5 Selfish captains in cricket history

Cricket is a team game; there should not be an ‘I’ in the team. While individual performances strengthen the position of the team, but not at a cost of the same becoming a liability.

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3. Steve Waugh

Steve Waugh
Steve Waugh. (Photo by Jamie McDonald/Getty Images for Laureus)

57 matches, winning 41and just 9 losses- Steve Waugh is one of the best to lead the Australian team. He has also led Australia to the 1999 World Cup victory and captained the Aussies for 15 matches in their streak of a record 16 consecutive Test wins.

But Waugh was also condemned by cricket pundits and especially his teammates for being conceited and egotistical. The rivalry between Shane Warne and the former Australian captain is well and thoroughly documented.

In Warne’s autobiography, No Spin, the leg-spinner has termed Waugh as “the most selfish player I have ever played with”. Warne says that “Tugga” didn’t support him after dropping the spinner in the West Indies series in 1999, and “lost a bit of respect for him”, Warne writes. Warne also stated that Waugh was selfish and cared only about his average being 50, and Waugh completely changed as a person after becoming the captain.

When Waugh was made the captain of the Australian team, Ian Chappell, another former Aussie great, pointed out Waugh’s self-interest saying, “ I think he’s been a selfish cricketer” and said he was the worst captain amongst his successors and predecessors. Waugh ended his career with a Test average of 51 and over 10,000 Test runs, but is accused of not playing for the team and batting for personal records, and to remain not out to better his average, risking the tail-enders.

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