A vigorously stacked pace battery, a stone-consistent batting line-up, and an exceptional handling unit – these consolidated would in any case be a disappointment without a legitimate wicket guardian. A passage into the keeping space is quite troublesome in the advanced game, on the off chance that you are not an outstanding ability with the willow in your grasp.
A manager presently needs to play out the double job of guardian batsman with equivalent artfulness and skill. Such a competitor is an intriguing item for any country. Gathering balls bowled at 145 kph in the blistering sun for two days and afterward going out to bat is by all accounts the most troublesome thing on the planet to a layman.
Here’s the list of the top 10 wicketkeeper-batsmen of all time:
In any case, there are a few guardians who make it happen and do it competently.
10. Brendon McCullum (New Zealand)
At No. 10 is the Kiwi wicketkeeper-batsman Brendon McCullum. As horrendous with the bat likewise with his physicality behind the wickets, he is the ideal encapsulation of ability, power, physicality, and brilliant reasoning. His ability with the Mcscoop (or Dilscoop) and the opposite clear has made him one of the most perilous players of his age to have swung the willow in the more limited arrangements of the game.
9. Matt Prior (England)
A productive batsman who was at first not viewed as an extraordinary manager at the worldwide level, Matt Earlier tweaked his glovework to turn into the best guardian batsman for Britain. His batting as well, was a major lift to Britain in Tests, as he midpoints over 40 which is very noteworthy for a guardian batsman coming in to bat at 6 or 7.
8. AB de Villiers (South Africa)
The main explanation De Villiers is at No. 8 in spite of his gallant endeavors with the bat and behind the stumps is a direct result of how much time he has been a guardian for the public group. He assumed control over the gloves solely after Imprint Boucher’s retirement and has recently been supplanted by Quinton de Kock.
7. Brad Haddin (Australia)
Haddin is a forceful wicketkeeper-batsman who assumed control over the reins from the incredible Adam Gilchrist. Aside from a typical in the mid-30s in ODIs and mid-30s in Tests, Brad Haddin has 252 gets and 8 stumpings to his name in Tests and 170 gets alongside 11 stumpings in ODIs.
6. Alec Stewart (England)
In spite of the fact that he doesn’t flaunt an outstanding normal – around 39 in Tests and 31 in ODIs – Stewart is as yet viewed as one of the most productive attendant batsmen Britain has at any point created.
5. Andy Flower (Zimbabwe)
A batsman from a minnow group, however more extravagant in class and sympathy than the heavyweights. Indeed, Andy Blossom was a posh veteran from Zimbabwe who showed that his batting was no accident; he mirrored an extremely serious level of batsmanship, similar to some other incredible of his period.
4. Mahendra Singh Dhoni (India)
India’s Reality Cup-winning commander MS Dhoni is seemingly the best manager batsman India has at any point had. Batting, keeping, captaining: three positions, one individual. However, he midpoints north of 52 from
3. Kumar Sangakkara (Sri Lanka)
One of the most complex and tasteful batsmen of his time, Kumar Sangakkara is maybe the best attendant batsman in the current cricketing world. The Sri Lankan midpoints a supernatural 58 in the Test configuration to go with a great 41.98 in ODIs. He has accumulated more than 14,000 runs in ODIs.
2. Mark Boucher (South Africa)
A serious eye injury on the ninth of July 2012 shut down an incredible profession. Mark Boucher was maybe the remainder of the traditional wicketkeeper-batsmen of the past age.
1. Adam Gilchrist (Australia)
No conjectures, no contentions for the sweet No. 1 spot; this one has a place with, the one, the just – Adam Gilchrist. With strike paces of 81.98 in Tests, 96.94 in ODIs, and 141 in T20Is, Gilly is viewed as one of, on the off chance that not, the most disastrous batsmen ever. He controlled Australia to a few successes across all configurations with his stunning hitting with the bat and skillful dominance behind the wickets.