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Crash, bang, wallop
Wisden CricInfo staff - November 2, 2001

1999
The sort of all-action performance that makes you wonder how Michael Slater can ever fail to make the Test team gave Australia the whip hand over Pakistan in the first Test at Brisbane. Most batsmen would have started cautiously in reply to an imposing total of 367, but not Slater. He butchered 169 and put on 269 for the first wicket (a record for Australia v Pakistan) with Greg Blewett. And after Mark Waugh stroked an even hundred, Adam Gilchrist and Shane Warne rubbed it in. Gilchrist smacked an 88-ball 81 in his first Test innings, and Warne gleefully smeared four sixes in a Test-best 86, piling on 86 for the tenth wicket with his old mate Scott "Can't bowl, can't field" Muller (6 not out). Much-hyped before the series, Shoaib Akhtar nursed typically erratic figures of 32-2-153-4. In all Australia's 575 took only 139.4 overs, the first display of the batting fireworks with which they would light up world cricket in the years to come. A defiant 119 from Saeed Anwar could not stop Australia completing an innings victory on the final day.

1956
Birth of Western Australia's Graeme Wood, a compact left-hand opener renowned for his stubborn determination and eccentric running - he became known as the "Kamikaze Kid" after a series of fiascos against England in 1978-79. Throughout his career Wood confounded expectations. Most notably, he followed hundreds in consecutive Tests (against England in 1980 and New Zealand the following winter) with three successive ducks. His Test career looked to be over after the 1985 England tour when he struggled, apart from a ten-hour 172 at Trent Bridge, but outstanding domestic form saw him return in 1988-89. He made a brave hundred against Ambrose, Marshall, Walsh and Patterson on a Perth flyer, but was dropped for the final time after the next match, as Australia tried out another left-handed opener ... Mark Taylor.

1956
Preparing a traditional Calcutta dustbowl backfired on India as they went down to a 94-run defeat to Australia in the third Test. In all 39 wickets fell in the match, and 35 of them went to spinners. Richie Benaud benefited more than anyone, taking 6 for 52 and 5 for 53, and though offspinner Ghulam Ahmed almost matched him with 7 for 49 and 3 for 81, a fourth-innings target of 231 proved beyond the Indians. It gave Australia a 2-0 series victory, neatly bringing down the curtain on the 45-Test career of their captain, Ian Johnson. He finished with exactly 1000 runs - and a slightly less symmetrical 109 wickets.

1921
Birth of a true allrounder. New Zealander Geoff "Boney" Rabone was an aggressive batsman, an offspinner capable of turning to leggies or even medium-pace, an outstanding slip fielder and a popular captain. He captained New Zealand in five of his 12 Tests, and though they didn't actually win any of them, it was hardly Rabone's fault. At times he opened the batting and bowling, and he turned in some heroic performances, most notably in his first match as captain, against South Africa at Durban in 1953-54, when he made 107 (next-best: 32) and 68 (19) as the Kiwis went down to an innings defeat. He played his last Test against England at Auckland in 1954-55, when New Zealand were skittled for the alltime Test low of 26.

1994
A rout at Harare, where Sri Lanka took their one-day series against Zimbabwe 2-1 with a thumping 191-run victory. It was their biggest win, in terms of runs, until they smashed India by 245 runs at Sharjah in 2000-01. The old firm of Aravinda de Silva and Arjuna Ranatunga set them up with a fourth-wicket partnership of 143 in 24 overs, with de Silva batting through for an unbeaten 107. Zimbabwe were always going to be up against it chasing 297, and it was effectively over when Chaminda Vaas and Ravindra Pushpakumara reduced them to 22 for 5. They were finally all out for 105 - there were only three fours in the whole innings - with Mark Dekker (23 off 109 balls) settling for some batting practice.

Other birthdays
1876 Ernie Hayes (England)
1897 Jack O'Connor (England)
1919 Alan Lissette (New Zealand)
1927 Eric Atkinson (West Indies)

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