific Test run-scorer through sheer discipline and mental toughness.

  • Matches: 161 (Tests), 92 (ODIs), 4 (T20Is)
  • Runs: 12472 (Tests), 3204 (ODIs), 61 (T20Is)
  • Hundreds: 33/5 (Tests/ODIs), Average: 45.35/36.50 (Tests/ODIs)
  • Player of Match Awards: 16
  • Player of Series Awards: 5
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: England’s highest Test run-getter, captained England to series wins in India and Ashes triumphs, First England Batter to score 10,000 Test Runs, Wisden Cricketer (2012), ICC Test Cricketer of the Year (2011). Selected in ICC Test Team of the Decade. Member of ICC Test Team of the Year (2011-13, 2015 & 16).

Also Read: 11 Cricketers Who Retired Too Early

Watch: Cook 235* vs Australia, 294 vs India, 190 vs India, 2012

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
1918161489403291
Embed from Getty Images

6. Sir Jack Hobbs (1908–1930, Surrey) — 91 Points

Role: Right-hand opening batter

The “Master,” Sir Jack Hobbs was a complete cricketer, blending unmatched technique, patience, and grace to dominate both Tests and first-class cricket.

  • Matches: 61 (Tests)
  • Runs: 5410
  • Hundreds: 15, Average: 56.94
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Wisden Cricketer of the Year twice (1909, 1926), Oldest batter to score a hundred (46 years, 82 days). Over 61,000 first-class runs (record), most centuries across all formats at retirement

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
2017151579350091
Embed from Getty Images

5. Sir James ‘Jimmy’ Anderson (2003–Present, Lancashire) — 92 Points

Role: Right Arm Swing Pacer

The master of swing, Sir James Anderson redefined fast bowling longevity, precision, and skill well into his 40s. 704 Test wickets by a pacer, will never be overtaken I reckon.

  • Matches: 194 (ODIs), 188 (Tests), 19 (T20Is)
  • Wickets: 269 (ODIs), 704 (Tests), 18 (T20Is)
  • 5-fers: 2 (ODIs), 32 (Tests)
  • Player of Match Awards: 13
  • Player of Series Awards: 5
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Highest wicket-taker among pace bowlers in history, 100+ Ashes wickets, backbone of England’s Test success for two decades, Wisden Cricketer (2009), Selected in Test Team of the Decade, Member of ICC Team of the Year (2010, 2011, 2013, 2017, 2022)

Watch: The King of Swing

Also Read: Jimmy Anderson Made Me Fall in Love with Swing Bowling

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
2017161589203292
Embed from Getty Images

4. Wally Hammond (1927–1947, Gloucestershire) — 94 Points

Role: Top Order Batter, Right Arm Medium Pace

An elegant powerhouse, Wally Hammond combined stylish strokeplay with brute force and athleticism to dominate interwar cricket.

According to Wisden Cricketer’s Almanack, “the judgment of cricket history is that the greatest batsmen of the game has known are – in order of appearance, only – WG Grace, Jack Hobbs, Walter Hammond, and Don Bradman. Others may come close indeed to those four but do not quite take place with them.”

  • Matches: 85 (Tests)
  • Runs: 7249
  • Hundreds: 22, Average: 58.45
  • Wickets: 83
  • 5-fers: 2
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: 1928 Wisden Cricketer, Former highest Test run-scorer, prolific century maker, England captain, famed for batting records and slip fielding. Best of 336* in Tests, scored 50,551 FC runs along with 167 hundreds.

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
2017161578353094
Embed from Getty Images

3. Ben Stokes (2013–Present, Durham) — 97 Points

Role: All-Rounder (Left Hand Batter, Right Arm Medium Pace), Captain

A once-in-a-generation match-winner, Ben Stokes’ fierce spirit, iconic innings, and leadership have etched him into English cricket folklore. He can take superhuman catches, win World Cup finals and Ashes out of thin air, and can bowl 140 kph+ as well.

  • Matches: 114 (ODIs), 110 (Tests), 43 (T20Is)
  • Runs: 3463 (ODIs), 6719 (Tests), 585 (T20Is)
  • Hundreds: 5 (ODIs), 13 (Tests)
  • Wickets: 74 (ODIs), 210 (Tests), 26 (T20Is)
  • 5-fers: 1 (ODIs), 4 (Tests)
  • Player of Match Awards: 19
  • Player of Series Awards: 5
  • World Cup Winner? ✅✅
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: 2019 ICC Cricketer of the Year, 2022 ICC Test Cricketer of the Year, 2016 Wisden Cricketer, Selected in Test Team of the Decade. Member of ICC Test Team of the Year (2016, 17, 19, 22) & ODI Team of the Year (2017-19). Hero of the 2019 World Cup Final, 2022 T20 World Cup winner, Ashes miracle at Headingley 2019, current Test captain. Also, see Bazball.

Read: Ben Stokes: Phoenix from the Ashes Review, Quotes, Life Lessons

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
161920121010503297
Embed from Getty Images

2. Ian Botham (1977–1992, Somerset, Worcestershire, & Durham) — 98 Points

Role: All-Rounder (Right Harm Batter/Right Arm Medium Pace)

  • Matches: 116 (ODIs), 102 (Tests)
  • Runs: 2113 (ODIs), 5200 (Tests)
  • Hundreds: 14 (Tests)
  • Wickets: 145 (ODIs), 383 (Tests)
  • 5-fers: 27 (Tests)
  • Player of Match Awards: 19
  • Player of Series Awards: 4
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: 1981 “Botham’s Ashes,” legendary performances with both bat and ball, England’s greatest match-winner for a decade, 1978 Wisden Cricketer

Also Read: Top 55 All-Rounders in Cricket History List (The Complete Guide)

Watch: Botham’s 5/1 1981 Ashes, 149* vs Australia

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
18201713108433298
Embed from Getty Images

1. Joe Root (2012–Present, Yorkshire) — 99 Points

Role: Middle Order Batter, Part-Time Off-Spin

The calm in England’s chaos for over a decade, Joe Root piled on runs with grace and grit, becoming the heartbeat of the Test side and one of the most dependable batters the country has ever seen. He went from a consistent contributor to an all-time great post-2021.

  • Matches: 172 (Tests), 152 (Tests), 32 (T20Is)
  • Runs: 12972 (Tests), 6541 (ODIs), 893 (T20Is)
  • Hundreds: 36/16 (Tests/ODIs), Average: 50.87/47.96 (Test/ODIs)
  • Wickets: 27 (ODIs), 71 (Tests), 6 (T20Is)
  • 5-fers: 1 (Tests)
  • Player of Match Awards: 25
  • Player of Series Awards: 10
  • World Cup Winner?
  • Captained England?
  • 100 Tests?

Notable Achievements: Fifth-highest run-scorer in Test history, Player of the Series in 2019 Ashes, key contributor to England’s white-ball and Test success, Wisden Cricketer of the Year 2014, ICC Test Cricketer of the Year 2021. Member of ICC Test team of the Year (2014-16, 2021, 2023-24) & ODI Team of the Year (2018).

Watch: Joe Root 2016 T20 World Cup vs SA, 180* vs India at Lord’s, Joe Root in ODIs

Also Read: Is Sachin Tendulkar’s 15921 Test Runs Record in Danger?

Career Stats (20)Match-Winning (20)Big Stage Impact (20)Longevity (15)Versatility (10)Accolades (10)Leadership (5)Era Bonus (5)Fielding Bonus (3)100-Test Bonus (2)Total
20201715810403299

Final Thoughts

Ranking the greatest English cricketers across eras is both a celebration and a challenge. How do you weigh Sydney Barnes’ domination against Jimmy Anderson’s longevity? Or Jack Hobbs’ legacy against Joe Root’s modern mastery? Should WG Grace have been ranked much higher?

Every player on this list left an undeniable mark on England’s cricketing story — and shaped how the game is remembered today.

Together, they told the story of English cricket in all its triumphs and trials.

Who are your top English cricketers of all time? Which moments or players would make your personal list? Share your thoughts and memories in the comments — we’d love to hear your takes on the legends who shaped the game.

****

Most Prolific England Cricketers: Statistical Overview

Which England Cricketer Has taken the Most Wickets?

We first look at the top 10 wicket-takers across formats. Also listed below are the top few wicket-takers in each format for England.

  • Test: Jimmy Anderson (704), Stuart Broad (604), Ian Botham (383), Bob Willis (325), Fred Trueman (307), Derek Underwood (297), Graeme Swann (255), Brian Statham (252)
  • ODI: Jimmy Anderson (269), Darren Gough (234), Adil Rashid (207)
  • T20I: Adil Rashid (131), Chris Jordan (108), Stuart Broad (65), Mark Wood (54), Sam Curran (54), Graeme Swann (51), David Willey (51), Moeen Ali (51)

Top 10 Most Wickets by England Bowlers Across Formats

PlayerWickets
Jimmy Anderson991
Stuart Broad847
Ian Botham528
Darren Gough466
Graeme Swann410
Bob Willis405
Adil Rashid398
Andrew Flintoff392
Chris Woakes385
Moeen Ali366

Which England Cricketer Has Scored the Most Runs?

We first look at the top 10 run scorer across formats.

  • Test: Joe Root (12972), Alastair Cook (12472), Graham Gooch (8900), Alec Stewart (8463), David Gower (8231), Kevin Pietersen (8181), Geoffrey Boycott (8114), Michael Atherton (7728), Ian Bell (7727), Colin Cowdrey (7624), Wally Hammond (7249), Andrew Strauss (7037), Len Hutton (6971), Ken Barrington (6806), Graham Thorpe (6744), Ben Stokes (6719), Jonny Bairstow (6042)
  • ODI: Eoin Morgan (6957), Joe Root (6541), Ian Bell (5416), Paul Collingwood (5092), Jos Buttler (5074)
  • T20I: Jos Buttler (3535), Eoin Morgan (2458), Alex Hales (2074), Dawid Malan (1892), Jonny Bairstow (1671), Jason Roy (1522)

Top 10 Most Runs by England Batters Across Formats

PlayerRuns
Joe Root 20406
Alastair Cook15737
Kevin Pietersen13779
Ian Bell13331
Graham Gooch13190
Alec Stewart13140
Jonny Bairstow11581
Jos Buttler11516
David Gower11401
Andrew Strauss11315
Ben Stokes10767
Marcus Trescothick10326
Eoin Morgan10115

England Cricket Records

  • Most Dismissals/Catches: Jos Buttler (503), Alec Stewart (451), Jonny Bairstow (361), Matt Prior (344), Joe Root (310), Alan Knott (285)
  • 100 Test Club: Anderson (188), Broad (167), Cook (161), Root (152), Stewart (133), Bell (118), Gooch (118), Gower (117), Atherton (115), Cowdrey (114), Stokes (110), Boycott (108), Pietersen (104), Botham (102), Bairstow (100), Strauss (100), Thorpe (100)
  • Most Matches as Test Captain: Joe Root (64), Alastair Cook (59), Michael Atherton (54), Michael Vaughan (51), Andrew Strauss (50), Nasser Hussain (45), Peter May (41), Graham Gooch (34), David Gower (32), Ben Stokes (32), Mike Brearley (31), Ray Illingworth (31)
  • Most Matches as ODI Captain: Eoin Morgan (126), Alastair Cook (69), Andrew Strauss (62), Michael Vaughan (60), Nasser Hussain (56), Graham Gooch (50)
  • ICC Hall of Fame: Sydney Barnes, Ken Barrington, Ian Botham, Geoffrey Boycott, Denis Compton, Alastair Cook, Colin Cowdrey, Ted Dexter, Graham Gooch, David Gower, WG Grace, Tom Graveney, Wally Hammond, Jack Hobbs, Len Hutton, Alan Knott, Jim Laker, Harold Larwood, George Lohmann, Peter May, Wilfred Rhodes, Brian Statham, Herbert Sutcliffe, Fred Trueman, Derek Underwood, Bob Willis

Sources:

If you like reading Articles on England Cricket, Check These Out:

And please, share, subscribe to our social media channels (X, Facebook) and other platforms (Substack, Medium)

© Copyright @Nitesh Mathur and Broken Cricket Dreams, LLC 2023. Originally published on 04/29/2025. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Broken Cricket Dreams with appropriate and specific direction to the original content (i.e. linked to the exact post/article).

155 Greatest Cricketers of All Time (Men’s): Who are the Best Players in Cricket History? (Updated 2023)

It’s time to discuss the greatest cricketers of all time. This ultimate list will feature 155 top cricketers across formats and eras—from WG Grace to Kieron Pollard.

Kieron Pollard and Dwayne Bravo just retired as players from the IPL and left their imprints on T20 cricket. As T20s evolve and become central to the cricketing universe, why not make a list of the greatest cricketers of all time across formats and eras?

Contents

Key Takeaways

  • Over 250 cricketers were considered for this list. We consider Tests, ODIs, T20Is, T20 leagues, and first-class cricket played over 145 years.
  • Sir Donald Bradman is chosen as the Greatest Cricketer of All-Time with WG Grace, Sachin Tendulkar, Jack Hobbs, Shane Warne, Frank Worrell, and Sir Garfield Sobers close behind.
  • England (40), Australia (31), West Indies (24) dominated the list due to their rich first class and World Cup histories. The breakdown of the rest of the countries are as follows: India (14), Pakistan (13), South Africa (12), Sri Lanka (10), New Zealand (7), Zimbabwe (1), Afghanistan(1), and Bangladesh (1).

Also Read:

156-177 Best Cricketers: Unlucky to Miss Out

Those who were unlucky to miss out were:

Charles Bannerman, Johnny Tyldesley, Subhash Gupte, Mitchell Johnson, Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi, David Warner, Jeff Thompson, Shahid Afridi, Mark Waugh, Makhaya Ntini, Mike Brearley, Harbhajan Singh, Glenn Turner, Ben Stokes, Cheteshwar Pujara, Lance Klusener, Yuvraj Singh, Ian Healy, Vijay Hazare, Trent Boult, Ian Chappell, Saeed Ajmal

155 Greatest Cricketers of All Time: The Ultimate List

Picking the Top 155 players was a tough task, but do you know what was even tougher? Ranking them.

Without furthur ado, here is the list. Enjoy the classic photography and check out the videos linked under some players.

Disclaimer: The ranking is most likely going to not align with your views. Expect the unexpected. Several ‘great’ cricketers did not make the list (see the extended list of honorable mentions below) but the ones that did fundamentally helped change the game. Feel free to comment below on players who you think should be in the list.

155. Learie ‘Lord’ Baron Constantine (West Indies, 1921-1939)

Major Teams: West Indies, Barbados, Freelooters, Trinidad

An allrounder by trade, Constantine was one of West Indies’ early stars. More than his on-field accomplishments, he made an impact as a lawyer, politician, and Trinidad & Tobago’s High Commissioner to the UK.

Embed from Getty Images

154. Alan Davidson (Australia, 1949-1963)

Major Teams: Australia, New South Wales

An Australian left-arm pacer who “would be the most menacing new-ball bowler of his day” and was a handy batter in the lower order—The original Mitchell Johnson and Mitch Starc.

Embed from Getty Images

153. Mitchell Starc (Australia, 2009-)

Major Teams: Australia, Australia U-19, New South Wales, Sydney Sixers, Yorkshire, Royal Challengers Bangalore

Speaking of Australian left arm pacers, Mitchell Starc. His World Cup exploits are alone to guarantee him a spot in the all-time list. Player of the Tournament when he helped Australia lift the trophy in 2015, he bettered himself in 2019 with the record tally of 27 wickets. Starc’s yorkers, early swing, and ability to clean up tails will be remembered forever.

Embed from Getty Images

152. Stan McCabe (Australia, 1928-1942)

Major Teams: Australia, New South Wales

Playing alongside Don Bradman, he was often overshadowed but was said to be a beautiful batter to watch. Even Sir Len Hutton remarked, “It would be hard to think of a greater Australian batsman. He had qualities that even Bradman hadn’t got.”He is best known for scoring 385 runs in that infamous Bodyline series.

Embed from Getty Images

151. Sir Conrad Hunte (West Indies, 1950-1967)

Wisden remarks the Hunte “was one of the greatest West Indian batsmen of a great generation.” Even the great Desmond Haynes picked Hunte over himself in the All-Time Barbados XI “because he was simply the better batsman.”

Embed from Getty Images

150. Godfrey Evans (England, 1939-1967)

Major Teams: England, Kent

ESPNCricinfo states that Evans was “arguably the best wicketkeeper the world has ever seen.” Played 91 Tests and even scored a couple of tons. Inflicted 1066 dismissals in his first-class career.

Embed from Getty Images

149. Marvan Atapattu (Sri Lanka, 1988-2007)

Major Teams: Sri Lanka, Delhi Giant, Sinhalese Sports Club

From 0,0.0,1,0,0 to establishing himself as the backbone of Sri Lanka’s Test batting seven years later and ending with six double centuries is a beautiful story. Decent ODI player with 8500 runs as well.

Embed from Getty Images

148. Hugh Tayfield (South Africa, 1945-1963)

Major Teams: South Africa, Rhodesia, Natal, Transvaal

Wisden remarks that Tayfield was “one of the greatest off spinners the game has ever seen.” Once took 9/113 in an innings.

Embed from Getty Images

147. Sunil Narine (West Indies, 2009-)

Major Teams: West Indies, West Indies U-19s, Barisal Burners, Cape Cobras, Comilla Victorians, Dhaka Dynamites, Guyana Amazon Warriors, Kolkata Knight Riders, Lahore Qalandars, Melbourne Renegades, Montreal Tigers, Oval Invincibles, Quetta Gladiators, Sydney Sixers, Trinbago Knight Riders, Trinidad & Tobago

Redefined three aspects of the T20 game—economical spin bowling, the mystery spin, and pinch hitting.

Embed from Getty Images

146. Mulvantrai ‘Vinoo’ Mankad (India, 1935-1962)

Major Teams: India, Bengal, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Mumbai, Rajasthan, Nawanagar

Although his name is infamously slandered for non-strikers run out, he was actually “one of the greatest allrounders India ever produced.”

Embed from Getty Images

145. Richie Benaud (Australia, 1948-1964)

Major Teams: Australia, New South Wales

Before he was the voice of cricket, he was remembered as one of Australia’s greatest captains. His aggressive captaincy led to the first tied Test in cricket’s history. As a leg spinning allrounder, he was the first man to complete the double of 200 Test wickets and 2000 runs.

Embed from Getty Images

144. Rohit Sharma (India, 2006-)

Major Teams: India, India U-19, Deccan Chargers, Mumbai Indians, Mumbai

264, 209, 208*, 171*, 162, 159, 152*, 150.

An ODI legend with a penchant for the mammoth hundreds. Easy on the eye, one of the best IPL captains, a T20 World Cup winner, and one of the best pullers the game has ever seen.

Embed from Getty Images

143. Bob Simpson (Australia, 1952-1978)

Major Teams: Australia, New South Wales, Western Australia

Played the third longest Test innings (743 balls) when he scored 311 against England in 1964. A leg-spinner allrounder who became an opening Test batter is a noteworthy achievement.

Embed from Getty Images

142. Peter May (England, 1950-1963)

Major Teams: England, Cambridge University, Surrey

Although he had a decent Test career, his first-class stats are outrageous—27592 runs with 85 hundreds.

Embed from Getty Images

141. Saeed Anwar (Pakistan, 1986-2003)

Major Teams: Pakistan, Karachi, Lahore, United Bank Limited, Agriculture Development Bank of Pakistan

A graceful left-hander, his 194 withstood the test of time until Sachin Tendulkar’s 200 broke his record. Anwar was the highest scoring opener in the 1990s in ODI cricket.

Embed from Getty Images

140. Sir Clyde Walcott (West Indies, 1941-1964)

Major Teams: West Indies, Barbados, British Guiana

One of the famous ‘3 Ws’ in West Indies’ middle order, he was a steady cog of West Indies’ middle order. 15 Test hundreds, 40 first class centuries, and Test average of 56.68. Fun fact, Walcott holds the record for the fewest ducks in career.

Also See: Sir Frank Worrell (#6), Sir Clyde Walcott (#134)

Embed from Getty Images

139. Ted Dexter (England, 1956-1968)

Major Teams: England, Sussex, Cambridge University

Dexter scored 21150 first class runs with 51 centuries and had a 62-match Test career. He was known was his counter-attacking style of play.

Embed from Getty Images

138. Sir Everton Weekes (West Indies, 1944-1964)

Major Teams: West Indies, Barbados

Weekes was one of the best in his time. Centuries in five consecutive innings, joint fastest to a 1000 Test runs, and ended with a Test average of 58.61.

Embed from Getty Images

137. Shoaib Akhtar (Pakistan, 1994-2011)

Major Teams: Pakistan, Agriculture Development Bank of Pakistan, Chittagong Division, Durham, Islamabad Leopards, Khan Research Labs, Kolkata Knight Riders, Pakistan International Airlines, Rawalpindi, Somerset, Surrey, Worcestershire

An icon for Pakistan cricket and inspiration for fast bowlers around the world. Bowled the fastest recorded delivery at 161.3 kph, it’s a shame that injuries meant he had a start-stop career.

Also See: Brett Lee (#111), his chief competitor in the Pace Race.

Embed from Getty Images

136. Basil D’Oliveira (England, 1964-1980)

Major Teams: England, Worcestershire

There’s a good reason why the England-South Africa trophy is named Basil D’Oliveira Trophy. As a South African-born mixed player, he was picked for England during the Apartheid era (known as the Oliveira affair). With 19,490 first class runs & important social legacy, he was named as South Africa’s Top 10 players of the century despite never representing the Proteas.

Embed from Getty Images

135. Andy Flower (Zimbabwe, 1986-2006)

Major Teams: Zimbabwe, Essex, South Australia

The greatest Zimbabwean batter and scored the highest runs in an innings by any keeper (232*). Over 11,000 international runs across formats, Flower lead the way during Zimbabwe’s golden years.

Embed from Getty Images

134. Wes Hall (West Indies, 1955-1971)

Major Teams: West Indies, Barbados, Queensland, Trinidad

The earliest in West Indies’ great line of pacers. Could bowl “close to 100 mph” and ended with 192 Test & 546 first class wickets.

Embed from Getty Images

133. Rod Marsh (Australia, 1968-1984)

Major Teams: Australia, Western Australia

The most prolific bowler-keeper combination in the history of Test cricket is “c Rod Marsh, b Dennis Lillee” (95). World record holder for most Test dismissals at the time of his retirement, he was the best keeper Australia produced…until Ian Healy & Adam Gilchrist surpassed him.

Embed from Getty Images

132. VVS Laxman (India, 1992-2012)

Major Teams: India, Deccan Chargers, Hyderabad, Kochi Tuskers Kerala, Lancashire

If you played the greatest innings of the twenty-first century, THAT 281*, you deserve to be on this list. Had a stellar Test career of performing under pressure with the lower order (and frequent back spasms).

Embed from Getty Images

131. Stephen Fleming (New Zealand, 1991-2008)

Major Teams: New Zealand, Canterbury, Chennai Super Kings, Middlesex, Nottinghamshire, Wellington, Yorkshire

Solid opening batter & more importantly, a captain that stabilized New Zealand cricket.

Embed from Getty Images

130. Andy Roberts (West Indies, 1969-1984)

Major Teams: West Indies, Combined Islands, Leeward Islands, Hampshire, Leicestershire, New South Wales

The face of West Indies’ pace quartet, his bouncers were ruthless. Apart from his 202 Test wickets, also had an effective ODI career—87 wickets at 20.35.

Embed from Getty Images

129. Martin Crowe (New Zealand, 1979-1996)

Major Teams: New Zealand, Auckland, Central Districts, Wellington, Somerset

The greatest New Zealand batter of his generation and definitely one of the best captains. Hamstring Injury in the 1992 World Cup semi-final was a huge factor in their defeat. Apart from his cricketing talent, was one of the leading thinkers of the game.

Embed from Getty Images

128. Clarrie Grimmett (Australia, 1911-1941)

Major Teams: Australia, South Australia, Victoria, Wellington

Credited for inventing the flipper, he was the second fastest to 200 Test wickets (and fastest before Yasir Shah) and the second oldest to take ten wickets in a Test match (44 years). New Zealand born Australian player.

Embed from Getty Images

127. Tom Graveney (England, 1948-1972)

Major Teams: England, Queensland, Worcestershire, Gloucestershire

Another first-class giant—732 FC matches, 47.793 runs, 122 hundreds, and 233 fifties. Had a decent 79-Test career as well

Embed from Getty Images

126. Arjuna Ranatunga (Sri Lanka, 1981-2001)

Major Teams: Sri Lanka, Sinhalese Sports Club

World Cup winning captain and helped propel Sri Lanka to the global stage. With over 7000 ODI runs, was a useful left-handed middle order batter.

Embed from Getty Images

125. Greg Chappell (Australia, 1966-1984)

Major Teams: Australia, New South Wales

Regarded as one of the best batters to ever don the baggy green. 7110 runs with 24 Test tons at 53.86 looks especially great given that batted in the era of the ferocious West Indian attack.

Embed from Getty Images

124. David Gower (England, 1975-1993)

Major Teams: England, Hampshire, Leicestershire

One of the most elegant left-handed batters to play the game. 8,231 Test runs, 18 Test centuries, and 117 matches. Solid.

Embed from Getty Images

123. Michael Holding (West Indies, 1972-1989)

Major Teams: West Indies, Canterbury, Derbyshire, Jamaica, Lancashire, Tasmania

Although 249 Test wickets at an average of 23.68 & 50.9 strike rate already puts him in the top echelons of world cricket, it was his impact with sheer pace and that menacing action that took him to the next level. An iconic commentator as well.

Embed from Getty Images

122. Kieron Pollard (West Indies, 2007-)

Major Teams: West Indies, West Indies U-19, Adelaide Strikers, Barbados Tridents, Cape Cobras, Deccan Gladiators, Dhaka Dynamites, Karachi Kings, Kerala Kings, London Spirit, Melbourne Renegades, Multan Sultans, Mumbai Indians, Peshawar Zalmi, Somerset, South Australia, St. Lucia Stars, Stanford Superstars, Toronoto Nationals, Trinbago Knight Riders, Trinidad, Welsh Fire

With almost 12,000 T20 Runs at 150.25 SR, batting predominantly at the lower order, Kieron Pollard was arguably the first bona fide T20 globetrotter. A pioneer in T20 power-hitting and mainstay for the Mumbai Indians in their 5-peat, he was a crucial member of West Indies’ 2012 T20 World Cup victory.

Embed from Getty Images

121. Michael Clarke (Australia, 2000-2015)

Major Teams: Australia, New South Wales, Hampshire, Pune Warriors

Had one of the greatest peaks of a Test batter. 1595 runs at 106.33 with 5 hundreds, including a 329* and a couple of double hundreds. Captain of Australia’s 2015 World Cup victory.

Embed from Getty Images

120. Mark Boucher (South Africa, 1995-2012)

Major Teams: South Africa, Border, Cape Cobras, Kolkata Knight Riders, Royal Challengers Bangalore

The wicketkeeper during South Africa’s golden generation and the most prolific keeper of all-time. Unfortunately, a bail hitting his eye ended his career. Played 147 Tests and inflicted an iconic 999 international dismissals (555 Tests, 425 ODIs, 19 T20Is).

I will remember him for hitting the winning runs in that famous 434-438 match.

Embed from Getty Images

119. Aravinda de Silva (Sri Lanka, 1983-2002)

Major Teams: Sri Lanka, Nondescripts Cricket Club, Kent, Auckland

107*(124), 3/42, & 2 catches—One of the best performances in a World Cup final. With over 15,000 international runs, Aravinda played his part in bringing Sri Lanka to the top tiers of world cricket.

Embed from Getty Images

118. Joel Garner (West Indies, 1975-1992)

At 6 ft 8 inches, Garner towered above all and provided West Indies with that extra edge. With 259 Test wickets at 20.97 and 146 ODI wickets, he was one of the best. Holds the record for the best ODI economy (3.09) and won the 1979 WC final with a 5/38 show.

Embed from Getty Images

117. Abdul Qadir (Pakistan, 1975-1994)

Major Teams: Pakistan, Punjab, Lahore, Habib Bank Limited

One of the best leg spinners of all time. What a classic action.

Embed from Getty Images

116. Allan Donald (South Africa, 1985-2004)

Major Teams: South Africa, Free State, Warwickshire, Worcesterershire

Before there was Steyn, Morne Morkel, Makhaya Ntini, and Kagiso Rabada, there was Allan Donald. Bowled with menace and one of South Africa’s premier icons after they were reinstated in international cricket. Will also be remembered to be at the receiving end in the most infamous run-out of them all.”

Also Read: 16 South Africa World Cup Chokes and Heartbreaks: The Complete List

Embed from Getty Images

Major Teams: West Indies, Barbados, Somerset, South Australia

115. Brett Lee (Australia, 1999-2012)

Major Teams: Australia, Kings XI Punjab, Kolkata Knight Riders, New South Wales, Otago, Sydney Sixers, Wellington

Probably the smoothest fast bowling action of all time. Over 700 international wickets, never compromised on pace despite injuries, THAT chainsaw celebration, and ended cricket career with a magnificent final over in the Big Bash.

Also See: Shoaib Akthar.

Embed from Getty Images

114. Hashim Amla (South Africa, 2004-)

Major Teams: South Africa, Barbados Tridents, Cape Cobras, Derbyshire, Dolphins, Essex, Khulna Tigers, Kings XI Punjab KwaZulu-Natal, Surrey, Trinbago Knight Riders

Elegant, high-class opener, and a massively underrated ODI batter. 55 International centuries, fastest to 7000 ODI runs, a triple centurion, partnership maker. From blockathons to two hundreds in T20 cricket, versatility was Amla’s strength.

Embed from Getty Images

113. Kevin Pietersen (England, 1997-2018)

Major Teams: England, Deccan Chargers, Delhi Daredevils, Dolphins, Hampshire, KwaZulu-Natal, Melbourne Stars, Nottinghamshire, Quetta Gladiators, Rising Pune Supergiants, Royal Challengers Bangalore, St. Lucia Zouks, Sunrisers Hyderabad, Surrey

The ODI series against home country, South Africa, would sum up his career. Had his doubters early on with the rebel style, but his gameplay was too good to ignore. The 2005 Ashes, 2010 T20 World Cup, and 2012 Test series victory in India. England legend, just left with self-inflicted unfortunate circumstances.

Also Read: 42 South African Born Cricketers Who Play for Other Countries: Can You Guess Them All?

Embed from Getty Images

112. Saqlain Mushtaq (Pakistan, 1995-2008)

Major Teams: Pakistan, Islamabad Cricket Association, Lahore Badshahs, Pakistan International Airlines, Surrey, Sussex

Fastest bowler to take 250 ODI wickets, most wickets ever in a calendar year (twice), and most famously known for bringing the ‘Doosra’ to prominence.

Embed from Getty Images

111. Michael Bevan (Australia, 1989-2006)

Major Teams: Australia, Tasmania, New South Wales, Yorkshire, Kent, Leicestershire, Sussex

Before MS Dhoni, Michael Bevan pioneered the ‘finisher’ role in ODI cricket. Averaging 53.98 after 232 matches, remaining unbeaten and hitting last-ball boundaries to win matches was his specialty.

Embed from Getty Images

110. Hedley Verity (England, 1930-1939)

Major Teams: England, Yorkshire

1956 first class wickets at 14.90 average with best figures for 10/10 in an innings. Died as a prisoner of war in World War II.

Embed from Getty Images

109. Rangana Herath (Sri Lanka, 1999-2019)

Major Teams: Sri Lanka, Kandurata Maroons, Moors Sports Club, Tamil Union Cricket and Athletic Club, Wayamba, Surrey, Hampshire

A specialist of sorts. If ever a bowler was needed on spinning tracks in the fourth innings, it was Herath. 433 Test wickets and Sri Lanka’s only hope in the transition years.

Embed from Getty Images

108. Kane Williamson (New Zealand, 2007-)

Major Teams: New Zealand, New Zealand U-19, Northern Districts, Yorkshire, Gloucestershire, Edmonton Royals, Sunrisers Hyderabad

The best batter New Zealand ever produced and a shrewd captain. Lead the Kiwis to their first global title along with the 2019 ODI World Cup final.

Also Read: World Test Championship Final Review 2021

Embed from Getty Images

107. Rashid Khan (Afghanistan, 2015-)

Major Teams: Afghanistan, Afghanistan U-19, Kabul, Adelaide Strikers, Gujarat Titans, Sunrisers Hyderabad, Barbados Tridents, Comilla Victorians, Durban Heat, Kabul Eagles, Lahore Qalandars, Maratha Arabians, MI Cape Town, MI Emirates, Nangahar Leopards, Quetta Gladiators, St. Kitts and Nevis Patriots, Sussex, Trent Rockets

Not many have seen a rise as exponential as Rashid Khan has in cricket. 501 T20 wickets in 374 T20 matches. Already a legend and sought out for, he has played in almost every league around the world. Afghanistan cricket rises when Rashid Khan rises.

Embed from Getty Images

106. Virender Sehwag (India, 1997-2015)

Major Teams: India, Delhi Leicestershire, Delhi Daredevils, Kings XI Punjab

You would think aggressive batting meant Sehwag would be dangerous in limited overs cricket. He was, but he truly changed the role of the opening batter in Test cricket. First ball boundaries and hitting double centuries in a single day was his forte. 319, 309, and 293 will be remembered forever.

Embed from Getty Images

105. Lance Gibbs (West Indies, 1953-1976)

Major Teams: West Indies, British Guiana, South Australia, Warwickshire

First spinner to pass 300 wickets and accumulated 1024 first class wickets, he will go down as West Indies’ greatest Test spinner. Has a Test hat-trick and once bowled a miserly spell of 53.3-37-38-8. Wow.

Embed from Getty Images

104. Brendon McCullum (New Zealand, 1999-2019)

Major Teams: New Zealand, Brisbane Heat, Canterbury, Chennai Super Kings, Glamorgan, Gujarat Lions, Kochi Tuskers Kerela, Kolkata Knight Riders, Lahore Qalandars, New South Wales, Otago, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Sussex, Toronto Nationals, Trinbago Knight Riders, Warwickshire

Match after match, captain McCullum would announce that this journey was ‘the time of their lives’ in the 2015 World Cup hosted at home. Took New Zealand to the World Cup finals for the first time, brought NZ out of lows of 2012, and for all his T20 exploits, had the skill to score 302 vs India I’m a Test match. Retired with the fastest Test century of all-time. Also credited for launching the IPL with a remarkable 158.

Embed from Getty Images

103. Arthur Morris (Australia, 1940-1955)

Major Teams: Australia, New South Wales

One of the best Ashes batters, a member of the ‘Invincibles,’ Australian army man during World War II, and a rugby player, Morris can truly say he did it all.

Embed from Getty Images

102. Lasith Malinga (Sri Lanka, 2001-2020)

Major Teams: Sri Lanka, Galle Cricket Club, Kandy, Kent, Galle Gladiators, Jamaica Tallawahs, St. Lucia Zouks, Guyana Amazon Warriors, Melbourne Stars, Rangpur Riders, Southern Express, Kent, Mumbai Indians

Malinga built a career out of pinpoint accurate yorkers and a slingy action. 4 wickets in 4 balls, couple of other hat-tricks, a T20 World Cup, and several IPL trophies with Mumbai Indians. Simply a legend.

Also Read: Lasith Malinga: The Slinga, Slayer, and SuperStar

Embed from Getty Images

101. Shane Watson (Australia, 2000-2016)

Major Teams: Australia, Australia U-19, New South Wales, Queensland, Tasmania, Brisbane Heat, Sydney Sixers, Sydney Thunder, Canterbury, Chennai Super Kings, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Rajasthan Royals, Dhaka Dynamites, Rangpur Rangers, Islamabad United, Quetta Gladiators, St. Lucia Zouks

History will regard Shane Watson in awe. Gifted with a rare combination of skills, he established himself as a fast-bowling order who could bat in the top order. Player of the tournament in the 2012 T20 World Cup, 2008 & 2013 IPLs, the 2009 Champions Trophy, and key play-off knocks with CSK in the 2019 IPL, he stood up on the big occasions. A successful Test opener between 2009-10 alongside Simon Katich speaks to his versatility.

Embed from Getty Images

List of the 100 Greatest Cricketers of All Time

The Top 100 cricketers of all time will at least consist of all the 10,000 runs scorers (either format), or members of the 500+ (Test), 400+ (ODI) wicket taker group.

100. Tillakaratne Dilshan (Sri Lanka, 1993-2017)

Major Teams: Sri Lanka, Basnahira South, Bloomfield Cricket and Athletic Club, Delhi Daredevils, Guyana Amazon Warriors, Kalutara Town Club, Karachi Kings, Northern Districts, Peshawar Zalmi, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Sebastianites Cricket and Athletic Club, Singha Sports Club, Surrey, Tamil Union Cricket and Athletic Club

Dilshan is one of the most innovative cricketers of the modern era. Known for ‘The Dilscoop,’ he was one of the pillars of the Sri Lankan in their 2014 T20 World Cup victory, along with numerous other finals between 2007-2014. Also a handy off-spinner & acrobatic fielder.

Also Read: My Favorite Player from Each Country: Unity In Diversity XI – #5 Will Shock You

Embed from Getty Images

99. Sourav Ganguly (1989-2012)

Major Teams: India, Bengal, Glamorgan, Lancashire, Northamptonshire, Kolkata Knight Riders, Pune Warriors

Changed how India was viewed. Captained India to the 2003 World Cup final and several overseas Test victories. I will forever remember him for his ODI exploits and down the ground sixes.

Embed from Getty Images

98. Monty Noble (Australia, 1893-1920)

Major Teams: Australia, South Australia, Queensland, Somerset

Noble is “regarded as the greatest Australian all-rounder ever produced by Australia.” In all, he took 624 first class wickets and hit 37 centuries as well.

Embed from Getty Images

97. Younis Khan (Pakistan, 1998-2018)

Major Teams: Pakistan, Surrey, Nottinghamshire, Warwickshire, Yorkshire, South Australia, Rajasthan Royals

One of the only constants in Pakistan’s era of uncertainty. 10,000 runs Test runs, crisis man in the 4th innings, solid ODI batter & slip fielder, and a T20 World Cup winning captain.

Embed from Getty Images

96. Neil Harvey (Australia, 1946-1963)

Major Teams: Australia, South Australia, Victoria

One of the best Australia ever had. In just 79-Tests, he scored 21 tons and 24 half centuries. The fourth fastest to a 1000 Test runs.

Embed from Getty Images

95. Bishan Singh Bedi (India, 1961-1982)

Major Teams: India, Delhi, Northern Punjab, Northamptonshire

Part of India’s spin quartet, Bedi had it all—the flight, guile, turn, and grace. With plenty of county experience, he ended with a mammoth 1560 first class wickets.

Embed from Getty Images

94. Nathan Lyon (Australia, 2011-)

Major Teams: Australia, South Australia, New South Wales, Adelaide Strikers, Sydney Strikers

A mainstay in Australia’s bowling line up. Bowling on Australian pitches for the majority of his career, Lyon became the tireless figure. Consistent line and length. Ball after ball. For an entire decade. 450+ Test wickets and counting.

Embed from Getty Images

93. Inzamam Ul Haq (Pakistan, 1986-2007)

Major Teams: Pakistan, Faisalabad, Multan, Rawalpindi, Yorkshire

Forever taunted for the run-outs, hit-wickets, and fitness issues, Inzamam ul-Haq was the catalyst to Pakistan’s 1992 world cup win. Scored almost 12,000 ODI and 9,000 Test runs. Beautiful to watch.

Embed from Getty Images

92. Ross Taylor (New Zealand, 2002-2022)

Major Teams: New Zealand, New Zealand U-10, Central Districts, Durham, Sussex, Middlesex, Victoria, Guyana Amazon Warriors, Jamaica Tallawahs, St. Lucia Zouks, Trinidad & Tobago Red Steel, Victoria, Delhi Daredevils, Pune Warriors, Rajasthan Royals

The best #4 ODI batter of all-time and between 2016-19, was the best ODI batter. Started as a leg side slogger and became a steady middle order batter. Nice to sign off with an unbeaten knock in New Zealand’s WTC win.

Also Read: Ross Taylor, An Underrated Cricketer Who Was A Giant Among New Zealand’s Greatest Generation

Embed from Getty Images

91. Dwayne Bravo (West Indies, 2001-)

Major Teams: West Indies, Mumbai Indians, Chennai Super Kings, Gujarat Lions, Chittagong Kings, Comilla Victorians, Dhaka Dynamites, Dolphins, Essex, Fortune Barishal, Kent, Lahore Qalandars, Maratha Arabians, Melbourne Renegades, Northern Superchargers, Paarl Rocks, Peshawar Zalmi, Quetta Gladiators, St. Kitts and Nevis Patriots, Surrey, Sydney Sixers, Trinbago Knight Riders, Trinidad & Tobago, Victoria, Winnipeg Hawks

614 T20 wickets, highest T20 wicket-taker of all time. Could hit sixes and bowl slow yorkers at will. A modern-day legend for the West Indies.

Embed from Getty Images

90. Stuart Broad (England, 2005-)

Major Teams: England, Leicestershire, Nottinghamshire, Kings XI Punjab, Hobart Hurricanes

Statistically, the second highest fast bowling wicket-taker of all-time. Speaks of his fitness. Could get hit for six sixes or bowl spells to remember forever. At one point, also a handy batter down the order.

Embed from Getty Images

89. Daniel Vettori (New Zealand, 1996-2015)

Major Teams: New Zealand, Northern Districts, Nottinghamshire, Warwickshire, Queensland, Delhi Daredevils, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Jamaica Tallawahs

705 international wickets, 6 Test hundreds, youngest Test player for New Zealand. One of the underrated greats of the game.

Embed from Getty Images

88. Ravichandran Ashwin (India, 2010-)

Major Teams: India, Tamil Nadu, Chennai Super Kings, Rising Pune Supergiants, Delhi Capitals, Kings XI Punjab, Rajasthan Royals, Nottinghamshire, Worcestershire

5 Test Hundreds. One of the greatest off spinners of all-time. Removed the stigma of non-strikers run-out almost single-handedly. Pioneered the ‘retired out’ in T20 cricket. Improved his batting to be a #3 in T20s, a decent finisher, Test match blockathon-specialist, off-spinner, leg-spinner, mystery spin, carrom ball. Has a succesfful YouTube channel. Cricket improviser at his absolute best. Ahead of his times.

Embed from Getty Images

87. Jim Laker (England, 1946-1965)

10/53 & 19/90, Test figures that took Laker into greatness. With 1944 first class wickets, he had a stellar career throughout.

Major Teams: England, Essex, Surrey, Auckland

Embed from Getty Images

86. Alan Knott (England, 1964-1985)

Major Teams: England, Kent, Tasmania

5 Test hundreds as a wicketkeeper, he was highly rated behind the stumps.

Embed from Getty Images

85. Ray Lindwall (Australia, 1941-1962)

Major Teams: Australia, South Australia, Queensland

With a smooth action, Lindwall was Australia’s premier swing bowlers. Retired with 228 Test wickets and two centuries.

Embed from Getty Images

84. Michael ‘Colin’ Cowdrey (England, 1950-1976)

Major Teams: England, Gentlemen, Oxford University, Kent

Cowdrey was the first man to play 100 Tests. His exploits in first class cricket are well known—42719 runs, 107 hundreds.

Embed from Getty Images

83. Sir Geoffrey Boycott OBE (England, 1962-1986)

Major Teams: England, Yorkshire, Northern Transvaal

Although Boycott had his troubles off the field, on the field, he was one of the great ones. In his era, not many scored more than his 151 first class hundreds and 8114 Test runs.

Embed from Getty Images

82. Keith ‘Nugget’ Miller (Australia, 1937-1959)

Major Teams: Australia, New South Wales, Victoria, Nottinghamshire

Miller is regarded as Australia’s greatest ever all-rounder. Although 2958 runs & 170 Test wickets flatter to deceive now, it was the best figures for an allrounder at the time.

Embed from Getty Images

81. Aubrey Faulkner (South Africa, 1902-1924)

Regarded as “one of the greatest allrounders,” he opened both the batting and bowling at times. Based on ESPNCricinfo’s weighted allrounder analysis, Aubrey Faulkner just edges out Keith Miller.

Major Teams: South Africa, Transvaal, Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC)

Embed from Getty Images

80. Ken Barrington (England, 1953-1968)

Major Teams: England, Surrey

Perhaps England’s greatest middle order batter. Now has the ninth highest Test average (58.67) after 82 Tests.

Embed from Getty Images

79. Graham Gooch (England, 1973-2000)

Major Teams: England, Essex, Western Province

Graham Gooch has perhaps scored the most runs. EVER. 44,846 First Class runs with 128 hundreds & 217 fifties to go along with 22, 211 List A runs with 44 hundreds and 139 fifties. In international cricket, he amassed 8900 Test runs, 4200 ODI runs, and 28 tons overall.

Embed from Getty Images

78. Graeme Smith (South Africa, 1999-2014)

Major Teams: South Africa, Gauteng, Western Province, Somerset, Surrey, Cape Cobras, Rajasthan Royals

One of the greatest captains and grittiest opening batters of all-time. Batting with a broken hand against Mitchell Johnson in attempt to save a Test match will go down as one of the most courageous acts on the cricket field.

Also Read: Top 11 Cricketers Who Retired Too Early – The Lost Generation

Embed from Getty Images

77. Chaminda Vaas (Sri Lanka, 1990-2012)

Major Teams: Sri Lanka, Basnahira North, Colts Cricket Club, Deccan Chargers, Hampshire, Middlesex, Northamptonshire, Worcestershire

The only player to take 8 wickets in an ODI match and the spearhead of Sri Lanka’s fast bowling attack with 781 international wickets. Has a World Cup hat-trick, Test hundred, and ODI fifty as well.

Embed from Getty Images

76. Sir Gordon Greenidge (West Indies, 1970-1992)

Major Teams: West Indies, Barbados, Hampshire

In modern cricket, one of the most dominant opening batters. 7558 Test runs and 37354 runs with 92 centuries. Had a stellar ODI career as well in World Cups—highest scorer of the 1979 World Cup.

Also See: Desmond Haynes (#69)

Embed from Getty Images

75. Shakib Al Hasan (Bangladesh, 2005-)

Major Teams: Bangladesh, Khulna Division, Dhaka Gladiators, Fortune Barishal, Adelaide Strikers, Sunrisers Hyderabad, Kolkata Knight Riders, Guyana Amazon Warriors, Jamaica Tallawahs, Worcestershire, Karachi Kings, Peshawar Zalmi

One of the greatest all-rounders in the modern era. If the pitch has something to offer, his left-arm spin is tricky to tackle. A great show at #3 in the 2019 World Cup. In one phrase, a living legend of Bangladesh.

Also Read: Why Shakib And Co are the True Fab 5 of this Era

Embed from Getty Images

74. Sanath Jayasuriya (Sri Lanka, 1988-2012)

Major Teams: Sri Lanka, Colombo Cricket Club, Somerset, Mumbai Indians

Apart from Sachin Tendulkar, he has the most man of the match awards. Revolutionized ODI powerplay batting in 1996, and a great asset with the ball as well.

Embed from Getty Images

73. Matthew Hayden (Australia, 1991-2012)

Major Teams: Australia, Queensland, Hampshire, Northamptonshire, Chennai Super Kings, Brisbane Heat

An epic conversion rate (30-100s, 29-50s) and one of the most dominant openers of the generation. Dancing down the wicket with broad shoulders, he sent tremors in the opposition bowlers.

Embed from Getty Images

72. Alec Bedser (England, 1939-1960)

With 1924 first-class and 236 Test wickets under his name, Bedser is one of England’s most prolific swing bowlers.

Major Teams: England, Surrey

Embed from Getty Images

71. Sir Alastair Cook (England, 2003-)

Major Teams: England, Essex

First England player to score 10,000 Test runs, Cook was the key constructor of England’s Ashes 2010 and India 2012 victories. Survived as an opener in one of the toughest eras to play fast and swing bowling. Best England Test batter (until Joe Root that is).

Embed from Getty Images

70. Desmond Haynes (West Indies, 1976-1997)

Major Teams: West Indies, Barbados, Middlesex, Western Province

Making one half of the third-highest Test partnership (6482 with Greenidge) of all time (and highest at the time), Haynes was a modern-day giant. In ODI cricket, he scored 8,648 runs with 17 centuries, a record that stood until 1998.

Embed from Getty Images

69. Mohammad Yousuf (Pakistan, 1996-2011)

Major Teams: Pakistan, Lahore, Lancashire, Warwickshire

One of the most elegant batters of all-time. Scored 1788 runs in 2006 with 9 hundreds and 3 fifties, still a Test record.

Embed from Getty Images

68. Robert George Dylan ‘Bob’ Willis (England, 1969-1984)

Major Teams: England, Surrey, Warwickshire, Northern Transvaal

One of the fastest English bowlers. Despite injuries, he took 325 Test wickets and played 90 Tests. Longevity and England fast bowlers is a common theme.

Embed from Getty Images

67. Joe Root (England, 2010-)

Major Teams: England, Yorkshire, Trent Rockets

After being criticized for not converting fifties into hundreds, Joe Root’s stellar 2021 etched his name into greatness—1708 runs with six daddy hundreds. An ODI World Cup winner as well.

Embed from Getty Images

66. Mahela Jayawardene (Sri Lanka, 1997-2015)

Major Teams: Sri Lanka, Sinhalese Sports Club, Delhi Daredevils, Kings XI Punjab

Class batter. 11,000 runs+ in each format. Most runs on a single ground (2921 runs in Sinhalese, Colombo), seven double hundreds, and a knack for long-partnerships.

Also See: Kumar Sangakkara (#51)

Embed from Getty Images

65. Sir Clive Lloyd (West Indies, 1963-1986)

Major Teams: West Indies, British Guiana, Lancashire

One of the most recognized left-handers in the game with the glasses & moustache, his calm demeanor was the feature that stood out the most. Playing over 100 Test matches and 490 first class matches, it was his captaincy with two ODI World Cups that crystalized his name in the hall of legends. Made a century in the inaugural World Cup final as well.

Embed from Getty Images

64. Fred “The Demon” Spofforth (Australia, 1874-1897)

Major Teams: Australia, South Australia, Victoria

Spofforth is regarded as “Australia’s first true fast bowler.” First bowler to take a Test hat-trick, he zoomed to 94 wickets in only 18 career Test matches.

Embed from Getty Images

63. Harold Larwood (England, 1924-1938)

Major Teams: England, Nottinghamshire

According to Larwood’s Wisden obituary, he was “one of the rare fast bowlers in the game to spread terror in opposition ranks by the mere mentions of his name.” If Don Bradman struggled, then Larwood must have been really, really good.

Embed from Getty Images

62. Steve Smith (Australia, 2007-)

Major Teams: Australia, New South Wales, Worcestershire, Rajasthan Royals

Averaging 60.00 after 87 tests with 28 hundreds is no joke. Started as a leg-spinner batting at #8 and ended up becoming the greatest modern-day Test batter.

Embed from Getty Images

61. Chris Gayle (West Indies, 1999-2022)

Major Teams: West Indies, Royal Challengers Bangalore, West Indies U-19, St. Kitts & Nevis Patriots, Balkh Legends, Barisal Burners, Chattogram Challengers, Dhaka Gladiators, Dophins, Fortune Barishal, ICC World XI, Jamaica, Jamaica Tallawahs, Jozi Stars, Kandy Tuskers, Karachi Kings, Kings XI Punjab, Kolkata Knight Riders, Lahore Qalandars, Lions, Matabeleland Tuskers, Melbourne Renegades, Quetta Gladiators, Rangpur Riders, Somerset, St. Kitts and Nevis Patriots, Sydney Thunder, Vancouver Knights, Western Australia, Worcester

Although he is known for his big hitting and T20 exploits, Chris Gayle conquered all-formats over two decades. Just look at his record—14562 (T20), 13189 (List A), 13226 (First Class) runs, best of 333 in Tests, best of 215 in ODIs, 175* in T20s, and 117 in T20Is.

Embed from Getty Images

60. Shaun Pollock (South Africa, 1991-2008)

Major Teams: South Africa, Dolphins, KawZulu-Natal, Durham, Warwickshire

From a family of cricketing greats, Shaun Pollock became the most prolific wicket-taker of his time with 829 international wickets. Great consistent bowling and an effective all-rounder.

Embed from Getty Images

59. Tom Richardson (England, 1892-1905)

Major Teams: England, Somerset, Surrey, London County

Wisden’s obituary stated that “He will live in cricket history as perhaps the finest of all fast bowlers.” With 2104 first class wickets, best of 10/45 in an innings, and an average of 9.64 (11.06 average in Tests), he is certainly one of the best fast bowlers.

Embed from Getty Images

58. Shivnarine Chanderpaul (West Indies, 1991-2015)

Major Teams: West Indies, Guyana, Durham, Lancashire, Warwickshire, Derbyshire, Guyana Amazon Warriors

With his side-on technique and under-the-eye stickers, one of the most recognized batters. A hard batter to dismiss, will go down as a West Indian legend with 164 Test matches, 30 Test hundreds, and over 20,000 international runs.

Embed from Getty Images

57. MS Dhoni (India, 1999-)

Major Teams: India, Bihar, Jharkhand, Chennai Super Kings

Greatest ODI finisher of all-time and one of the best captains in international cricket & the IPL. Gave Indian fans a moment to cherish with a World Cup winning six. Genius behind the wickets as well.

Also Read: MS Dhoni and SK Raina Retire: An End of An Era

Embed from Getty Images

56. Kumar Shri Ranjitsinhji (England, 1893-1920)

Major Teams: England, Sussex, Cambridge University, London County

Way ahead of his time, Ranjitsinhji “was probably one of the finest batsman of all time, not only in terms of runs scored but also because he brought new strokes to the game.”

Embed from Getty Images

55. Javed Miandad (Pakistan, 1975-1996)

Major Teams: Pakistan, Karachi, Habib Bank Limited, Sind, Glamorgan, Sussex

According to ESPNCricinfo, Miandad is the “greatest batsman Pakistan ever produced.” With over 16,000 international runs, 31 centuries, and 80 FC centuries, that certainly seems to be the case.

Embed from Getty Images

54. Brian Statham (England, 1950-1968)

Major Teams: England, Lancashire

100955 Balls, 2260 first class wickets, 16.37 average, these stats say it all.

Embed from Getty Images

53. Alfred Percy ‘Tich’ Freeman (England, 1914-1936)

Major Teams: England, Kent

With 3776 first class wickets, Freeman is regarded as “one of the greatest slow bowlers the game has ever known.”

Embed from Getty Images

52. Kumar Sangakkara (Sri Lanka, 1997-2020)

Major Teams: Sri Lanka, Kandurata, Warwickshire, Surrey, Kings XI Punjab, Deccan Chargers, Sunrisers Hyderabad

Like fine wine, Sangakkara grew better with age. Most runs in a calendar year across formats in 2014 and retired with 12,400 Test runs at an average of 57.40. A T20 World Cup winner and great keeper as well.

Embed from Getty Images

51. George Alfred Lohmann (England, 1884-1897)

Major Teams: England, Surrey

Yes, he played in the nineteenth century, but the best career bowling strike rate (34.1) of all-time meant he was a class apart. A medium fast bowler, Lohmann took 112 Test and 1841 first class wickets.

Embed from Getty Images

Top 50 Cricketers of All Time: The Absolute Greats

The next 50 are the absolute greatest cricketers of all time. They either played historic knocks, are highly spoken of, or changed the way the game was played.

50. Steve Waugh (Australia, 1984-2004)

Major Teams: Australia, South Australia, Kent, Somerset

Led Australia to an ODI World Cup and 16 consecutive Test wins. A middle order stronghold in Australia’s great generation with over 10,000 Test runs and 32 tons.

Embed from Getty Images

49. Curtly Ambrose (West Indies, 1985-2000)

Major Teams: West Indies, Leeward Islands, Antigua and Barbuda, Northamptonshire

One of the most lethal bowlers of his time, he bowled some of the best spells in memory. Just watch his 7-1 spell. Ended up with 630 international wickets.

Also Read: 24 Cricketers with Musical Talent Who Will Rock You Ft. Don Bradman, Sreesanth, and AB De Villiers

Embed from Getty Images

48. Anil Kumble (India, 1989-2010)

Major Teams: India, Karnataka, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Northamptonshire, Leicestershire, Surrey)

Kumble’s 10 wickets in an innings against Pakistan wrote his name in folklore. With 619 Test wickets & 337 ODI wickets, he was a central figure in India’s XI for over a decade.

Embed from Getty Images

47. AB De Villiers (South Africa, 2003-2020)

Major Teams: South Africa, Northerns, Titans, Delhi Daredevils, Royal Challengers Bangalore

AB De Villiers could score the fastest hundred of all-time or could score 43 (297) in an attempt of a blockathon. The most versatile and innovative batter this world has ever seen. Also, Bangalore’s favorite son.

Also Read: Faf du Plessis & AB De Villiers’ Friendship: Broken Dreams of Faf and ABD

Embed from Getty Images

46. Victor Trumper (Australia, 1894-1914)

Major Teams: Australia, New South Wales

Wisden reckons that Trumper was “by general consent the best and most brilliant.” Was one of the fastest scorers of all-time at about 40 runs per hour.

Embed from Getty Images

45. Rahul Dravid (India, 1992-2013)

Major Teams: India, Karnataka, Kent, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Rajasthan Royals

The glue that held India together. ‘The Wall’ played the most balls in the Test history (despite playing seven years less than Tendulkar). His versatility speaks volumes—Kept wickets, became an effective ODI floater, and hit three sixes in T20s. Major contributions in India’s overseas Test victories.

Also Read: What Rahul Dravid Taught Me, An Open Letter From a Cricket Fan to Those In Charge of Indian Cricket

Embed from Getty Images

44. Hanif Mohammad (Pakistan, 1951-1976)

Major Teams: Pakistan, Karachi

The original ‘Little Master’, Hanif’s 970-minute 337 vs West Indies in 1958 is forever etched in history. His highest score was 499 in first class cricket. How unfortunate.

Embed from Getty Images

43. Zaheer Abbas (Pakistan, 1965-1987)

Major Teams: Pakistan, Karachi, Sind, Gloucestershire

‘Known as the Asian Bradman,’ he is still the only Asian batter with 100 first-class hundreds. Prolific and elegant.

Embed from Getty Images

42. Denis Compton (England, 1936-1964)

Major Teams: England, Middlesex

Eerily similar stats to Zaheer Abbas, but a tad ahead. 78 Tests, 5807 runs. and 123 first class hundreds. One of England’s greatest.

Embed from Getty Images

41. Adam Gilchrist (Australia, 1992-2013)

Major Teams: Australia, New South Wales, Western Australia, Deccan Chargers, Kings XI Punjab

Revolutionized the role of the wicketkeeper. 9619 ODI runs at 96.94 SR and 5570 runs at 81.95 SR. After Gilchrist, wicketkeepers were expected to score runs and score them quickly.

Embed from Getty Images

40. Courtney Walsh (West Indies, 1981-2001)

Major Teams: West Indies, Jamaica, Gloucestershire

Before Mcgrath, Anderson, & Broad, Walsh bowled the most balls in his Test career (30019) and took the most wickets by a fast bowler (519). Not to mention 1807 first class wickets.

Embed from Getty Images

39. Allan Border (Australia, 1976-1996)

Major Teams: Australia, New South Wales, Queensland, Essex, Gloucestershire

First captain from Australia to lift the World Cup trophy, he set an example for the Waughs and Pontings to follow. With more than 11,000 Test runs and 156 Test caps (record at the time), he was a constant for Australia for the better part of two decades.

Embed from Getty Images

38. Waqar Younis (Pakistan, 1987-2003)

Major Teams: Pakistan, Karachi, Lahore, Multan, Rawalpindi, Surrey, Glamorgan

Credited for the ‘reverse’ swing, his bowled compilations are droolworthy to watch. 373 wickets at a strike rate of 43.4 and 416 ODI wickets puts him at the top of the crop.

Embed from Getty Images

37. Sir Richard Hadlee (New Zealand, 1971-1990)

Major Teams: New Zealand, Canterbury, Nottinghamshire

The first bowler to 400 Test wickets, he is arguably New Zealand’s greatest cricketer.

Embed from Getty Images

36. Dale Steyn (South Africa, 2004-2021)

Major Teams: South Africa, Cape Cobras, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Deccan Chargers, Sunrisers Hyderabad

Arguably the best fast bowler of all-time. Fast, pace, swing, consistency, he had it all. With a clean action, he dominated opposition at home and abroad. Unfortunately, freak injuries ended his career. Went past Pollock to become South Africa’s highest Test wicket-taker.

Also Read: Dale Steyn, The Embodiment of Simplicity and Intensity, Retires—The Greatest Fast Bowler of Them All

Embed from Getty Images

35. Virat Kohli (India, 2008-)

Major Teams: India, Delhi, Royal Challengers Bangalore, India U-19

Will go down as the greatest ODI batter of all-time. Definitely the best chaser in the game, his peak across formats was second to none. Twice the T20 player of the World Cup, his aggressive attitude and captaincy was crucial to India’s rise in Test cricket. The King of Cricket in the modern era.

Also Read: Virat Kohli’s 25 Best Innings Across International Formats (RANKED), 5 Ways Captain Virat Kohli Transformed Indian Cricket

Embed from Getty Images

34. Imran Khan (Pakistan, 1969-1992)

Major Teams: Pakistan, Sussex, Worcestershire

The world has never seen an Imran Khan before, and never will again. Fast bowler, effective batter, philanthropist, a Prime Minister, and a top candidate for the best-looking cricketer of all-time.

Embed from Getty Images

33. Ian Terence Botham (England, 1973-1993)

Major Teams: England, Durham, Somerset, Worcestershire, Queensland

In the golden era of all-rounders, Botham was arguably the best of the lot. About 7,000 international runs to go along with 528 wickets.

Embed from Getty Images

32. Kapil Dev (India, 1977-1995)

Major Teams: India, Haryana, Northamptonshire, Worcestershire

Three decades after he retired, India is still looking for another Kapil Dev. A long term fast-bowling all-rounder, he captained India to their first World Cup triumph.

Also Read: 83 Movie Review – Does the Film Do Justice to India’s Unlikely Dream 1983 World Cup Journey?

Embed from Getty Images

31. James ‘Jimmy’ Anderson (England, 2003-)

Major Teams: England, Lancashire, England U-19

The best swing bowler of all-time, it is his longevity and fitness that is remarkable. Two decades, 176 Tests, and 672 wickets. Brilliant!

Embed from Getty Images

30. George Headley (West Indies, 1927-1954)

Major Teams: West Indies, Jamaica

Had it not been for World War II, who knows how much George Headley could have accomplished. Retired with an average of 60.83 after 22 Tests and 69.86 in 103 first class matches. Wisden remarked that “he scored an avalanche of runs with a style and brilliance few of any age have matched.” Must have been wonderful to watch.

Embed from Getty Images

29. Derek ‘ Deadly’ Underwood (1963-1987)

Major Teams: England, Kent

Underwood claimed 2465 first-class wickets after bowling 139,783 balls along with 297 Test wickets.

Embed from Getty Images

28. Sunil Gavaskar (India, 1966-1987)

Major Teams: India, Mumbai, Somerset

The first player to break the 10,000 run Test barrier, the ‘Little Master’ set the standards for opening batsmanship in cricket. Playing without helmets against the West Indies was a daring task for sure.

Embed from Getty Images

27. Fred Trueman (England, 1949-1972)

Major Teams: England, Yorkshire, Derbyshire

Trueman was the first cricketer to 300 Test wickets. He had 2304 first class wickets to his name as well.

Embed from Getty Images

26. Bill ‘Tiger’ O’Reilly (Australia, 1927-1946)

Major Teams: Australia, New South Wales

Wisden remarked that O’Reilly was “probably the greatest spin bowler the game has ever produced” and Don Bradman is credited of saying, “he was the greatest bowler he had ever faced or watched.”

Embed from Getty Images

Greatest 25 Cricketers of All Time: The Undisputable Legends, Kings of Cricket

Time for the Undisputable Legends. These players are truly the greatest cricketers of all time.

25. Les Ames (England, 1926-1951)

Major Teams: England, Kent

According to Wisden, Ames was “without a doubt the greatest wicketkeeper-batsman the game [had] so far produced.” 418 stumpings, over 1,000 dismissals, and 102 first-class centuries.

Embed from Getty Images

24. Glenn McGrath (Australia, 1992-2007)

Major Teams: Australia, New South Wales

The greatest line and length bowler the world has ever seen. He was instrumental in Australia’s World Cup wins. Holds the record for most World Cup wickets (71) and was the highest fast bowling Test wicket taker before Jimmy Anderson and Stuart Broad surpassed him.

Embed from Getty Images

23. Dennis Lillee (Australia, 1967-1988)

Major Teams: Australia, Tasmania, Western Australia, Northamptonshire

If you can fox the great Sir Viv, you definitely have some skill. Broke the world record at that time and ended with 355 Test wickets.

Embed from Getty Images

22. Robert Graeme Pollock (South Africa, 1960-1987)

Major Teams: South Africa, Eastern Province, Transvaal

ESPNCricinfo reckons that Graeme Pollock was “perhaps the finest left-hand batsman the game has ever produced.” Another casualty of South Africa’s international exile, Pollock’s 60.97 average in his short 23-Test career gave the world a glimpse of his ability to go along his 64 hundreds in 262 first class games.

Embed from Getty Images

21. Herbert Sutcliffe (England, 1919-1945)

Major Teams: England, Yorkshire

First to score 4 Test centuries in a series and fastest to 1000 Test runs (12 innings), he was easily one of the greatest. Wisden’s obituary remarks that “he never knew a season of failure” as he would score over 50,000 first class runs with 151 tons.

World War I meant that he lost some early years and only started his career around the age of 25.

Embed from Getty Images

20. Malcolm Marshall (West Indies, 1977-1996)

Major Teams: West Indies, Barbados, Hampshire

The cricket world lost a gem in 1999 when Malcolm Marshall passed away at the young age of 41 due to cancer. However, he will be remembered as one of the most feared fast bowlers of all-time. 376 wickets at a strike rate of 46.7 & 20.94 average. Just watch some of his bouncers.

Embed from Getty Images

19. Barry Anderson Richards (South Africa, 1968-1983)

Major Teams: South Africa, Natal, Transvaal, Gloucestershire, Hampshire

South Africa’s exile meant Barry Richards could only play 4 Test matches, but still showed the world what he got—2 100s, 2 50s, and an average of 72.57. “One of the finest talents of the 20th century“, scoring 28,000 first class runs, 80 tons, and nine centuries before lunch display his greatness.

Embed from Getty Images

18. Wasim Akram (Pakistan, 1984-2003)

Major Teams: Pakistan, Hampshire, Lancashire

Best left-arm fast bowler of all time, key to Pakistan’s rise, and took the most wickets by a fast bowler in ODI cricket. He was the hero of the 1992 World Cup final and with Waqar Younis, formed a pair of the ages. Still holds the highest score by a #8 in Test matches, 257*.

Embed from Getty Images

17. Frank Wooley (England, 1906-1938)

Major Teams: England, Kent

58,959 runs. 145 centuries. 2066 Wickets. 978 first class matches. Wisden describes as “beyond doubt one of the finest and most elegant left-handed all-rounders of all-time.”

Embed from Getty Images

16. Brian Charles Lara (West Indies, 1987-2010)

Major Teams: West Indies, Trinidad & Tobago

Brian Lara was one of the best left-arm batters of all-time His name will forever be etched in record books with 400* (Test) and 501* (first class). More than the numbers, though, you always wanted to watch him bat. Top notch elegance.

Also Read: Most Stylish Batsman Of The Modern Era

Embed from Getty Images

15. Ricky Ponting (Australia, 1992-2013)

Major Teams: Australia, Tasmania

Ricky Ponting was one of the most dominant players of his generation. He ruled the world as a batter, fielder, and captain. Ponting holds the record for the fastest to 12,000 runs in both ODI and Test cricket, only behind Tendulkar. Ended with more than 27,000 international runs, 71 centuries, and 364 catches. However, his legacy is cemented with two World cup wins as captain.

Embed from Getty Images

14. Sir Leonard ‘Len’ Hutton (England, 1934-1955)

129 first class hundreds in 513 matches. Not quite 99.96, but 40,140 runs at 55.51 is quite special. Handy leg spinner as well. Wisden remarked in Hutton’s obituary that he was “one of the greatest batsman the game has produced in all its long history.”

Major Teams: England, Yorkshire

Embed from Getty Images

13. Jacques Kallis (South Africa, 1993-2014)

Major Teams: South Africa, Western Province, Warriors, Cape Cobras, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Kolkata Knight Riders, Sydney Thunder, Trinidad & Tobago Red Steel, Middlesex, Glamorgan

Once playing against India, a stat came up that aptly described Jacques Kallis contribution in Test cricket. With runs and centuries, Kallis rivalled Tendulkar. With the ball, he was an equal to Zaheer Khan. One of the greatest allrounders of the game, 10,000+ runs in each format, and had a decent T20 career as well. Would take South Africa two players to replace the balance he provided the Proteas.

Embed from Getty Images

12. Wilfred Rhodes (England, 1899-1930)

Major Teams: England, Yorkshire

Most prolific first-class wicket-taker of all time. 4204 wickets from 1110 matches. Close to 40,000 first class runs as well. Moreover, he had the longest first-class career with 30 years & 315 days. That’s commitment.

Also Read: Top 55 All-Rounders in Cricket History List (The Complete Guide)

Embed from Getty Images

11. Muttiah Muralitharan (Sri Lanka, 1989-2014)

Alternative spelling: Muthiah Muralidaran

The best off-spinner of all-time and the most prolific international wicket taker of all-time with 1347 wickets. Taking the 800th Test wicket with his final ball will go down as the one of the iconic moments in the game. A 1996 World Cup winner to cap it off.

Major Teams: Sri Lanka

Embed from Getty Images

10. Sir Isaac Vivian Alexander ‘Viv’ Richards (West Indies)

Major Teams: West Indies, Leeward Islands, Glamorgan, Somerset

Sir Viv Richards had just the right amount of talent, intimidation factor, and swag. One of the central pins of West Indies’ golden generation and way ahead of his time. Pioneer of modern ODI cricket.

Embed from Getty Images

9. Walter Reginald ‘Wally’ Hammond (England, 1920-1951)

Major Teams: England, Gloucestershire

7249 Test runs with 22 hundreds in the era that he played is already a huge achievement. Add to that, 50,551 first-class runs with a mammoth 167 centuries, 185 fifties, and 732 wickets, he is definitely one to be remembered.

Embed from Getty Images

8. Sydney Barnes (England, 1894-1930)

Major Teams: England, Staffordshire, Lancashire, Warwickshire, Wales

6,229 wickets at an average of 8.33 from club to Test matches. Most wickets ever in a Test series (49). S.C. Griffith, secretary of MCC summed it up perfectly, “The extraordinary thing about him was that all his contemporaries considered him the greatest bowler.”

Embed from Getty Images

7. Frank Worrell (West Indies, 1941-1964)

Major Teams: West Indies, Barbados, Jamaica

Sir Learie Constantine described Worrell as, ” a happy man, a good man, and a great one.” Worthy middle order batter & allrounder with a knack of big hundreds, his influence as a social icon was far greater. First long-term black captain of West Indian cricket, he helped unify the islands and moved West Indies move into the success of the 70s & 80s. Unfortunately, passed away at the age of 42 with a rich legacy, nevertheless. Key player in the first Tied Test, the Australia-West Indies series is still named the “Frank Worell Trophy.”

Embed from Getty Images

6. Sir Garfield St Aubrun ‘Garry’ Sobers (West Indies, 1952-1975)

Major Teams: West Indies, Barbados, Nottinghamshire, South Australia

The greatest all-rounder of all time. Shall I say more?

Embed from Getty Images

5. Shane Warne (Australia, 1990-2013)

Major Teams: Australia, Victoria, Rajasthan Royals, Melbourne Stars

If you bowled the ‘Ball of the Century,’ took 708 wickets, and won a World Cup final on your own, you deserve to be in the Top 5 of every list. A larger-than-life icon who revolutionized leg spin. A leader that Australia never had as his later years with the Rajasthan Royals and T20 leagues showed. His death in 2022 shocked one and all.

Embed from Getty Images

4. Sir John Berry ‘Jack’ Hobbs (England,1908-1930)

Major Teams: England, Surrey

Most prolific first-class batter of all-time. 61,760 runs, 199 centuries, 273 fifties, oldest Test centurion (at 46), and opened the batting and bowling in South Africa in 1910. The original ‘Master‘ and first cricketer to receive Knighthood.

Embed from Getty Images

3. Sachin Tendulkar (India, 1989-2013)

Major Teams: India, Mumbai, Mumbai Indians

The greatest batsman the world in the modern era. Over 34,000 international runs, 100 hundreds, World Cup winner. The original God of cricket, and a beacon of hope for a billion people for over two decades.

Embed from Getty Images

2. Dr. William Gilbert ‘WG’ Grace (England, 1865-1908)

Major Teams: England, Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), Gloucestershire, London County Cricket Club

Without Grace’s grace, we can only imagine how different cricket’s development as an official sport would have been in its early days. 44 years, 870 first class matches, 54,000 runs, 2800 wickets. Also practiced medicine and had that iconic beard.

Embed from Getty Images

1. Sir Donald Bradman (Australia, 1927-1949)

Major Teams: Australia, New South Wales, South Australia

Not only regarded as the greatest Test batter of all-time in the world of cricket but also a well know trivia fact outside of the sport. 99.94. The elusive 4 runs. 6996. In fact, he scored 117 centuries in 234 matches at an average of 95.14 with the best of 452* in all first-class cricket. Technically gifted, daddy hundreds, Test captain, ‘Borderline’ series, leader of the ‘Invincibles’, and the comeback after World War II break. Legend in all senses.

Embed from Getty Images

Extended List (By Country): The Honorable Mentions

These players are one of the best to have played for their nations. Several of these players played over 100 Test matches. However, due to the extensive competition, they did not make the Top 151 Greatest Cricket Players of All Time List.

Greatest Players of All Time #175-270

  • England: Patsy Hendren, Graeme Hick, Phil Mead, Douglas Jardine, Eoin Morgan, Ian Bell, Jos Buttler, Andrew Strauss, Alec Stewart, Dennis Amiss, Bernard Bosanquet, Mike Atherton, Maurice Tate, Graeme Swann, Charlie Parker, Andrew Flintoff, Frank Tyson, Graham Thorpe, Sir Pelham Warner, Bill Lockwood, John Jackson, Johnny Briggs, Hugh Trumble
  • West Indies: Alvin Kallicharran, Rohan Kanhai, Carl Hooper, Lawrence Rowe, Roy Fredericks, Vanburn Holder, Charlie Griffith, Andre Russell, Jackie Hendricks, Colin Croft, Ian Bishop
  • Australia: Dean Jones, David Boon, Bill Ponsford, Charles Turner, Bill Lawry, Mark Taylor, Aaron Finch, Clem Hill, Andrew Symonds, Geoffrey Marsh, Mike Hussey, Charlie McCartney, Pat Cummins, Josh Hazlewood
  • India: Lala Amarnath, Mohammad Azharuddin, Erapalli Prasanna, Zaheer Khan, Mohinder Amarnath, Dilip Vengsarkar, S Venkataraghavan, B Chandrasekhar, Vijay Merchant, Gundappa Vishwanath, Vijay Manjrekar, Farokh Engineer, Javagal Srinath
  • South Africa: Trevor Goddard, Herschelle Gibbs, Gary Kirsten, Kagiso Rabada, Vernon Philander, Morne Morkel, Dudley Nourse, Mike Proctor, Jonty Rhodes, John Waite, Faf du Plessis
  • New Zealand: Tim Southee, Glenn Turner, Nathan Astle, Jacob Oram, Scott Styris, Stewie Dempster, Martin Donnely, John R Reid, Shane Bond, Martin Guptill, Ian Smith, Jack Cowie, Chris Cairns, Chris Harris, Bruce Taylor, Neil Wagner
  • Pakistan: Shoaib Malik, Umar Gul, Fazal Mahmood, Yasir Shah, Saleem Malik, Babar Azam, Mohammad Asif, Misbah Ul-Haq, Rashid Latif
  • Sri Lanka: Angelo Mathews
  • Bangladesh: Tamim Iqbal, Mashrafe Mortaza, Mushfiqur Rahim, Mahmudullah
  • Zimbabwe: Grant Flower, Brendon Taylor
  • USA: Bart King

Top 10 Greatest Cricketers of All-Time (By Country)

Who are the greatest Australian cricketers of all-time?

The greatest Australian cricketer of all-time is Sir Donald Bradman (#1). The Top 10 Australian cricketers in history are Don Bradman (#1), Shane Warne (#5), Ricky Ponting (#15), Dennis Lillee (#23), Glenn McGrath (#24), Bill O’Reilly (#26), Allan Border (#39), Adam Gilchrist (#41), Victor Trumper (#46), Steve Waugh (#50).

Who are the English cricketers of all-time?

The greatest England cricketer of all-time is Dr. WG Grace (#2). The Top 10 England cricketers in history are WG Grace (#2), Sir Jack Hobbs (#4), Sydney Barnes (#8), Wally Hammond (#9), Wilfred Rhodes (#12), Sir Len Hutton (#14), Frank Wooley (#17), Herbert Sutcliffe (#21), Les Ames (#25), and Fred Trueman (#27).

Who are the greatest Indian cricketers of all-time?

The greatest Indian cricketer of all-time is Sachin Tendulkar (#3). The Top 10 Indian cricketers in history are Sachin Tendulkar (#3), Sunil Gavaskar (#28), Kapil Dev (#32), Virat Kohli (#35), Rahul Dravid (#45), Anil Kumble (#48), Kumar Shri Ranjitsinhji (#56), MS Dhoni (#57), Ravichandran Ashwin (#88), and Bishan Singh Bedi (#95).

Who are the greatest West Indian cricketers of all-time?

The greatest West Indian cricketer of all-time is Sir Garfield Sobers (#6). The Top 10 West Indies cricketers in history are Sir Garfield Sobers (#6), Frank Wooley (#7), Sir Vivian Richards (#10), Brian Lara (#16), Malcolm Marshall (#20), George Headley (#30), Courtney Walsh (#40), Curtly Ambrose (#49), Shivnarine Chanderpaul (#58), and Chris Gayle (#61).

Also Read: Top 21 West Indian Fast Bowlers List (The Complete Guide) | Greatest West Indies Fast Bowlers of All Time (Updated 2024), Top 50 Greatest West Indies Cricketers of All Time: The Complete List (2023)

Who are the greatest Sri Lankan cricketers of all-time?

The greatest Sri Lankan cricketer of all-time is Muttiah Muralitharan (#11). The Top 10 Sri Lanka cricketers in history are Muttiah Muralitharan (#11), Kumar Sangakkara (#52), Mahela Jayawardene (#66), Sanath Jayasuriya (#74), Chaminda Vaas (#77), Tillakaratne Dilshan (#100), Lasith Malinga (#102), Rangana Herath (#109), Aravinda de Silva (#119), Arjuna Ranatunga (#126), and Marvin Atapattu (#149).

Who are the greatest South African cricketers of all-time?

The greatest South African cricketer of all-time is Jacques Kallis (#13). The Top 10 South Africa cricketers in history are Jacques Kallis (#13), Barry Richards (#19), Graeme Pollock (#22), Dale Steyn (#36), AB De Villiers (#47), Shaun Pollock (#60), Graeme Smith (#78), Aubrey Faulkner (#81), Hashim Amla (#114), and Allan Donald (#116).

Who are the greatest Pakistan cricketers of all-time?

The greatest Pakistani cricketer of all-time is Wasim Akram (#18). The Top 10 Pakistan cricketers in history are Wasim Akram (#18), Imran Khan (#34), Waqar Younis (#38), Zaheer Abbas (#43), Hanif Mohammad (#44), Javed Miandad (#55), Mohammad Yousuf (#69), Inzamam Ul-Haq (#93), Younis Khan (#97), and Saqlain Mushtaq (#112).

Who are the greatest New Zealand cricketers of all-time?

The greatest New Zealand cricketer of all-time is Sir Richard Hadlee (#37). The Top 10 New Zealand cricketers in history are Richard Hadlee (#37), Daniel Vettori (#89), Ross Taylor (#92), Brendon McCullum (#104), Kane Williamson (#108), Martin Crowe (#129), Stephen Fleming (#131), Tim Southee, Trent Boult, and Glenn Turner.

Who are the greatest Bangladesh cricketers of all-time?

The greatest Bangladeshi cricketer of all-time is Shakib Al Hasan (#75).

Who are the greatest Afghanistan cricketers of all-time?

The greatest Afghanistan cricketer of all-time is Rashid Khan (#107).

Who are the greatest Zimbabwe cricketers of all-time?

The greatest Zimbabwean cricketer of all-time is Andy Flower (#132).

The Criteria

The goal of this list is that from these 152 greatest cricketers of all time, you can pick sub-lists of the “Greatest All-Rounders of All-Time,” “Greatest Fast Bowlers of All-Time,” etc.

So how did we pick the greatest cricketers of all time? Well, we considered it all—Impact, captaincy, World Cup contributions, longevity, legacy, and statistics (10,000 runs, player of the match awards, 5-fers, 10-fers, ICC Hall of fame, Wisden cricketer of the century list, etc.)

This was a tougher challenge than I had initially anticipated. So to narrow down our choices, if a player satisfied any of the criteria below, they were automatically added to the list:

  • Member of ICC’s Hall of Fame
  • 10,000 ODI or Test Runs
  • 500 Test Wickets, 400 ODI Wickets
  • Selected as the Six Giants of the Wisden Century or Wisden Cricketers of the Century

To understand a player’s true impact from before the 1950s, excerpts from Wisden’s Almanack and ESPNCricinfo were used (and cited).

*Note: Sydney Barnes, Don Bradman, W.G. Grace, Jack Hobbs, Tom Richardson, and Victor Trumper were selected as the Six Giants of the Wisden Century and Donald Bradman, Garfield Sobers, Jack Hobbs, Shane Warne, and Viv Richards were voted as Wisden Cricketer of the Century in 2000.

Thanks for reading the Greatest Cricketers of All Time. Do consider subscribing for more such content.

Frequently Asked Questions: Greatest Cricketers of All Time

Sources: Wisden’s Five Cricketers of the Century, ICC Hall of Fame, ESPN Cricinfo’s All time XIs

Also Read: Top 25 Greatest All-Rounders in Cricket History: Where do Ben Stokes, Shakib Al Hasan, and Ravindra Jadeja Rank?, Top 43 Pakistan Fast Bowlers List (The Complete Guide) | Greatest Pakistani Fast Bowlers of All Time (Updated 2023), Top 50 Greatest West Indies Cricketers of All Time: The Complete List (2023)

Who is the best cricketer of all time?

Sir Donald Bradman is considered the best cricketer of all-time, followed closely by WG Grace, Sachin Tendulkar, Jack Hobbs, Shane Warne, Frank Worrell, and Sir Garfield Sobers.

Who is the best batsman of all time?

Sir Donald Bradman, Sachin Tendulkar, Sir Jack Hobbs, Sir Frank Worrell, and Sir Viv Richards are the best batsman of all time. Sir Len Hutton, Ricky Ponting, Brian Lara, Barry Richards, and Graeme Pollock are close behind.

Who is the best bowler of all time?

Shane Warne are Sydney Barnes are the best bowlers of all time. Behind them are Muralitharan, Wasim Akram, Malcolm Marshall, Bill O’Reilly, Glenn Mcgrath, Fred Trueman, Jimmy Anderson, Dale Steyn, and Waqar Younis.

Who is the best all-rounder of all time?

Sir Garfield Sobers is the best all-rounder of all time with Jacques Kallis close behind. Kapil Dev, Ian Botham, Imran Khan, Richard Hadlee, Jayasuriya, Shakib Al Hasan, Miller, and Faulkner also make the list.

© Copyright @Nitesh Mathur and Broken Cricket Dreams, 2022. Originally published on 12/10/2022. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Broken Cricket Dreams with appropriate and specific direction to the original content (i.e. linked to the exact post/article).