Graeme Hick England (Eng) |
 | | Batting style | Right-handed batsman (RHB) | | Bowling type | Right arm off-break | | Tests | ODIs | | Matches | 65 | 120 | | Runs scored | 3383 | 3846 | | Batting average | 31.32 | 37.33 | | 100s/50s | 6/18 | 5/27 | | Top score | 178 | 126* | | BallsOvers bowled | 509.3 | 206 | | Wickets | 23 | 30 | | Bowling average | 56.78 | 34.20 | | 5 wickets in innings | 0 | 1 | | 10 wickets in match | 0 | N/A | | Best bowling | 4/126 | 5/33 | | Catches/stumpings | 90/0 | 64/0 | | As of 5 June 2006 Source: Cricinfo.com Image File history File links Flag_of_England. ...
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Cricket batsman A batsman in the sport of cricket is, depending on context: Any player in the act of batting. ...
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Batting average is a statistic in both baseball and cricket measuring the performance of baseball hitters and cricket batsmen, respectively. ...
Bold textBold textBold textBold textBold textBold textBold textBold textBold textBold textBold textBold textBold textBold textBold textBold textBold textBold textBold textA delivery or ball in cricket is a single action of bowling a...
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In the sport of cricket the word wicket has several distinct meanings: // Meanings of wicket Each wicket consists of three stumps, upright wooden poles that are hammered into the ground, topped with two wooden crosspieces, known as the bails. ...
Bowling average is a statistic measuring the performance of bowlers in the sport of cricket. ...
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| Graeme Ashley Hick (born 23 May 1966) is a former England cricketer. May 23 is the 143rd day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (144th in leap years). ...
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Hick was born in Salisbury, Rhodesia (now Harare, Zimbabwe), and was included in that country's World Cup squad at the age of 17. Although he was not selected for any of those matches, he did play in several warm-up games against county sides, and also toured Sri Lanka with Zimbabwe the following winter. National motto: Sit Nomine Digna (Latin: May she be worthy of the name} Official language English Capital Salisbury Political system Parliamentary system Form of government Republic - Last President John Wrathall - Prime Minister Ian Smith Area - Total - % water 390 580 km² 1% Population - 1978 est. ...
Harare (formerly Salisbury), estimated population 5,480,645 (2004), is the capital of Zimbabwe. ...
Cricket World Cup 2007 logo The ICC Cricket World Cup is the premier international championship of one-day cricket in the world. ...
In 1984, Hick came to England to play for Worcestershire. It is said that his off-spin bowling, rather than his batting, won him the nod over another player! In that first season, he played mostly for the Second XI - for whom he scored six hundreds - and for Kidderminster in the Birmingham League. His performances were impressive enough to lead Worcestershire to give him a first-team debut late in the season, and Hick repaid the county's faith in him by scoring 82 not out against Surrey. 1984 (MCMLXXXIV) was a leap year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Worcestershire CCC logo Worcestershire County Cricket Club is a county cricket club based at New Road, Worcester, England. ...
Spin bowling, sometimes known as slow bowling, is a technique used for bowling in the sport of cricket. ...
Batting has several meanings: In baseball, batting is the act of attempting to hit the ball thrown by the pitcher, in order to score runs. ...
Map sources for Kidderminster at grid reference SO825765 Kidderminster is a town in the Wyre Forest district of Worcestershire, England. ...
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In 1985, Hick played both for Zimbabwe (who were touring England) and for his county, and he enjoyed a successful season, ending with a batting average of over fifty, and scoring his first century: 230 for the Zimbabweans against Oxford University. In fact, for six English seasons, from 1985 to 1990 inclusive, Hick averaged more than fifty in first-class cricket every year. 1985 (MCMLXXXV) was a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
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In 1987, Hick was named as one of Wisden's five Cricketers of the Year. The following summer, he became the first man since Glenn Turner, and only the eighth in history, to hit a thousand runs before the end of May, with 410 of those runs coming in April alone, a record for that month until beaten by Ian Bell in 2005. 1988 also saw Hick make his highest first-class score - 405 not out against Somerset. 1987 (MCMLXXXVII) was a common year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
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Glenn Maitland Turner (b. ...
Ian Ronald Bell MBE (born 11 April 1982 in Coventry, West Midlands) is an English cricketer. ...
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1988 (MCMLXXXVIII) was a leap year starting on Friday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
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Hick's barrage of runs helped Worcestershire win back to back County Championships in 1988 and 1989, as well as the Sunday League in 1987. He also played a key part in Worcestershire's 1991 Benson and Hedges Cup Final win over Lancashire at Lords, and their 1994 Natwest Final win over Warwickshire. Since Zimbabwe did not have Test status in the 1980s, Hick decided to qualify by residency to play for England. Originally this would have meant him waiting ten years before becoming eligible, but this period was eventually reduced to seven years, not least because New Zealand were also aware of Hick's talents; in the 1988/89 winter he played for Northern Districts, and in a game against Auckland scored a first-class record 173 runs between tea and close of play. Test cricket is the longest form of the sport of cricket. ...
1988 (MCMLXXXVIII) was a leap year starting on Friday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
1989 (MCMLXXXIX) was a common year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
The Auckland Metropolitan Area, or Greater Auckland, in the North Island of New Zealand, is the largest urban area in New Zealand. ...
Hick made his England debut in 1991, in a One-Day International series against West Indies. He scored 86 not out in his third match, which raised expectations for his Test debut against the same opposition at Headingley, but could make only six in each innings. This poor form continued in the following matches, to the extent that he was dropped from the team before the end of the summer, although quickly recalled for the tour of New Zealand that followed. It should be noted, however, that Hick was not the only England batsman to struggle against the West Indies in the summer of 1991. While Hick averaged only 10 in that series, Michael Atherton averaged only 8.75. 1991 (MCMXCI) was a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
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This pattern - picked, dropped, recalled, dropped again - was to become a feature of Hick's international career. His best period for England came in the years between 1993 and 1996, when he averaged in the mid-forties, and showed flashes of his expected brilliance - his 141 on tour against a full-strength South African side is seen by some as his finest Test innings. But even then he was never quite accepted as a fixture in the side, and many believed that he was mentally fragile when confronted with truly hostile fast bowling; New Zealand coach John Bracewell called him a "flat-track bully" who could dominate county attacks but was intimidated by the intensity of Test cricket. 1993 (MCMXCIII) was a common year starting on Friday of the Gregorian calendar and marked the Beginning of the International Decade to Combat Racism and Racial Discrimination (1993-2003). ...
1996 (MCMXCVI) was a leap year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar, and was designated the International Year for the Eradication of Poverty. ...
Fast bowling, sometimes known as pace bowling, is one of the two approaches to bowling in the sport of cricket. ...
John Garry Bracewell (born 15 April 1958 in Auckland) is a New Zealand cricketer and coach. ...
Hick played the last of his 65 Tests in 2001, and ended with a modest batting average of just 31.32, the lowest of any England batsman to have played so many matches. His record in One-Day Internationals is considerably better, and for Worcestershire he has maintained throughout his career a very high standard, being the only batsman currently playing to have scored over 100 first-class centuries. He captained his county between 2000 and 2002. 2001: A Space Odyssey. ...
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Hick is a highly-regarded slip fielder, and has more first-class catches to his name than any other current outfielder. His off-spin bowling has also occasionally been decisive, although Hick himself has often seemed reluctant to make use of it. In the sport of cricket, a slip fielder (collectively, a slip cordon) is placed fairly close in on the off side of a batsman. ...
He was granted a testimonial by Worcestershire for the 2006 season. In promotion and advertising, a testimonial or endorsement consists of a written or spoken statement, sometimes from a public figure, sometimes from a private citizen, extolling the virtue of some product. ...
Worcestershire (pronounced ; abbreviated Worcs) is a county located in the West Midlands region of central England. ...
While Hick's eventual Test average of 31.32 is exceedingly paltry for a batsman of his reputation, the statistic on its own does not tell the full story. In 25 tests between Hick's first test hundred (178 vs India in Bombay, 1993) and his fourth test hundred (141 vs South Africa, Pretoria, 1995) Hick averaged 50. 20 of these tests were played against Australia, South Africa and the West Indies, 2 were played on the sub-continent against India and Sri Lanka, and only 3 were played against what could be called weak opposition in the form of New Zealand (and Hick's scores in those tests were not particularly high). For a batsman who many say "never cut it at test level", Hick was once ranked as high as no.7 (16/11/1995)in the official ICC test ratings, while only Brian Lara kept him off top spot of the One-Day ratings (10/01/1995). On closer inspection, it therefore appears that several factors (perhaps outwith his control) got in the way of Hick fulfilling his Test potential. In his autobiography, Mike Atherton felt Hick suffered from the huge expectation that even some great players don't have to deal with. Nasser Hussain argued that Hick simply put too much pressure on himself. Shane Warne, meanwhile, leapt to Hick's defence in his autobiography, claiming; "Hick is simply a quality player. As an outsider looking in he seemed to lack a bit of confidence at test level, but how much of that can be put down to the fact that he could never be sure of his place in the side?" Warne also stated that Hick timed the ball "as well as anybody". Referring to the omissions of Gatting, Smith, and Hick in the 1993 Ashes series, Warne said, "Amazing! If England had six better batsman than Gatting, Smith and Hick they should have been one of the top sides in the world rather than scraping around for the odd win." Warne makes a crucial point. Even in his best spell for England - where he averaged 50 in 25 tests (which, coincidentally, was more than Atherton, Thorpe, Stewart, Smith or a crux of other players not mooted as failures did at that time) - Hick was still dropped twice. Hick followed his breakthrough century against India with scores of 47, 68, 26, 22, 34, 20 and 64 at an average of 40 and yet found himself dropped after the 2nd Ashes test of 1993. Then, one test match after his fine second innings score of 67 helped England to level the 1995 series with the West Indies at Lords, Hick was again jettisoned after England's heavy defeat in the following test at Edgbaston. The fact that every other England batsman (bar Robin Smith) failed in that test match too did not matter. It is, therefore, submitted that England got out of Hick what they gave him. How can you drop a player so many times for little or no reason and then expect him to turn it on willy nilly when he's reselected? Compare the treatment that Hick got, to that of the treatment Atherton, Hussain, Thorpe, Stewart had in the same era. These players were all fixtures in England's test side no matter how poor their form was - their place rarely questioned. Hick, it could be argued, carried more expectation on his shoulders than any of the above players, but even when he played better than they did (as statistically he did between 1993 and 1995) his place was the most in doubt. The barrage of personal criticism and vitriol poured upon him by everyone from Raymond Illingworth to the English press can't be overlooked either. Mike Atherton's decision to declare when Hick was 98 not out in the 3rd Ashes test of 1994-95 was also a situation seemingly unique to Hick. During that innings, Hick had played positively and only spent 10 balls in the nineties. His partner at the crease, Graham Thorpe, monopolised the strike as Hick's hundred loomed. Atherton's declaration shocked many, especially Hick. England failed to win that test match and, in some quarters, Hick was blamed for putting himself before the team. He'd only spent 10 balls in the 90's, however, while Graham Thorpe had monopolised the strike in the closing overs of the innings. If a clear message was forthcoming from Atherton to the batsmen, then surely Thorpe would have given the strike to Hick more freely - particularly given that his ability to rotate the strike was one of Thorpe's natural forte's. Steve Waugh, who once described the young Hick as "the best 18 year old the game's ever seen", surprisingly sided with Hick in his autobiography. Waugh noted that an ashes hundred would have been a crucial stepping stone in Hick's improving test career, and that Atherton's "misguided" decision to declare set Hick back further, and was hardly the best way to support and encourage a player under the pressure that Hick always was. Three test matches later, Hick was again dropped. Like Shane Warne, Waugh notes Hick's exposure to very poor man-management in his time in the England set-up. Given Australia's reputation for tough mental attitudes and their derision for "soft touches", the fact that Warne and Waugh stick up for Hick so fervently is illuminating. Their compatriot, Justin Langer, refers to Hick as one of his cricketing "heroes" while Merv Hughes, who infamously sledged Hick in the 1993 Ashes series, once said, "I only sledged players I respected". With regard to Merv Hughes, many seem to recall that Hick "crumbled" or "wilted" in the face of the Australian's verbals. Hick was undoubtedly taken aback by Hughes, but he nonetheless averaged 42.6 in that series. Perhaps more of England's batsmen should have "crumbled" against Australia in the 1990's! As the above instance shows, too many people cared solely about the negative when it came to Hick. That is not to blame everyone but Hick for his shortcomings. There were indeed several times were Hick's technique, and temperament fell short. John Bracewell once called him "a flat-track bully" although the more reasonable of Hick's critics have said he was more of a "flat atmosphere bully" (ie the expectation of the occasion flustered him more than the opposition). Whatever he's dubbed, only Pakistan and New Zealand prevented Hick scoring a century against them in international cricket. A poor run of form in 1996 resulted in Hick's lengthy absence from international cricket. He returned to play a further 19 tests between 1998 and 2001, although he was never given a place with any degree of permanence. Hick did, however, manage a few crucial and memorable innings for England in this time. Aside from centuries against Zimbabwe and Sri Lanka, many recall his brave, blistering assault on Jason Gillespie in the 2nd Ashes test of 1998 - his 68 allowing England to avoid an innings defeat. Hick also contributed (with scores of 39 and 60) greatly to England's win in the low-scoring Melbourne Test of that series - although his performance there has been totally overlooked in favour of Dean Headley's fine 6/60 bowling figures. With the help of a young Michael Vaughan, Hick's rampaging 59 turned the crucial 4th test of the 2000 series vs the West Indies in England's favour. His last hurrah in the Test match arena came as a supporting player to Graham Thorpe's magnificent 64 not out in England's record-breaking win against Pakistan in Karachi in December 2000. His quickfire innings of 40 in the face of fading light, Pakistani gamesmanship, and his own poor form, helped take England to the brink of victory. Even Bob Willis - one of Hick's fiercest critics - was moved to call it "an immense contribution". While bowlers such as Warne, Gillespie, Hughes, Ambrose, Walsh, Donald, Muralitharan, Younis and Akram all preyed on Hick during his international career, none completely dominated him. Whereas Mike Atherton performed awfully against Glenn McGrath, Hick can point to a multitude of international innings where he belied both his opponents and his "soft" reputation. On inspection, it seems that Hick batted best in Test cricket in the company of both Mike Atherton and Graham Thorpe (the series vs South Africa in 1994 and 1995/6, the Ashes tour of 1994-95, the Karachi test in 2000, are some examples). One theory could be that, in Atherton and Thorpe, Hick batted with two mentally strong players who specialised in working the ball and rotating the strike rather than playing big shots. Rotating the strike and keeping the scoreboard ticking made it much harder for a bowler to "target" Hick and put him under sustained pressure. Hick eventually ran out of lives after his poor form continued to the Sri Lankan leg of 2000-01 winter tour. Given his generally poor form in the Test arena, this was understandable. Much less understandable, however, was Hick's permanent omission from the One-Day International set-up. Despite his Test ups and downs, Hick's ODI form for England was reliable and very respected. His man of the match performance in the 1992 World Cup semi-final against South Africa and his consecutive innings of 108, 66 not out, 126 not out, and 109 in the triangular event with Australia and Sri Lanka in 1999 testify to this. Later in 2001, Kent captain Matthew Fleming called for Hick (whom he deemed the "best one-day player in England") to replace Nasser Hussain as England's one-day captain. To date, Hick is rated 31st in the ICC's all-time table of ODI batsman. During his international career, Hick tended to polarise the English media. Bob Willis and Geoff Boycott were generally his fiercest critics, while Ian Botham, Christopher Martin-Jenkins and Mark Nicholas were particularly supportive. When asked if thought of his England career as a success or failure, Hick responded, "a bit of both." Nasser Hussain once commented, "I hope Graeme Hick doesn't feel unfulfilled now. He did achieve an awful lot in the game."
First-class cricket matches are those in which both teams have two innings each and which involve either international teams or the highest standard of domestic teams. ...
A night match at Old Trafford. ...
Batting average is a statistic in both baseball and cricket measuring the performance of baseball hitters and cricket batsmen, respectively. ...
Cricket ball A cricket ball is a hard, solid ball used to play cricket. ...
In the sport of cricket the word wicket has several distinct meanings: // Meanings of wicket Each wicket consists of three stumps, upright wooden poles that are hammered into the ground, topped with two wooden crosspieces, known as the bails. ...
Bowling average is a statistic measuring the performance of bowlers in the sport of cricket. ...
In the sport of cricket the word wicket has several distinct meanings: // Meanings of wicket Each wicket consists of three stumps, upright wooden poles that are hammered into the ground, topped with two wooden crosspieces, known as the bails. ...
An innings, or inning, is a segment of a game in any of a variety of sports â most notably baseball and cricket â during which a side takes its turn to bat. ...
In the sport of cricket the word wicket has several distinct meanings: // Meanings of wicket Each wicket consists of three stumps, upright wooden poles that are hammered into the ground, topped with two wooden crosspieces, known as the bails. ...
In the sport of cricket, the term stump has three different meanings: part of the wicket, a manner of dismissing a batsman, and the end of the days play (stumps). Part of the wicket The stumps are three vertical posts supporting the bails to form a wicket at each...
June 23 is the 174th day of the year (175 th in leap years) in the Gregorian Calendar, with 191 days remaining. ...
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Career milestones - 7 October 1983: First-class debut: Zimbabwe XI v Young West Indian XI at Harare
- 8 September 1984: First first-class match in England: Worcestershire v Surrey at The Oval, London
- 10 June 1985: Maiden first-class century: 230 for Zimbabwe v Oxford University at The Parks, Oxford
- 4 September 1985: Maiden first-class century for Worcestershire: 174 not out v Somerset at New Road, Worcester
- 24 June 1987: Highest score in one-day cricket: 172* for Worcestershire v Devon at New Road
- 1987: Named one of the Wisden Five Cricketers of the Year
- 6 May 1988: Highest first-class score: 405 not out for Worcs v Somerset, Taunton. During this innings he shared a Worcestershire record 265 for the 6th wicket with Steve Rhodes
- 28 May 1988: Reached 1000 first-class runs for the season before the end of May by making 172 v West Indians at New Road.
- 20 July 1988: In scoring 198, shared a Worcestershire record 205 (since broken) for the seventh wicket with Phil Newport v Yorkshire at New Road
- 24 July 1990: Fiftieth first-class century: 100* for Worcs v Glamorgan at Abergavenny, Wales (he had scored 252* in the first innings)
- 18-25 July 1990: His sequence of scores comprising 171* and 69* (Worcestershire v Somerset), 252* and 100* (Worcestershire v Glamorgan) and 53 (Worcestershire v Derbyshire) totalled 645 first-class runs without being dismissed, a record in the British Isles
- 23 May 1991: One Day International debut: v West Indies at Edgbaston, Birmingham
- 6 June 1991: Test debut: v West Indies at Headingley, Leeds
- 20 February 1993: Maiden Test century: 178 v India at Bombay, India
- 5 March 1993: Maiden One-day International century: 105* v India at Gwalior, India
- 1-3 July 1995: Best first-class bowling figures of five for 18 for Worcestershire v Leicestershire at New Road
- 9 May 1996: In scoring 215, shared Worcestershire record 300 for the second wicket with Phil Weston v India at New Road
- 18-19 September 1997: In scoring 303*, shared Worcestershire record 438* for the third wicket with Tom Moody v Hampshire at Southampton
- 31 May 1998: Hundredth first-class century: 134 for Worcs v Sussex at New Road
- 23 January 1999: Highest One-day International score: 126* v Sri Lanka at Adelaide, Australia
- 4 April 1999: Best one-day bowling figures of five for 19 for an England XI v Pakistan A in Lahore, Pakistan
- 20 February 2000: Best bowling figures in One-day Internationals of five for 33 v Zimbabwe at Harare, Zimbabwe
- 5 July 2004: Hit the then-highest score in the history of the Twenty20 Cup, 116* against Northamptonshire Steelbacks at Luton.
- 1 May 2005: Passed Kim Barnett's record aggregate of 9,002 National League runs.
- 20-23 May 2005: Took a Worcestershire record eight catches in the match (five in the first innings, three in the second) v Essex at Chelmsford
- 22 June 2006: Scored hundredth century for Worcestershire, 139 against Northamptonshire at New Road.
- 22 June 2006: Passed Denis Compton's total of 38,942 runs to become one of the top 20 all-time first class run scorers
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Phil Weston (born William Phillip Christopher Weston on June 16, 1973 in Durham) is an English cricketer. ...
Thomas Masson Moody (born October 2, 1965, Adelaide, South Australia) is a former Australian cricketer. ...
Sussex field against Derbyshire at Hove on 24 April 2005 The Arthur Gilligan stand at Hove The Pavilion at Hove Leaving the County Ground at Hove Sussex County Cricket Club is one of the 18 major counties which make up the English domestic cricket structure, representing the historic county of...
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Northamptonshire Cricket Club is one of the 18 major counties which make up the English domestic cricket structure. ...
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Kim John Barnett (born Stoke-on-Trent, 17 July 1960) was an English cricketer. ...
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External links - Graeme Hick Testimonial 2006 Site
- Graeme Hick Fans Viewpoint
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