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Mick Lewis      

Full name Michael Llewellyn Lewis

Born June 29, 1974, Greensborough, Victoria

Current age 35 years 226 days

Major teams Australia, Durham, Glamorgan, Victoria

Nickname Billy

Playing role Bowler

Batting style Right-hand bat

Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Height 1.83 m

Michael Llewellyn Lewis
Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 4s 6s Ct St
ODIs 7 1 1 4 4* - 4 100.00 0 0 0 0 1 0
T20Is 2 - - - - - - - - - - - 1 0
First-class 82 108 35 693 54* 9.49 0 1 35 0
List A 94 29 15 127 19 9.07 228 55.70 0 0 25 0
Twenty20 14 4 2 20 11* 10.00 19 105.26 0 0 1 1 1 0
Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
ODIs 7 7 341 391 7 3/56 3/56 55.85 6.87 48.7 0 0 0
T20Is 2 2 45 49 4 2/18 2/18 12.25 6.53 11.2 0 0 0
First-class 82 14751 8060 277 6/59 29.09 3.27 53.2 7 0
List A 94 4508 3694 121 5/48 5/48 30.52 4.91 37.2 2 1 0
Twenty20 14 14 305 350 29 4/10 4/10 12.06 6.88 10.5 3 0 0
Career statistics
ODI debut New Zealand v Australia at Wellington, Dec 7, 2005 scorecard
Last ODI South Africa v Australia at Johannesburg, Mar 12, 2006 scorecard
ODI statistics
T20I debut Australia v South Africa at Brisbane, Jan 9, 2006 scorecard
Last T20I South Africa v Australia at Johannesburg, Feb 24, 2006 scorecard
T20I statistics
First-class debut 1999/00
Last First-class Tasmania v Victoria at Hobart, Feb 12-15, 2007 scorecard
List A debut 1999/00
Last List A South Australia v Victoria at Adelaide, Oct 19, 2007 scorecard
Twenty20 debut Western Australia v Victoria at Perth, Jan 6, 2006 scorecard
Last Twenty20 Victoria v Tasmania at Melbourne, Jan 13, 2007 scorecard
Profile

The latest of the late bloomers, Mick Lewis grew up in regional Victoria, never made a junior state side and the Academy doesn't rate even a line on his resume. "I came through a different path," he says. "At a younger age I wasn't really that good at cricket, to tell you the truth." In his 20s he moved to Melbourne, joined the Northcote club to play grade cricket and steadily moved up the ranks, making his first-class debut as a 25-year-old.

A fast, accurate and skidding bowler with an aggressive attitude, he collected five wickets in the first innings of the 2000-01 Pura Cup final in Brisbane and showed a high level of consistency by capturing more than ...

The latest of the late bloomers, Mick Lewis grew up in regional Victoria, never made a junior state side and the Academy doesn't rate even a line on his resume. "I came through a different path," he says. "At a younger age I wasn't really that good at cricket, to tell you the truth." In his 20s he moved to Melbourne, joined the Northcote club to play grade cricket and steadily moved up the ranks, making his first-class debut as a 25-year-old.

A fast, accurate and skidding bowler with an aggressive attitude, he collected five wickets in the first innings of the 2000-01 Pura Cup final in Brisbane and showed a high level of consistency by capturing more than 25 Pura Cup victims in each of the four seasons before 2006-07. The 2004-05 summer was his best at state level as he picked up 38 wickets at 22.05 to earn a Cricket Australia contract, and he spent parts of the winter in Durham, where he was occasionally mentioned as an Ashes prospect, and in Pakistan with Australia A.

Influenced heavily by the fast bowler Rodney Hogg, Lewis became a one-day international aged 31 - the oldest since the 38-year-old Bob Holland in 1984-85 - and made an instant impact with 3 for 56 against New Zealand. Respected as a death bowler in domestic games, he delivered a nerveless final over of the second Chappell-Hadlee Series match and sealed a two-run win and the trophy with a desperate run out. "I had to do what I know I can do - bowl full and straight and at the stumps." Such qualities didn't help him at Johannesburg in March 2006, when he was smeared for 113 runs in his ten overs - the most ever conceded in a one-day international. The performance and an overall economy rate of 6.87 in his seven games led to him losing his Cricket Australia contract. The 2006-07 domestic season was a frustrating one for Lewis, who missed time with a hip muscle injury and was eventually dropped due to poor form. He finished with 16 Pura Cup wickets at 37.62 and added only one limited-overs game in 2007-08 before announcing his retirement.
Cricinfo staff January 2008

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Latest Articles
Latest Photos

Oct 29, 2007

Mick Lewis smashes one off Muttiah Muralitharan, Cricket Australia Chairman's XI v Sri Lankans, 3rd day, Adelaide, October 29, 2007

Mick Lewis smashes one off Murali

© Getty Images

Jan 13, 2007

Mick Lewis took four wickets to guide Victoria to Twenty20 glory, Victoria v Tasmania, KFC Twenty20 final, Melbourne, January 13, 2007

Mick Lewis took four wickets to guide Victoria to Twenty20 glory

© Getty Images

Dec 15, 2006

Mick Lewis sends down a delivery, Victoria v New South Wales, Pura Cup, Melbourne, December 15, 2006

Mick Lewis sends down a delivery

© Getty Images

Country Fixtures Country Results
Tasmania v Queensland at Hobart - Feb 8-11
Queensland 326 Tasmania 289/5
Western Aus v South Aus at Perth - Feb 8-11
Western Aus 284 South Aus 309/5
1st ODI: Aus Women v NZ Women at Adelaide - Feb 10
Aus Women 60/0 (10.2 ov)
Victoria v NSW at Melbourne
Feb 10 (14:15 local, 03:15 GMT)
2nd ODI: Aus Women v NZ Women at Adelaide
Feb 11 (10:00 local, 23:30 GMT)
Complete fixtures »
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