Why Steven Smith is the best of the Fab Four

The fab four is an oft-used term to group together Steven Smith, Virat Kohli, Kane Williamson and Joe Root, but stats suggest one of them is breaking away even from this elite pack

S Rajesh and Shiva Jayaraman. Graphics by TS Girish12-Aug-2019″I said during the summer that Virat Kohli is the best player I have ever seen but that is just another level… he is the best problem-solver in the game.”Those were the words of Justin Langer, Australia’s coach, after Steven Smith’s utterly monumental effort at Edgbaston. He scored 39% of Australia’s bat runs (runs excluding extras) in the Test, was in the middle when Australia scored 74% of their total runs (571 out of 771), and became only the fourth batsman in history to score 140-plus runs in innings. All this in the opening match of an away Ashes series, in hostile conditions, in his first Test in 16 months. Just another day (or five days) in the office.ESPNcricinfo LtdInevitably, there were comparisons with Kohli – who got hundreds in each innings in Adelaide in 2014, and has been prolific over the last three-and-a-half years – but also with England’s captain Joe Root, who has had a bit of a batting slump recently, and who only managed 57 and 28 in the two innings at Edgbaston. ESPNcricinfo presents a comparison among this generations fab four batsmen, along a few key parameters since the start of 2016.Runs, and contribution to the team’s totalThe overall averages since the beginning of 2016 shows a clear gulf between the top three and Root. Smith, Kohli and Kane Williamson all top 60, while Root languishes at 44.95, below Cheteshwar Pujara, Henry Nicholls and Tom Latham. The fall for Root has been quite significant: before 2016, he averaged 54.68, which means he has dropped around 18% in the last three-and-a-half years.ESPNcricinfo LtdSmith, though, is distancing himself even from this very elite group. Since the start of 2014, he averages a staggering 73.53 and has contributed 20.6% of Australia’s total bat runs. In the last three-and-a-half years, his average has seen a very marginal drop – to 70.60 – but Australia’s dependency on him increased even further: he has scored 21.25% of the team’s bat runs. That is a whopping 35% more than the percentage contribution of Root to England’s runs (15.76%). Kohli and Williamson are somewhere in between, but still considerably higher than Root’s percentage.In the Edgbaston Test, Australia scored 74% of their total runs while Smith was out there in the middle. He was involved in 11 partnerships over the course of his two hundreds (came in at two-down, and was last out in the first innings and fifth out in the second). That is an average of 5.5 partners per innings in the Test. For Root, the corresponding values in the Test were 38% and 2.