No bowler with a reasonable playing span has the numbers he does for the second half or the last third of his career

S Rajesh. Stats by Shiva Jayaraman04-Jul-2020If all goes to plan in these extremely uncertain times, the third Test between Australia and India later this season will be Ishant Sharma’s 100th; he will become only the second India seamer, and the 11th overall (including the seam-bowling allrounders but excluding Jacques Kallis, who was more batsman than bowler) to reach the landmark. His average, which is currently 32.39, is the worst among these 11 bowlers – the others all average below 30 – but the fact that he has got this far, with a respectable bowling average (Zaheer Khan finished with a career average of 32.94) is in itself cause for celebration.ESPNcricinfo LtdA look at Ishant’s career graph will explain why. After 70 Tests, his average was a mediocre 37.05; at the time he played his 70th – in July 2016 – only two players had played at least as many Tests and bowled at least 1750 overs with a poorer average, and neither was a specialist bowler: Carl Hooper averaged 49.42 from 102 matches, and Ravi Shastri 40.96 in 80 Tests. Both averaged over 35 with the bat, compared to Ishant’s 8.37.