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Player Profile(#19)…Jacob Oram(New Zealand)

Posted by wildkiwi25 on April 24, 2008

Photobucket

Jacob David Philip Oram (born 28 July 1978, Palmerston North, Manawatu, New Zealand) is a New Zealand cricketer. He is a big hitting left-handed batsman and a right-arm fast-medium bowler. Because of his abilities with both bat and ball, he is a regular fixture in the current New Zealand test and one day sides. He usually bats around 6 or 7 for New Zealand. Oram’s bowling has been more successful in the shorter format: he has reached as high as 5 in the ICC ODI Player Rankings as a bowler. Standing at 1.98m (6ft 6 in), he was a schoolboy representative as a soccer goalkeeper. He has also played for Manawatu in the Hawke Cup.

He plays for the Chennai Super Kings in the Indian Premier League.

More details about his career statistics and everything else can be found by right clicking HERE

Here is a brilliant example of his hard hitting and punishing batting —>>

Posted in all-rounder, Batter, black caps, bowler, Chennai Super Kings, Hawke Cup, Indian Premier League, Jacob Oram, Manawatu, new zealand | Leave a Comment »

Player Profile(#19)…Jacob Oram(New Zealand)

Posted by wildkiwi25 on April 24, 2008

Photobucket

Jacob David Philip Oram (born 28 July 1978, Palmerston North, Manawatu, New Zealand) is a New Zealand cricketer. He is a big hitting left-handed batsman and a right-arm fast-medium bowler. Because of his abilities with both bat and ball, he is a regular fixture in the current New Zealand test and one day sides. He usually bats around 6 or 7 for New Zealand. Oram’s bowling has been more successful in the shorter format: he has reached as high as 5 in the ICC ODI Player Rankings as a bowler. Standing at 1.98m (6ft 6 in), he was a schoolboy representative as a soccer goalkeeper. He has also played for Manawatu in the Hawke Cup.

He plays for the Chennai Super Kings in the Indian Premier League.

More details about his career statistics and everything else can be found by right clicking HERE

Here is a brilliant example of his hard hitting and punishing batting —>>

Posted in all-rounder, Batter, black caps, bowler, Chennai Super Kings, Hawke Cup, Indian Premier League, Jacob Oram, Manawatu, new zealand | Leave a Comment »

Player Profile(#16)…Shane Bond(New Zealand)

Posted by wildkiwi25 on April 9, 2008

Shane Bond going for the catch

shane bond gets the catch

Shane Bond with pretty Indian girl

Shane Edward Bond (born 7 June 1975 in Christchurch, New Zealand) is a New Zealand cricketer. He has represented New Zealand in Test match, One Day International and Twenty20 International cricket as well as playing for Canterbury in New Zealand domestic cricket and Warwickshire in English domestic cricket. Bond is a right-arm fast bowler.

Bond’s career has been plagued with injuries, chiefly recurring stress fractures of the back. He had surgery in 2004 to try and prevent further injury, but it was only partially successful. In recent years he has suffered back problems, knee injuries and an abdominal tear. These problems, in conjunction with a late start to his fully professional cricket career, have limited his appearances in both international and domestic cricket. Since his debut in the 2001/02 season, he has only managed to appear in 17 Test matches for New Zealand.

His international career is currently on hold, and may possibly be finished, after he initially signed for, and consequently played for the Delhi Giants in, the ‘rebel’ Indian Cricket League during March 2008, causing the New Zealand cricket board to terminate his central contract in January 2008. His decision to take part in the Indian Cricket League has also affected his future in domestic cricket, with it currently still unclear as to whether he will be able to fulfill a contract to play cricket in England for Hampshire during 2008.

Bond is a fast bowler capable of regularly bowling at speeds in excess of 145 km/h. He was first recorded breaking the 150km/h barrier in the 2001/02 season. In contrast to some other fully fast bowlers, Bond combines pace with control and accuracy, assets which have seen him find success in all forms of the game.

Limiting the statistics to players who have bowled at least 1000 balls, he holds the record for the best strike rate (27.5) in ODI’s and has the third best average (19.32). In Tests, limiting the statistics to player who have bowled at least 2000 balls, his Test strike rate, (38.9), currently ranks fourth in the all-time list and his average (22.39) currently sits at number 40. Amongst current players who have bowled over 2000 balls in Tests, only Stuart Clark, Muttiah Muralitharan and Dale Steyn have better averages.

Bond usually bats quite far down the batting order, at number nine or later, but he is capable of slogging some quick runs towards the end of an innings.

Bond made his first-class debut for Canterbury on 20 January 1997, in a match against Central Districts. He was relatively old when he made his first-class debut, at 21 years and 7 months old, and for the first few years of his career he played relatively little first-class cricket, playing only 12 matches for Canterbury in his first three seasons. His bowling figures in his first three seasons were solid but unspectacular. Bond stopped playing cricket professionally for one year after he joined the New Zealand Police in November 1999, which left him no time to pursue his cricket career. He returned to play several games for Canterbury in the 2000/01 season and had reasonable success despite his year off. He was handed his first international opportunity early in the 2001/02 season, and from then, due to injuries and international commitments he was mainly unavailable to play for Canterbury, and only appeared in eight State Championship and ten State Shield games in seven seasons.

He made a brief appearance in English county cricket in the 2002 season, representing Warwickshire in three County Championship games, finding moderate success with the ball. He has signed to return to England to play for Hampshire in the 2008 season, but whether he will be able to play due to his association with the Indian Cricket League is still not decided.

Bond appeared in seven Twenty20 games for the Delhi Giants during the March/April 2008 version of the league, but had little success, only taking two wickets at 86.50.

Bond enjoyed strong success against Australia during his career. On 26 January 2002, Shane Bond bowled New Zealand to victory over Australia, getting 5/25. In the Cricket World Cup, Bond achieved 6/23 again against Australia (New Zealand’s best bowling performance in ODIs at the time)[citation needed] – which including being on a hat-trick after getting Damien Martyn and Brad Hogg in consecutive deliveries. Bond struggled with a number of back problems which cause soft tissue to break.[citation needed] These injuries had ruled him out in a lot of international cricket in the past.

Against India, Bond saved New Zealand from defeat with a spell of 6/19, including the wickets of Rahul Dravid, Sourav Ganguly and Virender Sehwag. These are the best One Day International bowling performances by a New Zealander to date.[citation needed]

In a Test match against the West Indies, Bond took 5-69, his fourth 5-wicket haul in just 13 International Tests Matches, and went on to win the man of the match award. He stated that this was one of his best ever bowling efforts. New Zealand went on to defeat the West Indies by 27 runs.[citation needed]

On 14 January 2007, Bond took a hat-trick in the last over against Australia in a one-day international at the Bellerive Oval, dismissing Cameron White, Andrew Symonds and Nathan Bracken in successive deliveries, becoming just the second New Zealand player to take a hat-trick in limited-overs international cricket, although the game was still lost by 105 runs.

A graph showing Bond’s test career bowling statistics and how they have varied over time.Shortly Afterwards on 23 January 2007 Bond became the second-fastest bowler in history to take 100 One-Day wickets, behind Pakistan’s Saqlain Mushtaq by one match. Bond, however, needed 54 fewer deliveries to achieve the feat, and was the fastest bowler to take 100 wickets in terms of number of deliveries bowled.[citation needed]

On 16 February 2007, Bond took 5-23, his fourth 5-wicket haul, in the 2007 Chappell-Hadlee Trophy. This enabled New Zealand to dismiss Australia for 149, giving the New Zealanders a 10-wicket victory over them, the Australians’ heaviest one day defeat, and although he sat out the final game in the Chappell-Hadlee series, he was instrumental in the eventual 3-0 series win for the first time in Chappell-Hadlee Trophy history.[citation needed]

On May 16, 2007, Shane Bond was named New Zealand cricketer of the year for the 2006/2007 season and the best bowler for that season. In September Bond was named in the ICC’s best performing test side over the past year.

A breath of fresh air since his introduction to Test cricket on the Australian tour of 2001-02, Shane Bond has given New Zealand a rare fast-bowling option. He is among the fastest bowlers in the world, and with his arrival the potency of the attack has increased. The quickest New Zealander to reach 50 one-day international wickets, including a national best of 6 for 22 against Australia in the 2003 World Cup, his potential is only limited by his susceptibility to injury, having suffered crippling stress-fractures in his feet and back. These injuries forced him to miss out on all cricket from May 2003, including a proposed stint with Warwickshire in the English County Championship that year. However, after passing a fitness test, he was picked for the tour of England in 2004, but flew home during the second Test after failing to recover from his back injury. His fast, inswinging yorker commands the respect of the best batsmen in the game – but only when he’s fit. He took 13 wickets at 9.23 against Zimbabwe in 2005, including 10 for 99 in the second Test at Bulawayo – his first ten-wicket haul – and in the process became the quickest among all New Zealand bowlers to get to 50 Test wickets, achieving the mark in only his 12th match. Unsurprisingly, he again broke down and was out of the game for another nine months with a knee injury. Another comeback was cut short when back problems kept him out of the first Champions Trophy game in 2006 but he returned again and was destructive in the CB Series in Australia. His sore back surfaced once more in Australia but he overcame it and continued his outstanding form against the world champions. His 5 for 23 in the first game of the Chappell-Hadlee Trophy in February 2007 augured well for Bond’s second World Cup. He picked up 13 wickets in the tournament and finished as the most economical bowler. However, frequent injuries interrupted Bond’s career and the fast bowler joined the lucrative Indian Cricket League in 2008. The New Zealand board reacted to this move by terminating Bond’s national contract although they did not rule out the possibility of his return.

Shane Bond Bowling

Shane Bond gets a wicket

  • View the full list of 190 articles relating to Shane Bond

    *Acknowledgements to Cricinfo.com, Wikipedia.com, Cricinfo staff, Owners of pictures, and associated links

  • Posted in black caps, bowler, Canterbury, Cricket, Delhi Giants, Fast, new zealand, Shane Bond | Leave a Comment »

    Player Profile(#16)…Shane Bond(New Zealand)

    Posted by wildkiwi25 on April 9, 2008

    Shane Bond going for the catch

    shane bond gets the catch

    Shane Bond with pretty Indian girl

    Shane Edward Bond (born 7 June 1975 in Christchurch, New Zealand) is a New Zealand cricketer. He has represented New Zealand in Test match, One Day International and Twenty20 International cricket as well as playing for Canterbury in New Zealand domestic cricket and Warwickshire in English domestic cricket. Bond is a right-arm fast bowler.

    Bond’s career has been plagued with injuries, chiefly recurring stress fractures of the back. He had surgery in 2004 to try and prevent further injury [1], but it was only partially successful. In recent years he has suffered back problems, knee injuries and an abdominal tear. These problems, in conjunction with a late start to his fully professional cricket career, have limited his appearances in both international and domestic cricket. Since his debut in the 2001/02 season, he has only managed to appear in 17 Test matches for New Zealand.

    His international career is currently on hold, and may possibly be finished [2], after he initially signed for, and consequently played for the Delhi Giants in, the ‘rebel’ Indian Cricket League during March 2008, causing the New Zealand cricket board to terminate his central contract in January 2008 [3]. His decision to take part in the Indian Cricket League has also affected his future in domestic cricket, with it currently still unclear as to whether he will be able to fulfill a contract to play cricket in England for Hampshire during 2008 [4].

    Bond is a fast bowler (see fast bowling for clarification of terminology) capable of regularly bowling at speeds in excess of 145 km/h. He was first recorded breaking the 150km/h barrier in the 2001/02 season [5]. In contrast to some other fully fast bowlers, Bond combines pace with control and accuracy, assets which have seen him find success in all forms of the game.

    Limiting the statistics to players who have bowled at least 1000 balls, he holds the record for the best strike rate (27.5) in ODI’s [6] and has the third best average (19.32) [7]. In Tests, limiting the statistics to player who have bowled at least 2000 balls, his Test strike rate, (38.9), currently ranks fourth in the all-time list [8] and his average (22.39) currently sits at number 40 [9]. Amongst current players who have bowled over 2000 balls in Tests, only Stuart Clark, Muttiah Muralitharan and Dale Steyn have better averages.

    Bond usually bats quite far down the batting order, at number nine or later, but he is capable of slogging some quick runs towards the end of an innings.

    Bond made his first-class debut for Canterbury on 20 January 1997, in a match against Central Districts [10]. He was relatively old when he made his first-class debut, at 21 years and 7 months old, and for the first few years of his career he played relatively little first-class cricket, playing only 12 matches for Canterbury in his first three seasons. His bowling figures in his first three seasons were solid but unspectacular [11]. Bond stopped playing cricket professionally for one year after he joined the New Zealand Police in November 1999, which left him no time to pursue his cricket career [12]. He returned to play several games for Canterbury in the 2000/01 season and had reasonable success despite his year off [13]. He was handed his first international opportunity early in the 2001/02 season, and from then, due to injuries and international commitments he was mainly unavailable to play for Canterbury, and only appeared in eight State Championship [14] and ten State Shield games [15] in seven seasons.

    He made a brief appearance in English county cricket in the 2002 season, representing Warwickshire in three County Championship games, finding moderate success with the ball. He has signed to return to England to play for Hampshire in the 2008 season, but whether he will be able to play due to his association with the Indian Cricket League is still not decided.

    Bond appeared in seven Twenty20 games for the Delhi Giants during the March/April 2008 version of the league, but had little success, only taking two wickets at 86.50 [16].

    Bond enjoyed strong success against Australia during his career. On 26 January 2002, Shane Bond bowled New Zealand to victory over Australia, getting 5/25. In the Cricket World Cup, Bond achieved 6/23 again against Australia (New Zealand’s best bowling performance in ODIs at the time)[citation needed] – which including being on a hat-trick after getting Damien Martyn and Brad Hogg in consecutive deliveries. Bond struggled with a number of back problems which cause soft tissue to break.[citation needed] These injuries had ruled him out in a lot of international cricket in the past.

    Against India, Bond saved New Zealand from defeat with a spell of 6/19, including the wickets of Rahul Dravid, Sourav Ganguly and Virender Sehwag. These are the best One Day International bowling performances by a New Zealander to date.[citation needed]

    In a Test match against the West Indies, Bond took 5-69, his fourth 5-wicket haul in just 13 International Tests Matches, and went on to win the man of the match award. He stated that this was one of his best ever bowling efforts. New Zealand went on to defeat the West Indies by 27 runs.[citation needed]

    On 14 January 2007, Bond took a hat-trick in the last over against Australia in a one-day international at the Bellerive Oval, dismissing Cameron White, Andrew Symonds and Nathan Bracken in successive deliveries, becoming just the second New Zealand player to take a hat-trick in limited-overs international cricket, although the game was still lost by 105 runs.[23]

    A graph showing Bond’s test career bowling statistics and how they have varied over time.Shortly Afterwards on 23 January 2007 Bond became the second-fastest bowler in history to take 100 One-Day wickets, behind Pakistan’s Saqlain Mushtaq by one match. Bond, however, needed 54 fewer deliveries to achieve the feat, and was the fastest bowler to take 100 wickets in terms of number of deliveries bowled.[citation needed]

    On 16 February 2007, Bond took 5-23, his fourth 5-wicket haul, in the 2007 Chappell-Hadlee Trophy. This enabled New Zealand to dismiss Australia for 149, giving the New Zealanders a 10-wicket victory over them, the Australians’ heaviest one day defeat, and although he sat out the final game in the Chappell-Hadlee series, he was instrumental in the eventual 3-0 series win for the first time in Chappell-Hadlee Trophy history.[citation needed]

    On May 16, 2007, Shane Bond was named New Zealand cricketer of the year for the 2006/2007 season and the best bowler for that season. In September Bond was named in the ICC’s best performing test side over the past year.

    A breath of fresh air since his introduction to Test cricket on the Australian tour of 2001-02, Shane Bond has given New Zealand a rare fast-bowling option. He is among the fastest bowlers in the world, and with his arrival the potency of the attack has increased. The quickest New Zealander to reach 50 one-day international wickets, including a national best of 6 for 22 against Australia in the 2003 World Cup, his potential is only limited by his susceptibility to injury, having suffered crippling stress-fractures in his feet and back. These injuries forced him to miss out on all cricket from May 2003, including a proposed stint with Warwickshire in the English County Championship that year. However, after passing a fitness test, he was picked for the tour of England in 2004, but flew home during the second Test after failing to recover from his back injury. His fast, inswinging yorker commands the respect of the best batsmen in the game – but only when he’s fit. He took 13 wickets at 9.23 against Zimbabwe in 2005, including 10 for 99 in the second Test at Bulawayo – his first ten-wicket haul – and in the process became the quickest among all New Zealand bowlers to get to 50 Test wickets, achieving the mark in only his 12th match. Unsurprisingly, he again broke down and was out of the game for another nine months with a knee injury. Another comeback was cut short when back problems kept him out of the first Champions Trophy game in 2006 but he returned again and was destructive in the CB Series in Australia. His sore back surfaced once more in Australia but he overcame it and continued his outstanding form against the world champions. His 5 for 23 in the first game of the Chappell-Hadlee Trophy in February 2007 augured well for Bond’s second World Cup. He picked up 13 wickets in the tournament and finished as the most economical bowler. However, frequent injuries interrupted Bond’s career and the fast bowler joined the lucrative Indian Cricket League in 2008. The New Zealand board reacted to this move by terminating Bond’s national contract although they did not rule out the possibility of his return.

    Shane Bond Bowling

    Shane Bond gets a wicket

  • View the full list of 190 articles relating to Shane Bond

    *Acknowledgements to Cricinfo.com, Wikipedia.com, Cricinfo staff, Owners of pictures, and associated links

  • Posted in black caps, bowler, Canterbury, Cricket, Delhi Giants, Fast, new zealand, Shane Bond | Leave a Comment »

    In the International Spotlight…New Zealand Cricket

    Posted by wildkiwi25 on March 20, 2008

    nz cricketers dressed in Beige for twenty20

    shane bond

    The New Zealand cricket team, also known as the Black Caps, played their first Test in 1929-30 against England in Christchurch, New Zealand, becoming the fifth Test nation. It took the team until 1955-56 to win a Test, against the West Indies at Eden Park in Auckland. They played their first ODI in the 1972-73 season against Pakistan in Christchurch.

    The current Test captain is Daniel Vettori. He replaces the Black Caps’ most successful captain, Stephen Fleming who led New Zealand to 28 Test victories, more than twice as many as any other captain. Vettori lost his first match as captain (vs South Africa) by 358 runs, New Zealand’s worst ever defeat by runs.
    The New Zealand cricket team became known as the Black Caps in January 1998, after its sponsor at the time, Clear Communications, held a competition to choose a name for the team.

    As of October 2007, the New Zealand team has played 332 Test matches, winning 18.67%, losing 39.45% and drawing 41.86% of its games.

    DOMESTIC TEAMS:
    New Zealand Cricket involves the following first-class teams:

    ·Auckland Aces
    ·Canterbury Wizards
    ·Central Districts Stags
    ·Northern Districts Knights
    ·Otago Volts
    ·Wellington Firebirds

    CRICKET DEVELOPMENT:
    New Zealand Cricket has established High Performance Cricket training centre based at Lincoln University. It also operates a grassroots development programme for school children called ‘MILO Kiwi Cricket’ . John Wright, former NZ opening batsman, was appointed acting high performance manager for NZC in November 2007.
    New Zealand has many private cricket academies and the Bracewell Cricket Academy based at Rathkeale College is one of the largest cricket academies, providing an Overseas Cricket Development Programme, a Pre-Season Coaching Camp, a Festival of Cricket.

    There are around 100,000 registered cricketers in New Zealand. By way of comparison, Australia and the U.K. have around 500,000 each. According to Mark O’Neill, New Zealand’s batting coach from 2007-09, the competition at club level in NZ is nowhere near as intense as in Australia.

    “In Sydney there are 20 first grade teams, each club has five grades. To get to first grade you’ve got to be a friggin’ good player and once you get there the competition is very, very fierce. Unfortunately it’s not the same standard [in NZ]. Competition is everything and the only way the New Zealand guys are going to get that is to play the world’s best players.”

    TOURNAMENT HISTORY:

    World Cup
    ·1975: Semi Finals
    ·1979: Semi Finals
    ·1983: First round
    ·1987: First round
    ·1992: Semi Finals
    ·1996: Quarter Finals
    ·1999: Semi Finals
    ·2003: 5th Place
    ·2007: Semi Finals

    Mini World Cup
    ·ICC Knockout 1998: Quarter Finals
    ·ICC Knockout 2000: Won
    ·ICC Champions Trophy 2002: First round
    ·ICC Champions Trophy 2004: First round
    ·ICC Champions Trophy 2006: Semi Finals

    Twenty20 World Championship
    ·2007: Semi Finals

    Commonwealth Games
    ·1998: Bronze medal

    World Championship of Cricket
    ·1985: Fourth

    Austral-Asia Cup
    ·1986: Semi Finals
    ·1990: Semi Finals
    ·1994: Semi Finals

    TOURNAMENT VICTORIES:
    ·ICC Knock-Out Trophy Nairobi Gymkhana Club Nairobi Kenya 2000. New Zealand beat India in the final.

    ·2003 Bank Alfala Series Trophy held in Sri Lanka (New Zealand, Pakistan,Sri Lanka)
    ·2004 NatWest Series Trophy held in England (West Indies, England,New Zealand).
    ·2005 Videocon TriSeries held in Zimbabwe (India, Zimbabwe,New Zealand).

    WORLD RECORDS:
    ·Richard Hadlee, one of New Zealand and the world’s best all-rounders, took the world record for most Test wickets (374) vs India at Bangalore in 1988. He lost the record to Kapil Dev. Hadlee was the first bowler to reach 400 Test wickets vs India at Christchurch in 1990

    ·Andrew Jones and Martin Crowe held the highest ever 3rd-wicket partnership in Tests which at the time was the highest partnership for any wicket.

    ·Brian Hastings and Richard Collinge together scored 151 runs for the highest ever 10th-wicket partnership against Pakistan in 1973.

    ·Nathan Astle scored Test cricket’s fastest ever double century versus England Christchurch 2002. He scored 200 off 153 balls with the second hundred coming off just 39 deliveries. He was eventually out for 222 — the dreaded double Nelson. He knocked the first hundred off 114 balls. Astle smashed the record by 59 balls, previously held by Adam Gilchrist Australia vs South Africa Johannesburg 2002).

    ·Geoff Allott holds the record for the longest time taken to score a duck. South Africa Auckland 1999. He faced 77 balls in 101 minutes for his zero score.

    ·Danny Morrison held another “unwanted” record for the most ducks in Test cricket(24)
    . He lost the record to Courtney Walsh.

    ·Chris Cairns and his father Lance Cairns are one of the two father-son combination to each claim 100 Test wickets, South Africa’s Peter and Shaun Pollock being the other.

    ·Chris Cairns held the record for the most Test sixes. He passed Viv Richards record of 84 (vs England, Lord’s, London, 2004) and retired from Test cricket with 87. He has since been passed by both Adam Gilchrist (the current record holder) and Brian Lara.

    ·Chris Harris is the only New Zealand cricketer to have taken 200 wickets in ODIs. (vs England, Lord’s, London, 2004). He is only the second player in ODIs to complete the 4000 run / 200 wicket double. (The other is Sri Lankan Sanath Jayasuriya). He holds the record for the most ODI caught and bowled dismissals, with 29.

    ·Fast bowler Shane Bond holds the best strike rate in the history of One Day International cricket of 26.5 (one player out for every 26.5 balls bowled).

    ·John Bracewell became the first – and so far only – substitute fielder to take four catches in a One-Day International, vs Australia in Adelaide on 23 November 1980.

    ·The New Zealand team holds the dubious honour of the record for the most consecutive Test series played without a win – 30 series between 1929-30 and 1969-70 (40 years), comfortably ahead of Bangladesh on 16 series.

    ·Another unenviable distinction is the largest margin defeat in the Cricket World Cup, by 215 runs, by Australia. (April 2007).

    Notable
    ·New Zealand dismissed Zimbabwe (Harare 2005) twice in the same day for totals of 59 and 99. Zimbabwe became only the second team (after India Manchester 1952) to be dismissed twice in the same day. The whole Test was completed inside two days.

    ·Daniel Vettori scored NZ’s fastest Test century. (vs Zimbabwe Harare 2005). Vettori needed only 82 balls to reach the 100 mark.

    ·In the same match, he became the third NZ cricketer (after Richard Hadlee and Chris Cairns) to take more than 200 Test wickets.

    ·Lou Vincent holds the record for the highest one-day cricket innings by a New Zealander of 172 (vs Zimbabwe Bulawayo 2005). The previous best was Glenn Turner 171 not out (vs East Africa Birmingham 1975). Vincent and captain Stephen Fleming broke the New Zealand one-day opening partnership record against all countries. Their total of 204 beat Fleming and Nathan Astle’s 193 (vs Pakistan Dunedin 2000-2001). The team total of 397 was just one run short of the then record one-day total of 398 (Sri Lanka vs Kenya Kandy 1996).

    ·Brendon McCullum scored the fastest World Cup (2007) fifty (off 20 balls) for New Zealand against Canada, beating Mark Boucher’s 21-ball record set against the Netherlands six days earlier.

    ·In a match for the New Zealanders (i.e., the New Zealand national team playing a tour match against non-test opposition) at Scarborough, Yorkshire, in 1986 vs the D.B. Close XI, Ken Rutherford scored 317 runs off just 245 balls, including 228 runs in boundary fours and sixes. In terms of balls faced, this is almost certainly one of the four fastest first-class triple-centuries ever recorded.

    EXTERNAL RELATED LINKS:

  • BLACKCAPS official website
  • New Zealand cricket
  • Beige Brigade Official Website
  • Cricinfo New Zealand
  • A somewhat wacky site – Fun with the Black Caps
  • Cricket database
  • Runs on the board – New Zealand cricket (NZHistory)
  • New Zealand Cricket website
  • New-zealand Cricket News
  • Black Caps website
  • Bracewell Cricket Academy
  • New Zealand Cricket Blog

    REFERENCE LINKS:

  • Cricinfo Test Team Records page

    SEE ALSO:

  • List of New Zealand cricketers
  • New Zealand national cricket captains
  • New Zealand women’s cricket team
  • Beige Brigade Blackcaps Supporters

    New-Zealand-team-Natwest-Series-trophy

    Ross Taylor

    *Acknowledgements to Cricinfo.com, Wikipedia.org and other related sites/links in this article/post.

  • Posted in beige brigade, black caps, Daniel Vettori, Domestic, new zealand, ODI, one day international, Richard Hadlee, State Shield, stephen fleming, Test, test cricket, twenty20 | Leave a Comment »

    In the International Spotlight…New Zealand Cricket

    Posted by wildkiwi25 on March 19, 2008

    nz cricketers dressed in Beige for twenty20

    shane bond

    The New Zealand cricket team, also known as the Black Caps, played their first Test in 1929-30 against England in Christchurch, New Zealand, becoming the fifth Test nation. It took the team until 1955-56 to win a Test, against the West Indies at Eden Park in Auckland. They played their first ODI in the 1972-73 season against Pakistan in Christchurch.

    The current Test captain is Daniel Vettori. He replaces the Black Caps’ most successful captain, Stephen Fleming who led New Zealand to 28 Test victories, more than twice as many as any other captain. Vettori lost his first match as captain (vs South Africa) by 358 runs, New Zealand’s worst ever defeat by runs.
    The New Zealand cricket team became known as the Black Caps in January 1998, after its sponsor at the time, Clear Communications, held a competition to choose a name for the team.

    As of October 2007, the New Zealand team has played 332 Test matches, winning 18.67%, losing 39.45% and drawing 41.86% of its games.[1]

    DOMESTIC TEAMS:
    New Zealand Cricket involves the following first-class teams:

    ·Auckland Aces
    ·Canterbury Wizards
    ·Central Districts Stags
    ·Northern Districts Knights
    ·Otago Volts
    ·Wellington Firebirds

    CRICKET DEVELOPMENT:
    New Zealand Cricket has established High Performance Cricket training centre based at Lincoln University. It also operates a grassroots development programme for school children called ‘MILO Kiwi Cricket’ . John Wright, former NZ opening batsman, was appointed acting high performance manager for NZC in November 2007.
    New Zealand has many private cricket academies and the Bracewell Cricket Academy based at Rathkeale College is one of the largest cricket academies, providing an Overseas Cricket Development Programme, a Pre-Season Coaching Camp, a Festival of Cricket.

    There are around 100,000 registered cricketers in New Zealand. By way of comparison, Australia and the U.K. have around 500,000 each.[1][2] According to Mark O’Neill, New Zealand’s batting coach from 2007-09, the competition at club level in NZ is nowhere near as intense as in Australia.

    “In Sydney there are 20 first grade teams, each club has five grades. To get to first grade you’ve got to be a friggin’ good player and once you get there the competition is very, very fierce. Unfortunately it’s not the same standard [in NZ]. Competition is everything and the only way the New Zealand guys are going to get that is to play the world’s best players.”[3]

    TOURNAMENT HISTORY:

    World Cup
    ·1975: Semi Finals
    ·1979: Semi Finals
    ·1983: First round
    ·1987: First round
    ·1992: Semi Finals
    ·1996: Quarter Finals
    ·1999: Semi Finals
    ·2003: 5th Place
    ·2007: Semi Finals

    Mini World Cup
    ·ICC Knockout 1998: Quarter Finals
    ·ICC Knockout 2000: Won
    ·ICC Champions Trophy 2002: First round
    ·ICC Champions Trophy 2004: First round
    ·ICC Champions Trophy 2006: Semi Finals

    Twenty20 World Championship
    ·2007: Semi Finals

    Commonwealth Games
    ·1998: Bronze medal

    World Championship of Cricket
    ·1985: Fourth

    Austral-Asia Cup
    ·1986: Semi Finals
    ·1990: Semi Finals
    ·1994: Semi Finals

    TOURNAMENT VICTORIES:
    ·ICC Knock-Out Trophy Nairobi Gymkhana Club Nairobi Kenya 2000. New Zealand beat India in the final.

    ·2003 Bank Alfala Series Trophy held in Sri Lanka (New Zealand, Pakistan,Sri Lanka)
    ·2004 NatWest Series Trophy held in England (West Indies, England,New Zealand).
    ·2005 Videocon TriSeries held in Zimbabwe (India, Zimbabwe,New Zealand).

    WORLD RECORDS:
    ·Richard Hadlee, one of New Zealand and the world’s best all-rounders, took the world record for most Test wickets (374) vs India at Bangalore in 1988. He lost the record to Kapil Dev. Hadlee was the first bowler to reach 400 Test wickets vs India at Christchurch in 1990

    ·Andrew Jones and Martin Crowe held the highest ever 3rd-wicket partnership in Tests which at the time was the highest partnership for any wicket. [3].

    ·Brian Hastings and Richard Collinge together scored 151 runs for the highest ever 10th-wicket partnership against Pakistan in 1973. [4].

    ·Nathan Astle scored Test cricket’s fastest ever double century versus England Christchurch 2002 [5]. He scored 200 off 153 balls with the second hundred coming off just 39 deliveries. He was eventually out for 222 — the dreaded double Nelson. He knocked the first hundred off 114 balls. Astle smashed the record by 59 balls, previously held by Adam Gilchrist Australia vs South Africa Johannesburg 2002).

    ·Geoff Allott holds the record for the longest time taken to score a duck. South Africa Auckland 1999. He faced 77 balls in 101 minutes for his zero score.

    ·Danny Morrison held another “unwanted” record for the most ducks in Test cricket(24)
    . He lost the record to Courtney Walsh.

    ·Chris Cairns and his father Lance Cairns are one of the two father-son combination to each claim 100 Test wickets, South Africa’s Peter and Shaun Pollock being the other.

    ·Chris Cairns held the record for the most Test sixes [7]. He passed Viv Richards record of 84 (vs England, Lord’s, London, 2004) and retired from Test cricket with 87. He has since been passed by both Adam Gilchrist (the current record holder) and Brian Lara.

    ·Chris Harris is the only New Zealand cricketer to have taken 200 wickets in ODIs. (vs England, Lord’s, London, 2004). He is only the second player in ODIs to complete the 4000 run / 200 wicket double. (The other is Sri Lankan Sanath Jayasuriya). He holds the record for the most ODI caught and bowled dismissals, with 29.[2]

    ·Fast bowler Shane Bond holds the best strike rate in the history of One Day International cricket of 26.5 (one player out for every 26.5 balls bowled) [8].

    ·John Bracewell became the first – and so far only – substitute fielder to take four catches in a One-Day International, vs Australia in Adelaide on 23 November 1980.

    ·The New Zealand team holds the dubious honour of the record for the most consecutive Test series played without a win – 30 series between 1929-30 and 1969-70 (40 years), comfortably ahead of Bangladesh on 16 series. [9]

    ·Another unenviable distinction is the largest margin defeat in the Cricket World Cup, by 215 runs, by Australia. (April 2007).

    Notable
    ·New Zealand dismissed Zimbabwe (Harare 2005) twice in the same day for totals of 59 and 99. Zimbabwe became only the second team (after India Manchester 1952) to be dismissed twice in the same day. The whole Test was completed inside two days.

    ·Daniel Vettori scored NZ’s fastest Test century. (vs Zimbabwe Harare 2005). Vettori needed only 82 balls to reach the 100 mark.

    ·In the same match, he became the third NZ cricketer (after Richard Hadlee and Chris Cairns) to take more than 200 Test wickets.

    ·Lou Vincent holds the record for the highest one-day cricket innings by a New Zealander of 172 (vs Zimbabwe Bulawayo 2005). The previous best was Glenn Turner 171 not out (vs East Africa Birmingham 1975). Vincent and captain Stephen Fleming broke the New Zealand one-day opening partnership record against all countries. Their total of 204 beat Fleming and Nathan Astle’s 193 (vs Pakistan Dunedin 2000-2001). The team total of 397 was just one run short of the then record one-day total of 398 (Sri Lanka vs Kenya Kandy 1996).

    ·Brendon McCullum scored the fastest World Cup (2007) fifty (off 20 balls) for New Zealand against Canada, beating Mark Boucher’s 21-ball record set against the Netherlands six days earlier.

    ·In a match for the New Zealanders (i.e., the New Zealand national team playing a tour match against non-test opposition) at Scarborough, Yorkshire, in 1986 vs the D.B. Close XI, Ken Rutherford scored 317 runs off just 245 balls, including 228 runs in boundary fours and sixes. In terms of balls faced, this is almost certainly one of the four fastest first-class triple-centuries ever recorded [3].

    EXTERNAL RELATED LINKS:

  • BLACKCAPS official website
  • New Zealand cricket
  • Beige Brigade Official Website
  • Cricinfo New Zealand
  • A somewhat wacky site – Fun with the Black Caps
  • Cricket database
  • Runs on the board – New Zealand cricket (NZHistory)
  • New Zealand Cricket website
  • New-zealand Cricket News
  • Black Caps website
  • Bracewell Cricket Academy
  • New Zealand Cricket Blog
  • REFERENCE LINKS:

  • ^ Cricinfo Test Team Records page retrieved on November 3, 2007
  • ^
    Winning without losing a wicket, and Kumble’s record. Cricinfo (January 12, 2004). Retrieved on 200702-21.
  • ^
    [1]
  • SEE ALSO:

  • List of New Zealand cricketers
  • New Zealand national cricket captains
  • New Zealand women’s cricket team
  • Beige Brigade Blackcaps Supporters
  • New-Zealand-team-Natwest-Series-trophy

    Ross Taylor

    *Acknowledgements to Cricinfo.com, Wikipedia.org and other related sites/links in this article/post.

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