Sunday, 2 October 2011 | 0 comments | By: tipu

Taylor Martinez Biography and Photos Videos

Taylor Martinez Biography and Photos Videos
Taylor Martinez Biography

Ht: 6-0 Wt: 180 40: 4.50 
Position: QB, S
Date of Birth: 09/15/1990
Birthplace: Norco,  CA
Year: Class of 2009
High School: Centennial HS
(Corona, CA)
As a 2008 senior, led Corona (Calif.) Centennial to the CIF State D-I Championship. Finished with 3,019 yards passing, 28 touchdown passes, seven interceptions on 61% percent. Ran for 12 rushing touchdowns and 750 yards rushing. Names Team MVP, Big VIII MVP, CIF-SS Inland Division Player of the Year, HSI Player of the Year, GoldenStatePreps.com SoCal Offensive Player of the Year, L.A. Times Player of the Year and MaxPreps.com Player of the Year.
Taylor Martinez' father, Casey, played safety for Iowa State. Last season Martinez played for Cajon High School in San Bernardino and doesn't have any stats to report. He transferred about six months ago to Corona Centennial.

40: 4.47; VJs: 38; SHs: 3.97; PCs: 260; L-Cone: 6.98

Martinez reports a 3.0 core GPA and is taking the SAT on June 7.

Martinez: "I'm a great open field tackler and have good strength. I'm fast and have great instincts at quarterback. I make good decisions and am pretty accurate. I have a strong arm, but can throw on the run too.

"I want to work on my footwork and scrambling. Especially on drop-backs."


Scout.com Combine Results (full list):
Location: Los Angeles
Year: 2008
Height: 6-0
Weight: 173
40-Yard Dash: 4.50
Short Shuttle: 3.97
Vertical Jump: 37.0"
Broad Jump: 9-10
Taylor Martinez Photos
                      Taylor Martinez Photos
Taylor Martinez Photos
Taylor Martinez Photos
Taylor Martinez Photos
Taylor Martinez Photos

Taylor Martinez Photos
Wednesday, 24 August 2011 | 0 comments | By: tipu

Sania Mirza Biography and Photos and Videos

Sania Mirza Biography and Photos and Videos
Sania Mirza Biography 

Sania Mirza (Urdu: ثانیہ مرزا ,  Telugu: సానియా మీర్జా, Hindi: सानिया मिर्जा) (born 15 November 1986, in Mumbai) is a professional Indian tennis player. She began her tennis career in 2003 and is well-known for her powerful forehand ground strokes. She is the first ever Indian to break into the top 30 WTA rankings. Mirza has defeated many top players, including Svetlana Kuznetsova and Martina Hingis.
In 2004 she was awarded the Arjuna award by the Indian Government. In 2006, Mirza was awarded a Padma Shri, India's fourth highest honour for her achievements as a tennis player.[1] In March 2010, The Economic Times named Mirza in the list of the "33 women who made India proud".[2] 
In 2009, Sania Mirza got engaged to childhood friend Sohrab Mirza. However the engagement was called off shortly after.[9] Mirza married Pakistani cricketer Shoaib Malik on 12 April 2010.[10][11] The wedding was held in Hyderabad, India. The online attention the wedding received made Mirza the most searched woman tennis player in 2010 according to Google Trends.[12] The couple planned to settle down in Dubai. The wedding was even more controversial because Shoaib Malik was accused by another girl of already being married to him and hence he could not marry Sania without first divorcing her. Initially for many days, Shoiab Malik refused to grant the divorce claiming he was never married. This resulted in a huge media drama leading to so much online attention as stated earlier. Finally, having no other option, Shoaib divorced the girl paving the way for his next marriage to Sania.

Country India 
Residence Hyderabad, India
Born 15 November 1986 (age 24)
Mumbai, India
Height 1.73 m (5 ft 8 in)
Turned pro 2003
Retired Active
Plays Right-handed, two-handed backhand
Career prize money US$ 2,218,434
Official web site http://www.mysaniamirza.com/
Singles
Career record W-L / 261–148
Career titles 1 WTA, 14 ITF
Highest ranking No. 27 (27 August 2007)
Current ranking No. 64 (14 August 2011)
Grand Slam results
Australian Open 3R (2005, 2007)
French Open 2R (2007, 2009, 2011)
Wimbledon 2R (2005, 2007, 2008, 2009)
US Open 4R (2005)
Olympic Games 1R (2008)
Doubles
Career titles 12 WTA, 4 ITF
Highest ranking No. 11 (4 July 2011)
Current ranking No. 11 (4 July 2011)
Grand Slam Doubles results
Australian Open 3R (2007, 2008, 2010)
French Open F (2011)
Wimbledon SF (2011)
US Open QF (2007) 
Olympic Games 2R (2008)
Mixed Doubles
Career titles 1
Grand Slam Mixed Doubles results
Australian Open W (2009)
French Open 2R (2007)
Wimbledon QF (2011)
US Open QF (2007)
Last updated on: 14 June 2011.
Medal record
Asian Games
Gold 2006 Doha Mixed Doubles
Silver 2006 Doha Singles
Silver 2006 Doha Team
Silver 2010 Guangzhou Mixed Doubles
Bronze 2010 Guangzhou Singles
Bronze 2002 Busan Mixed Doubles
Commonwealth Games
Silver 2010 Delhi Singles
Bronze 2010 Delhi Women's Doubles


Sania Mirza
Sania Mirza
Sania Mirza
Sania Mirza
Sania Mirza
Sania Mirza
Thursday, 18 August 2011 | 0 comments | By: tipu

Mitchell Johnson Australian Cricketer Biography and Photos and Videos

This Blog is about Mitchell Johnson Australian Cricketer Biography and Photos and Videos
Mitchell Johnson Biography

Full name Mitchell Guy Johnson
Born 2 November 1981 (age 29)
Townsville, Queensland, Australia
Nickname Notch, Midge, Chomps
Height 1.89 m (6 ft 2 in)
Batting style Left-hand
Bowling style Left-arm fast
Role Bowling All-rounder
International information
National side Australia
Test debut (cap 398) 8 November 2007 v Sri Lanka
Last Test 3 January 2011 v England
ODI debut (cap 156) 10 December 2005 v New Zealand
Last ODI 10 August 2011 v Sri Lanka
ODI shirt no. 25
Domestic team information
Years Team
2001–2008 Queensland
2008 – Western Australia
Career statistics
Competition Tests ODIs FC List A
Matches 42 100 73 124
Runs scored 1,152 691 1,959 789
Batting average 22.15 19.19 23.89 19.24
100s/50s 1/6 0/2 2/10 0/2
Top score 123* 73* 123* 73*
Balls bowled 9,689 4,868 14,992 6,188
Wickets 181 158 278 188
Bowling average 29.71 25.12 30.50 26.76
5 wickets in innings 7 3 10 3
10 wickets in match 2 0 3 0
Best bowling 8/61 6/34 8/61 6/31
Catches/stumpings 10/– 23/– 17/– 26/–
Mitchell Guy Johnson (born 2 November 1981 in Townsville, Queensland) is an Australian cricketer. He is a left-arm fast bowler and left-handed batsman. He was awarded the International Cricket Council's 2009 "Cricketer of the Year" award, the Sir Garfield Sobers Trophy.

Career

When attending a fast-bowling clinic in Brisbane at age 17, former Test fast-bowler Dennis Lillee identified him as a "once-in-a-lifetime prospect".[1] Lillee contacted former team mate Rod Marsh and arranged for Johnson to join the Australian Cricket Academy in Adelaide.[1]


Johnson fields in a tour match against Northamptonshire during the 2009 Ashes
Johnson subsequently played for the Australian Under-19 side that toured England in 1999, however recurrent back injuries hampered his prospects. He recovered to start his first-class career two years later, when he was selected to play state cricket for his native Queensland. Playing for Queensland against New Zealand, Johnson hit a six off the first ball he faced in first-class cricket. In September 2005, he was in the Australia A cricket team that toured Pakistan.
Johnson switched from the Queensland Bulls to the Western Warriors on 25 July 2008.[2]
[edit]Tests
Johnson was chosen to be in the squad for the first Ashes Test beginning on 23 November 2006, but was 12th man in all of the games. On 10 November 2007, while making his Australian Test match debut against Sri Lanka at his home ground in Brisbane, Johnson took his first wicket, that of Thilan Samaraweera, caught by Adam Gilchrist. Johnson went on to take 4/96.
On 19 January 2008, Johnson scored his first ever Test half-century, against India in Perth, having being both dropped and bowled off a no ball, although Australia ended up losing the match.
On the second day of the First Test against South Africa in Perth on 18 December 2008 Johnson took seven wickets for just 42 runs, including five wickets for two runs near the close, to reduce the tourists from 3/234 to 8/243. He ended with 8/61 the next day. Later in the series he made 64 batting with Michael Clarke.
The 2009 tour to South Africa saw an important development in Johnson's armoury, the ability to consistently swing the ball into the right-hander, which he previously had struggled to achieve. During the First Test, on 27 February 2009, Johnson scored 96 not out, to help Australia post 466 all out. This included one over in which he scored 26 runs off the bowling of Paul Harris, hitting two fours and three sixes, the last of which carried out of the stadium and broke the record for the most runs in an over for Australia in a Test match. He also took eight wickets with the ball.
In the Second Test, he unleashed a fiery spell of fast bowling that gained him two wickets in his first over, and three in his first spell, as well as sending both Jacques Kallis and Graeme Smith off, retired hurt. After this, notable cricket commentator Peter Roebuck described him as the best fast bowler in the world.
In the Third Test, with Australia almost defeated, he struck 123 not out, reaching triple figures in only 86 balls. With tail-ender Bryce McGain for company, Johnson decided to take on the bowling and struck Dale Steyn for six to reach his century. Although Australia went on to lose the Test match by an innings, Johnson was named man of the series, with 16 wickets and over 250 runs in 3 matches.
During the 2009 Ashes tour he was criticised for his poor bowling and his lack of control. Johnson's position as spearhead of the Australian seam-attack was called into question, with match figures of 3/200 in second Test at Lords and his demotion to first-change bowler in Australia's tour game against Northamptonshire. In the match against Northamptonshire, he returned 1/107 from 18.1 overs as Australia won by 135 runs.[3] Despite his poor form he was selected for the third Test.[4] Johnson consequently re-discovered some form in the fourth test taking 5/69 in the second-innings.[5]


Johnson bowling in the Adelaide Oval nets, January 2009
Johnson appeared to get back to his best towards the end of 2009, earning praise from captain Ricky Ponting during the summer series against both West Indies and Pakistan. He finished the year as the worlds top wicket taker (63), and also became the first Australian to take 50 wickets and score 500 runs in a calendar year.[6]
In the 2010–11 Ashes series Johnson took more wickets than any other Australian with 15 (36.93) even though he played only 4 Tests. In the First Test at the Gabba he was hit for 0/170 in the match and was so out of form that he was dropped. Returning for the Third Test at the WACA he hit 62, took 6/38 and 4/44 was instrumentental in Australia's 267 run victory. However, his wayward bowling returned and Johnson became increasingly affected by the chanting of the Barmy Army whenever he bowled; "He bowls to the left, He bowls to the right, That Mitchell Johnson, His bowling is shite". In the Fifth Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground 20,000 England fans sung this as he walked to the crease and he made a first ball duck as England won by an innings to retain the Ashes.
[edit]One Day Cricket
In December 2005, Johnson was selected for the Australian One Day International team, making his debut against New Zealand in Christchurch, with chairman of selectors Trevor Hohns justifying his selection on the grounds of grooming players for the future.
Johnson gave the first signs of his potential at international level against the strong Indian batting line-up in a One Day International in Malaysia, Johnson's 7th. He took 4/11 off just 4 overs, including the wickets of Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid and Yuvraj Singh. Johnson then played in the Australian 2006 ICC Champions Trophy team, and in the group A match against England he took 3/40, including Kevin Pietersen. On 26 January 2007, Johnson took 4 wickets in 8 balls during the seventh match of the CB Series against England, for which he earned Man of the Match honours. In October 2007 Johnson helped Australia seal the ODI series in India. He finished as the top wicket-taker with 14 wickets, which showed his abilities, even on the slow pitches of the sub-continent.[7] In the fifth ODI at Vadodara he took 5/26, his first international five wicket haul.


Johnson bowling against India in a Test in October 2010
Australia came into the Champions Trophy ranked second in ODIs; along with being the event's reigning champions.[8] They opened their campaign against an undermanned West Indian outfit who were without prominent players because of an industrial dispute.[9] After being put into bat, Australia fell to 7/172 after 40 overs, before finishing on 8/275 in 50 overs as the pitch flattened out. Johnson scored a career best 73 not out, as Australia scored 69 runs from their batting Powerplay (between overs 44 and 49). In an innings which produced "fierce, clean hitting", Johnson struck three sixes and eight fours in his quick-fire 47 ball innings. Although Johnson went wicketless in the West Indian innings, he secured the man of the match award as Australia won by 50 runs.
Mitchell Johnson
Mitchell Johnson
Mitchell Johnson
Mitchell Johnson
Mitchell Johnson

Steve Smith Australian Cricketer Biography and Photos and Videos

This Blog is about Steve Smith Australian Cricketer Biography and Photos and Videos
 Steve Smith Biography

Steven Peter Devereux "Steve" Smith is an Australian international cricketer who currently plays for the New South Wales Blues. An all-rounder, Smith bats right-handed and bowls right arm leg spin. Smith has played for the Kent Second XI, New South Wales, the Sutherland Cricket Club and Illawong Menai Cricket Club. One of his earliest achievements was being the leading wicket taker at the 2008 KFC 20/20 competition. This was despite only playing 4 out of the 5 games. He took 4/15 against Queensland and finished with 9 wickets overall.[1] Due to his efforts, he was named the second best player of the tournament.[2]
Smith made his First Class debut against Western Australia at the SCG on 24 January 2008. He scored 33 in his only innings as NSW defeated WA outright.[3]
He was part of the New South Wales team that won the 2009 Twenty20 Champions League.
Smith recently achieved his highest score in One Day Domestic (ODD) competitions in Australia against Tasmania. Following a middle order collapse, Smith resurrected the innings with a quickfire 81 off 58 deliveries, taking the Blues total to a respectable 271. The game was lost despite Smith's efforts.
Smith was called up to the Australian Test squad in 2010 to cover for spinner Nathan Hauritz who was in doubt for Boxing Day Test against Pakistan, but Hauritz managed to recover.[4]
By the end of the 2009–2010 domestic season Smith had a first-class batting average of over 50 after just 13 first-class matches. While his first-class bowling average in the high forties was not as impressive, his bowling appeared to be steadily improving following some well-publicised mentoring from Shane Warne. In the final match of the season he took 7 for 64 in the second innings against South Australia.
In the 2010 Twenty-Twenty World Cup he took 11 wickets over seven games at an average of 14.81 to finish as the equal second highest wicket-taker at the tournament.
Smith made his test debut at Lords in 2010, playing both tests against against Pakistan in the 2010 test series played in England. His bowling was not required in the first innings but he took 3 wickets for 51 in the second innings of his debut test. In the second test he was called to bowl only ten overs for no wickets but played an impressive role with the bat in the second innings. Batting with the tail and rogering the strike, he scored 77 including nine fours and two sixes off successive balls, helping Australia to set a competitive target after having been bowled out for 88 in the first innings.
Playing in a club match, right-handed Smith took guard left-handed and hit a six. [5]
He made his One Day International debut for Australia in the fifth match of the ODI Series against the West Indies on 19 February 2010 and his Test debut against Pakistan at Lord's on 13 July 2010.
Smith's fielding attracted attention during the 2009–2010 season with some spectacular catches in the outfield. [6]
His mother is English.
Full name Steven Peter Devereux Smith
Born 2 June 1989 (age 22)
Sydney, Australia
Height 1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)
Batting style Right-hand
Bowling style Right-arm Leg break
Role All-rounder
International information
National side Australia
Test debut (cap 415) 13 July 2010 v Pakistan
Last Test 3 January 2011 v England
ODI debut (cap 182) 19 February 2010 v West Indies
Last ODI 13 April 2011 v Bangladesh
ODI shirt no. 49
T20I debut (cap 43) 5 February 2010 v Pakistan
Last T20I 14 January 2011 v England
Domestic team information
Years Team
2007– New South Wales Blues (squad no. 19)
2010–2011 Royal Challengers Bangalore
2010 Worcestershire
2011- Kochi Tuskers Kerala
2011- Sydney Sixers
Career statistics
Competition Test ODI FC List A
Matches 5 24 23 44
Runs scored 259 299 1,516 880
Batting average 28.77 23.00 42.11 32.59
100s/50s 0/2 0/0 4/6 0/4
Top score 77 46* 177 92
Balls bowled 372 797 2,988 1,565
Wickets 3 21 41 37
Bowling average 73.33 33.23 48.17 37.10
5 wickets in innings 0 0 1 0
10 wickets in match 0 0 0 0
Best bowling 3/51 3/33 7/64 3/33
Catches/stumpings 3/– 11/– 28/– 21/–
Steve Smith
Steve Smith
Steve Smith
Steve Smith
Steve Smith
Steve Smith

Tim Paine Australian Cricketer Biography and Photos and Videos

This Blog is about Tim Paine Australian Cricketer Biography and Photos and Videos
Tim Paine Biography

Full name Timothy David Paine
Born 8 December 1984 (age 26)
Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
Nickname T-Paine, Kid
Height 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Role Wicketkeeper-Batsman
International information
National side Australia
Test debut (cap 414) 13 July 2011 v Pakistan
Last Test 13 October 2011 v India
ODI debut (cap 178) 28 August 2009 v Scotland
Last ODI 13 April 2011 v Bangladesh
ODI shirt no. 36
T20I debut (cap 41) 30 August 2009 v England
Last T20I 14 January 2011 v England
Domestic team information
Years Team
2006–present Tasmania (squad no. 8)
2011-present Sahara Pune Warriors (squad no. 23)
2011-present Hobart Hurricanes
Career statistics
Competition Test ODI FC List A
Matches 4 26 46 81
Runs scored 287 737 2,467 2,462
Batting average 35.87 39.48 31.62 34.67
100s/50s 0/2 1/5 1/18 5/12
Top score 92 111 215 134
Balls bowled 0 0 6 0
Wickets 0
Bowling average
5 wickets in innings 0
10 wickets in match 0
Best bowling 0/3
Catches/stumpings 16/1 35/4 129/6 104/9

Timothy David Paine (born 8 December 1984 in Hobart, Tasmania), is an Australian cricketer who plays for the Tasmanian Tigers in Australian domestic cricket and for the University of Tasmania Cricket Club in club cricket. He is a right-handed batsman and wicket-keeper, as well as a right arm bowler at junior level. As with most wicket-keepers, Paine is primarily a middle-order batsman in First-class cricket, and an opening batsman in List A and Twenty20 cricket.
A product of the Australian Cricket Academy, Paine became the youngest-ever contracted player in Australia, when he received a rookie contract with Tasmania at 16 years of age. He made both his First-class and one-day debuts for Tasmania in 2005; scoring a one-day century later in the 2005–06 season, and a first-class hundred, 215, in the next. He was a part of the state's maiden Sheffield Shield (then the Pura Cup) season victory that season and also their 2007–08 one-day winning side. Paine made his ODI debut for Australia as a replacement for regular wicket-keeper Brad Haddin in 2009 against England, and in the series' sixth match, he scored his maiden international century. A further injury to Haddin in 2010 paved the way for Paine's Test debut against Pakistan in England. Soon after, he played in another two Tests against India, before Haddin's recovery for the 2010–11 Ashes series.
1991–2004: Early life and introduction to cricket

Paine captained Tasmania at Under–15 and Under–17 level, along with being a member of its Under–19 team at the age of just fifteen. He was vice-captain of the Australian Under–17, before scoring a first grade century for the University club in Hobart. "He was always the smallest one playing cricket," Paine's father John said, "We lived in a fairly quiet street and we lived right next to the beach [in the suburb of Lauderdale] so they used to play a fair bit of beach cricket. We used to have a cricket pitch in our backyard which was the driveway and the next-door neighbour's had a turf wicket which the boys used to roll and mow and do all that sort of stuff. So he had to learn from an early age I suppose to be a bit stronger and a bit more competitive."[1] As a junior, Paine was a talented Australian rules player—considered good enough to make the Australian Football League (AFL)—and his brother Nick, one of four siblings, plays in the Tasmanian Football League with the Clarence Football Club.[1][2] Paine's uncle, Robert Shaw, was an AFL player and coach.[2]
At 16, Paine became the youngest Australian domestic cricket's youngest-ever contracted player when he received a basic A$10,000 rookie contract with Tasmania—a new innovation in Australian cricket.[3] After Cricket Australia allowed rookie contracts Paine said, "These new contracts are a great idea; I'm pretty happy about them anyway! It's good to give young players something [along these lines] to show them that they're in the back of the minds of the administrators and the coaches."[4]
In December 2003, he was announced captain of the Australian Under–19 team for the 2004 World Cup in Bangladesh, played in February and March 2004.[5][6] Relieved of wicket-keeping duties, Paine scored 142 runs at an average of 23.66 and took two catches, along with taking seven wickets at an average of 22.28 in eight matches.[7] However, Australia lost the Under–19 Plate Championship final to Bangladesh.[8]

Cricket career

[edit]2005–2009: Early domestic career
Paine made his Tasmanian debut as solely an opening batsman in November 2005, during an ING Cup one-day match against Western Australia in Perth, scoring 28 from 44 balls.[9] His first-class debut came shortly after as an opener when Tasmania played South Australia in Hobart during December.[10] Opening the batting, Paine scored a duck (zero) in the first innings and 17 in the second as the match was drawn.[11] He made his maiden List A century in his first season, scoring 111 in the ING Cup.[6] The following season his made his maiden first-class century with 215 against Western Australia in a Pura Cup match at Perth in October 2006.[12]
For the first part of his career he was Tasmania's second wicketkeeper, behind Sean Clingeleffer, particularly at first-class level, before taking Clingeleffer's place permanently in late 2007. Paine played as an opening batsman in Tasmania's maiden Sheffield Shield season triumph in 2006–07, scoring zero and five. Despite his low scores in the final, Paine was Tasmania's highest run scorer in the one-day competition that season.[6] He continued with one-day performances in the following season in which Tasmania won the Ford Ranger Cup, aggregating 261 runs and collecting 21 dismissals. 2008–09 saw Paine score 445 Sheffield Shield runs at 29.66 along with 42 dismissals.[13]
His growing maturity saw him become Tasmanian vice-captain ahead of the 2009–10 season.[6] In early 2009, Paine was selected to play for Australia 'A' against Pakistan 'A' in a series of one-day and first-class matches. Playing at the Allan Border Field in Brisbane, Paine scored 134 off 136 balls in the third one-day match to secure a series win for the Australian 'A' side.[14]
[edit]2009–10: Early international career
In 2009, Paine was selected for the national squad for the One Day International series against England, shortly after the conclusion of the Ashes Test series, when incumbent wicketkeeper Brad Haddin returned home for surgery on a broken finger.[15] Paine made his ODI debut in a one-off match against Scotland, scoring 29 not out from 38 balls in Australia's total of 345 all out. He then took a single catch, as they were eventual victors by 189 runs.[16][17] Paine made his International Twenty20 (T20) debut against England in early September at Old Trafford, ahead of the upcoming seven match ODI series between the two teams. England were in trouble at 2/4 (two wickets for four runs), in reply to Australia's 145, before rain caused the match to be abandoned. Paine was not required to bat, as he was listed to come in at the traditional wicket-keepers' position of seven.[18][19][20] The second and final T20 match of the short series was also abandoned without a ball being bowled.[21][22][23] Paine played his second ODI in the first match of the following ODI series. Australia batted first, with Paine run out in the third over for a duck, scored from six balls; however, he collected two dismissals and a run-out, in England's four-run defeat.[24][25][26] His performances steadily improved, with 26, 29, 51 and 16 respectively,[27] before scoring his maiden ODI century in the sixth match of the series at Trent Bridge . Paine was eventually dismissed for 111 from 148 balls, as Australia took a 6–0 series lead.[28]
After losing the final ODI in England, Australia won the 2009 ICC Champions Trophy in South Africa. In their second group match against India, Paine scored his second half-century (56).[29] However, he struggled for consistency in Australia's remaining matches and finished with 123 runs at an average of 24.60.[30] Touring India for a seven match ODI series in late October and early November, Paine broke his finger while attempting to catch a ball in India's innings of the second ODI in Nagpur. He was subsequently sent home and replaced by Graham Manou after the match.[31]
On return from injury, Paine was Tasmania's leading run-scorer for the 2009–10 domestic Twenty20 tournament, hitting 166 runs at 33.20 while opening the batting.[32] However, Tasmania struggled and finished last. When Haddin was rested from national duties for two ODIs against the West Indies in February 2010, Paine was again his replacement, scoring 16 and 24.[33] Tasmanian came off the bottom of the ladder after winning their last three one-day matches to qualify for the 2009–10 Ford Ranger Cup Final against Victoria. There, Paine scored his fifth List A century, 100 from 118 balls, as Tasmania completed a comfortable victory—their fourth one-day title. Victoria's loss was their fourth successive one-day final loss.
Tim Paine
Tim Paine
Tim Paine
Tim Paine
Tim Paine
Tim Paine

Brad Haddin Australian Cricketer Biography and Photos and Videos

This Blog is about Brad Haddin Australian Cricketer Biography and Photos and Videos
Brad Haddin Biography

Full name Brad James Haddin
Born 23 October 1977 (age 33)
Cowra, New South Wales, Australia
Nickname BJ
Height 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style None
Role Wicketkeeper-Batsman
International information
National side Australia
Test debut (cap 400) 22 May 2008 v West Indies
Last Test 3 January 2011 v England
ODI debut (cap 144) 30 January 2001 v Zimbabwe
Last ODI 11 April 2011 v Bangladesh
ODI shirt no. 57
Domestic team information
Years Team
1997–1999 Australian Capital Territory
1999–present New South Wales
2011–present Kolkata Knight Riders
2011–present Cape Cobras
Career statistics
Competition Tests ODIs FC List A
Matches 32 85 130 187
Runs scored 1,904 2,429 7,712 5,560
Batting average 39.66 33.27 40.80 33.90
100s/50s 3/8 2/15 13/42 8/34
Top score 169 110 169 138*
Catches/stumpings 118/3 117/7 408/29 258/44

Bradley James Haddin (born 23 October 1977 in Cowra, New South Wales) is an Australian cricketer. He is a right-handed batsman and wicket-keeper.
Haddin was selected in the first ever Mercantile Mutual Cup season of 1997–98 for the Canberra Comets, with whom he began his professional cricketing career. In the 1999–2000 season, he began playing for the New South Wales Blues[1] to pursue further cricketing opportunities. Since then, he has produced several memorable batting innings, including a top score of 133 against Victoria.
In September 2003, he replaced Simon Katich as captain of New South Wales, while Katich was on international duty, and he since been acting-captain on numerous occasions. He has also captained Australia A.
For most of his career he was Australia A wicketkeeper but was drafted into the Australian squad as wicketkeeper if Adam Gilchrist was injured or rested. He made his international debut in a One Day International on 30 January 2001 against Zimbabwe in Hobart. He made one stumping and made 13 runs. He was demoted from second choice wicketkeeper for Australia in 2001 by Wade Seccombe and later Ryan Campbell, but reclaimed this position in late 2004.
On 18 September 2006, playing against West Indies at Kuala Lumpur in the DLF Cup, Haddin and Australian captain Mike Hussey put on 165, which at that time was a world-record stand for the sixth wicket in ODIs.[2]
He finally made his Test debut on 22 May 2008 against the West Indies at Kingston, Jamaica,[3] becoming Australia's 400th Test cricketer, after Adam Gilchrist retired.
Haddin was involved in a controversy relating to the dismissal of Neil Broom in an ODI in Perth in February 2009. Broom was given out bowled but replays clearly showed that Haddin's gloves had disturbed the bails. New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori expressed his dissatisfaction with Haddin's actions in not calling Broom back to the wicket. His comment led to an angry retort from Australian captain Ricky Ponting. Ponting defended his team mate saying that Haddin was convinced the ball hit the stumps.[4]
On 15 February 2009, Haddin became acting Australian captain for the Twenty20 against New Zealand after Ricky Ponting was rested and Michael Clarke was injured.
There is a debate as to who would be the successor of Haddin, but Graham Manou and Tim Paine are the frontrunners having already had international experience.
On 9 March 2010, in the third match of the 2009–10 Chappell-Hadlee One Day International series against New Zealand, Haddin scored his second ODI hundred, hitting 110 off 121 balls opening the Australian innings.[5]
He was ruled out of the 2010 ODI series in England due to an elbow injury, which he claims flared up when he smashed that century against New Zealand in March.[6]
On 27 November 2010, in the opening match of the The Ashes series 2010–11 at The Gabba, Brisbane, Haddin scored 136, his third test hundred, in a valuable innings that helped Australia to a commanding first innings lead. He went on in the series to collect 360 runs at an average of 45.00.
He was dropped for Australia's Twenty20 series against England in January 2011 in favour of Tim Paine, leaving him shocked and angry about his departure.
In the 2011 Indian Premier League season, Haddin was contracted by Kolkata Knight Riders for US$325,000. On 12 May 2011 Haddin was contracted by South African Domestic team Cape Cobras.
Brad Haddin
Brad Haddin
Brad Haddin
Brad Haddin
Brad Haddin

David Hussey Australian Cricketer Biography and Photos and Videos

This Blog is about David Hussey Australian Cricketer Biography and Photos and Videos
Diavid Hussey Biography

Full name David John Hussey
Born 15 July 1977 (age 34)
Mount Lawley, Western Australia, Australia
Nickname Huss, Bomber, B.O.M.
Height 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Batting style Right-hand
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak
Role Batsman
Relations Mike Hussey (brother)
ODI debut (cap 167) 4 July 2008 v West Indies
Last ODI 24 March 2011 v India
ODI shirt no. 29
Domestic team information
Years Team
2003–present Victoria (squad no. 8)
2004–present Nottinghamshire (squad no. 29)
2008–2010 Kolkata Knight Riders (squad no. 8)
2011 Northern Districts Knights(T20 only)
2011 - Kings XI Punjab (squad no. 29)
2011 - Melbourne Stars
Career statistics
Competition T20I ODI FC List A
Matches 28 34 155 192
Runs scored 622 886 11,903 6,067
Batting average 27.04 32.81 54.85 39.91
100s/50s –/3 1/6 40/52 8/40
Top score 88* 111 275 130
Balls bowled 282 449 2,644 1,714
Wickets 16 12 25 39
Bowling average 18.68 33.08 65.56 38.76
5 wickets in innings 0 0 0
10 wickets in match n/a 0 n/a
Best bowling 3/25 4/21 4/105 4/21
Catches/stumpings 16/- 16/– 200/– 94/–
David John Hussey (born 15 July 1977) is an Australian cricketer. Hussey is a right-handed batsman and can also bowl right-arm offbreaks. He is the younger brother of Australian Test cricketer Michael Hussey.

Australian domestic career .Hussey's cricketing prowess was perhaps first widely acknowledged after an innings for the Victorian Bushrangers in 2003–04, his first full season of first-class cricket. Hussey scored 212 not out as his side scored a record 455/7 in the 4th innings to beat New South Wales in Newcastle.[1] He finished the Australian season with an aggregate 857 runs at an average of 61. In 2004–05 his four day form let him down and he was dropped from the Victorian Pura Cup side. Hussey unsuccessfully asked Cricket Victoria for a release to return to Western Australia. [1] Another modest Pura Cup season for Victoria in 2005–06 saw him make 500 runs at an average of just over 30. It was again in the one day arena where he impressed as he smashed 535 runs at 76.42. This tally included 130 against Queensland and he won the state's limited-overs player-of-the-year award. In 2006–07 he repeated his Newcastle heroics with another match winning unbeaten century to beat NSW in the 4th innings. Captaining the side in the absence of Cameron White and Brad Hodge, Hussey finished with 125 as his side made 362 for 7 chasing 360 for victory. The winning runs came from his bat with a 6 off Stuart MacGill. It took his first thousand-run season in 2007–08 (he made 1,008 in the Pura Cup at 56) before he was finally chosen for a tour, the ODI series in the West Indies in 2008, and earned his first Cricket Australia contract. In February 2008 Hussey made the second fastest Australian domestic one-day hundred, off 60 balls. Hussey played as a Twenty20 allrounder, bowling in all Victoria's matches with success (a wicket in all but one game and leaving him with 10 for the tournament). In 2007–08 Hussey was named Victoria's Player of the Year in all three domestic cricket formats. [1]
English cricket

Hussey started his English cricket career at Horsham Cricket Club in Sussex. Since 2004 Hussey has played for county side Nottinghamshire. In the English summer of 2004 Hussey score 1208 runs for Nottinghamshire. In 2005 he had another prolific season, scoring 1231 runs. He hit two centuries and one double century, 232* against Warwickshire as his county went on to win the championship. In the subsequent county season Hussey scored a career best 275, off just 227 balls and with 14 sixes.[2] His record for the year was an exceptional 1,219 runs at 93.76.[1] Hussey signed for Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club for the 2008 and 2009 seasons, but due to commitments to the Australian national team withdrew from the end of the 2008 season.[3]
He will return to Notts for the majority of the 2010 season.

International career
Hussey bowling off spin in the Adelaide Oval nets.
In 2004 Hussey played for one-day internationals (ODIs) for Australia A scoring a century against the West Indies.[1] In September 2007 David toured Pakistan with the Australia 'A' team, scoring two centuries on the tour. Hussey made his international Twenty20 debut for Australia against India at the MCG on 1 February 2008. Although he was not required to bat, he did take a wicket and a catch.
Hussey's international representative career continued with selection for the ODI tour of the West Indies in the Australian off-season of 2008. He made his debut at Basseterre on 4 July 2008 in the fourth ODI of the bilateral series against the West Indies and scored 52, involved in a 50 partnership with brother Michael. In the fifth ODI, he created a new record for Australia when he struck a half century off just 19 balls. Incidentally, earlier in the same match, wicket keeper Luke Ronchi scored his half century off just 21 balls only to see it eclipsed by Hussey minutes later.
On 28 August 2009, Hussey registered his maiden ODI century against Scotland getting 111 off 87 balls. Nevertheless, although he represented Australia in a number of T20 International matches during 2010,[4] Hussey did not play another one day international after scoring his century against Scotland until he was selected for the 1st ODI against England at the MCG on 16 January 2011.[5] During England's innings, Hussey took figures of 2/42 off six overs with the ball, but was not required to bat during Australia's successful run chase.[6] On 23 January 2011 in the third ODI match in a series against England, he scored 68* to take Australia to victory and a 3-0 series lead over England with four games to play. On 6 February 2011 he scored 60 in the 3rd ODI match against England as Australia completed a resounding 6-1 series win at the WACA in Perth.
Despite his exemplary first class average of 55.27, Hussey has never been selected to play a Test Match for Australia. Outside of the substantially more populous India, Hussey is the only batsman to average more than 54 at first class level, but never be selected for a test.
Diavid Hussey
Diavid Hussey
Diavid Hussey
Diavid Hussey
Diavid Hussey

Callum Ferguson Australian Cricketer Biography and Photos and Videos

This Blog is about Callum Ferguson Australian Cricketer Biography and Photos and Videos
Callum Ferguson Biography

Full name Callum James Ferguson
Born 21 November 1984 (age 26)
North Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
Nickname Fergie
Height 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Batting style Right-hand
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Role Batsman
Domestic team information
Years Team
2003– South Australia (squad no. 12)
2011–present Sahara Pune Warriors
2011–present Adelaide Strikers
Career statistics
Competition ODI T20I FC List A
Matches 30 3 55 89
Runs scored 663 16 3,346 2,307
Batting average 41.43 5.33 35.97 34.95
100s/50s 0/5 0/0 6/20 2/18
Top score 71* 8 132 101*
Balls bowled 42
Wickets 0
Bowling average
5 wickets in innings 0
10 wickets in match 0
Best bowling 0/3
Catches/stumpings 7/– 1/– 25/– 19/–

Callum James Ferguson (born 21 November 1984 in North Adelaide, South Australia) is an Australian cricketer who currently plays Australian Domestic cricket for South Australia.
He represented Australia at Under 19 level and debuted for the Australia one-day side in 2009. He made his first half century for Australia on 13 February 2009.

Early life

Ferguson attended Blackfriars Priory School in Prospect, South Australia before moving to Marryatville High School in Year 9.
He went on to complete his schooling there.

Cricketing career


First-class cricket
Ferguson made his first-class debut on 16 October 2004 against Victoria at his home ground, Adelaide Oval.
He had a very strong debut season, top scoring for South Australia with 733 runs at 38.57.[1]
Ferguson scored his maiden first-class century with an innings of 103 against New South Wales at the Sydney Cricket Ground on 4 December 2004.
His ton came in the second innings after a disastrous yet memorable first innings for South Australia in which they were dismantled for a record low total of 29, mainly due to a devastating spell of 7/4 from Australian representative Nathan Bracken.[2]
Ferguson's second season also saw him produce solid results, as he scored 503 runs at an average of 36. After a weak 2006-07 season, Ferguson was dropped, however has recently regained his place in the South Australian line up.
On November 16, 2008, Ferguson recorded his first one day domestic century playing the Western Warriors before being eventually run out on 102.

One Day Internationals
He made his One Day International (ODI) debut against New Zealand in February 2009 at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, and was not out for 6 runs off 6 balls.
Ferguson then made 28 runs off 23 balls against New Zealand in his second ODI on Sunday 8 February 2009. In his third ODI on 10 February 2009 he made 13 not out off 11 balls. This was his first international match at his home ground of the Adelaide Oval.
In his fourth match he made a half century off 35 balls in a rain-shortened match,participating in a great partnership with Brad Haddin of over 90 runs.
On September 4, 2009, Ferguson made his current ODI top score of 71 not out (off 75 balls) against England at The Oval (Kennington Oval / The Brit Insurance Oval), London.
Callum Ferguson
Callum Ferguson
Callum Ferguson
Callum Ferguson
Callum Ferguson