Thursday, 18 August 2011 | | By: tipu

Cameron White Australian Cricketer Biography and Photos and Videos

This Blog is about Cameron White Australian Cricketer Biography and Photos and Videos
Cameron White Biography

Full name Cameron Leon White
Born 18 August 1983 (age 27)
Bairnsdale, Victoria, Australia
Nickname Whitey, Bear, Bundy
Height 1.87 m (6 ft 2 in)
Batting style Right-hand
Bowling style Legbreak googly
Role Batsman
International information
National side Australia
Test debut (cap 402) 9 October 2008 v India
Last Test 10 November 2008 v India
ODI debut (cap 152) 5 October 2005 v ICC World XI
Last ODI 9 April 2011 v Bangladesh
ODI shirt no. 7
T20I debut (cap 22) 9 January 2007 v England
Last T20I 8 August 2011 v Sri Lanka
Domestic team information
Years Team
1999–present Victoria (squad no. 9)
2007-2010 Royal Challengers Bangalore (squad no. 18)
2006–2007 Somerset
2011-present Deccan Chargers (squad no. 7)
2011-present Melbourne Stars
Career statistics
Competition Test ODI FC List A
Matches 4 87 113 201
Runs scored 146 2,037 6,933 5,108
Batting average 29.20 35.12 42.01 34.98
100s/50s 0/0 2/11 16/32 6/31
Top score 46 105 260* 126*
Balls bowled 558 331 11,820 3,718
Wickets 5 12 172 92
Bowling average 68.40 29.25 40.37 35.84
5 wickets in innings 0 0 2 0
10 wickets in match 0 n/a 1 n/a
Best bowling 2/71 3/5 6/66 4/15
Catches/stumpings 1/– 37/– 107/– 87/–

Cameron Leon White (born 18 August 1983 in Bairnsdale, Victoria) is an Australian cricketer and current Australian Twenty20 captain. A powerful middle order batsman and right-arm leg-spin bowler, White made his first-class cricket debut as a teenager in the 2000–01 season for the Victorian Bushrangers as a bowling all-rounder. Early comparisons with Victoria team-mate Shane Warne faded as White took on a role closer to that of Andrew Symonds, a batsman who bowled occasionally.
In 2003–04, he became Victoria's youngest ever captain at the age of 20 when he took over leadership of their one-day side, and the first-class captaincy followed the season after. International recognition came for the first time in 2005, but White found himself in and out of the side as the selectors and national captain Ricky Ponting looked for White to improve his bowling to play as a front-line spinner. Two successful winters with English county side Somerset helped to propel White back into the selectors' minds. After a couple of further unfruitful international spells, including four Test matches in 2008, White finally secured a regular place in the one-day squads after a string of good performances in 2009.
Early career
White began his cricket career working his way through the youth structure at Victoria, playing in the Commonwealth Bank Under-17, and later Under-19, Championship series. He showed his prowess with both bat and ball during these competitions, claiming a century, two half-centuries and 17 wickets in the ten matches he played over two seasons. He tended to bat as part of the middle order and bowl as third or fourth change. His first-class debut came in March 2001, aged 17, against New South Wales. Batting at number nine, White scored 11 runs in his only batting innings of the match, and claimed 4/65[note 1] coming on as third change bowler.[1] He made one further first-class appearance that season before joining up with the Australia Under-19 cricket team for two youth Tests against Sri Lanka.
He captained the Australia Cricket Academy side that toured New Zealand, beating New Zealand Academy 3–1 in a four-match one-day series, after a pair of draws in two three-day matches. Soon after, he made his List A debut for Victoria, but the match was rained off after 42.1 overs without White taking any part in the match.[2] White received his first senior man of the match award a few days later for his two wickets and score of 91 batting at number seven during the Pura Cup match against South Australia.[3] He was named as captain of the Australia Under-19 squad to compete in the 2002 Under-19 Cricket World Cup in Sri Lanka,[4] and led his team to victory in the competition, beating South Africa by seven wickets in the final. White finished the tournament as the leading run-scorer with 423 runs, with two of the other top-four batsmen also being Australian.[5]
Despite his success with the bat during the Under-19 World Cup, Victoria continued to use White as a bowling all-rounder, a decision that seemed to be justified in the 2002–03 season when White passed 50 just once in his 13 first-class innings and claimed 28 wickets. In his last match of the season, he claimed his maiden five and ten-wicket hauls, taking 6/66 in the first-innings against Western Australia and 4/70 in the second-innings to help Victoria to a 10 wicket victory.
Cameron White
Cameron White
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