Thursday, June 2, 2011

David Warner

David Warner      

David Andrew Warner
Full name David Andrew Warner
Born October 27, 1986, Paddington, New South Wales
Current age 24 years 218 days
Major teams Australia, Australia Under-19s, Delhi Daredevils, Durham, Middlesex, New South Wales, Northern Districts
Nickname Lloyd
Playing role Opening batsman
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak
Height 1.70 m
Batting and fielding averages
MatInnsNORunsHSAveBFSR100504s6sCtSt
ODIs7701066915.1413777.37018310
T20Is252507068928.24488144.67047031150
First-class712140611436.9060966.661148930
List A36362957165*28.1496798.9614942970
Twenty2010510552836107*28.362034139.42118296114450

Bowling averages
MatInnsBallsRunsWktsBBIBBMAveEconSR4w5w10
ODIs7------------
T20Is25------------
First-class771337711/01/1277.003.47133.0000
List A36612011831/111/1139.335.9040.0000
Twenty20105------------

Career statistics
ODI debutAustralia v South Africa at Hobart, Jan 18, 2009 scorecard
Last ODIScotland v Australia at Edinburgh, Aug 28, 2009 scorecard
 
T20I debutAustralia v South Africa at Melbourne, Jan 11, 2009 scorecard
Last T20IAustralia v England at Melbourne, Jan 14, 2011 scorecard
First-class debutNew South Wales v Western Australia at Sydney, Mar 5-8, 2009 scorecard
Last First-classTasmania v New South Wales at Hobart, Mar 17-21, 2011 scorecard
List A debutNew South Wales v Tasmania at Sydney, Jan 24, 2007 scorecard
Last List AVictoria v New South Wales at Melbourne, Feb 23, 2011 scorecard
Twenty20 debutQueensland v New South Wales at Brisbane, Jan 5, 2007 scorecard
Last Twenty20Delhi Daredevils v Pune Warriors at Delhi, May 21, 2011 scorecard

Recent matches
Bat & BowlTeamOppositionGroundMatch DateScorecard
19Delhiv PuneDelhi21 May 2011Twenty20
29Delhiv PunjabDharamsala15 May 2011Twenty20
21Delhiv ChennaiChennai12 May 2011Twenty20
1Delhiv MumbaiMumbai7 May 2011Twenty20
13Delhiv KochiDelhi2 May 2011Twenty20
3Delhiv KochiKochi30 Apr 2011Twenty20
2Delhiv KolkataDelhi28 Apr 2011Twenty20
7Delhiv BangaloreDelhi26 Apr 2011Twenty20
77Delhiv PunjabDelhi23 Apr 2011Twenty20
51Delhiv DeccanDelhi19 Apr 2011Twenty20

Profile
A diminutive and dangerous opening batsman, David Warner exploded onto the international scene in 2008-09. His breathtaking effort of 89 from 43 balls in his Twenty20 debut against South Africa at the MCG was all the more remarkable as he was the first man to walk out for Australia before playing first-class cricket since 1877. His call-up had been a surprise and it capped off an eventful couple of months in which he also earned an IPL contract with Delhi Daredevils and a deal to use a two-sided bat. The rewards had come after he began the summer in dynamic fashion with a then New South Wales one-day record of 165, and followed it with 97 from 54 balls in the FR Cup, proving his success was not a one-off. His 390 runs in that competition came at a strike-rate of 129 and an average of 55.71.
Promoted to the Australian one-day team, he struggled after a strong 69 in his second game and was dropped, but remained in the Twenty20 plans. Despite the attention of the national selectors, he could not convince the state panel that he was worthy of a Sheffield Shield debut until a late reshuffle enabled him to play the final match of the season. He picked up 42 off 48 balls in a satisfying start and then headed to South Africa as a Twenty20 specialist in Australia's squad. Shortly after he returned for the IPL and was named in the World Cup outfit. In the global Twenty20 tournament in England he scored 63 against West Indies, and followed up with 150 runs at strike-rate of 148 in the Caribbean a year later, when Australia reached the final.
He remains desperate to be considered in all forms and signed a three-year deal with the Blues in 2010 when there was the threat on an interstate move. Last summer he scored 89 runs in three Shield games and 195 in eight FR Cup appearances. It was again in the shortest form that he excelled and his strike-rate was an amazing 232.87 in five Twenty20 domestic fixtures, which came after he helped the Blues to the inaugural Champions League trophy in India.
Warner tasted state cricket for the first time in 2006-07 with two limited-overs and three Twenty20 appearances. An excellent fieldsman, Warner was used as a substitute in Australia's Test against South Africa in Perth in 2005-06. In the same season he was the leading run-scorer on the Australia Under-19 tour of India and went on to play at the Under-19 World Cup. A keen surfer, Warner completed his second year as a New South Wales rookie in 2007-08 after spending his winter at the Academy, a stint which ended early when he was sent home for general untidyness. He picked up an unbeaten 50 in his only FR Cup game that season, played four Twenty20 affairs and was promoted to a full deal following 760 grade runs at 54.29 with Easts.
Brydon Coverdale August 2010

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