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Dominic Thornely      

Full name Dominic John Thornely

Born October 1, 1978, Albury, New South Wales

Current age 31 years 52 days

Major teams Hampshire, Mumbai Indians, New South Wales, Surrey

Nickname DT

Playing role Higher middle order batsman

Batting style Right-hand bat

Bowling style Right-arm medium, Right-arm offbreak

Height 1.97 m

Dominic John Thornely
Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 4s 6s Ct St
First-class 80 135 17 5070 261* 42.96 10 29 49 0
List A 94 87 10 2249 108 29.20 2948 76.28 2 14 31 0
Twenty20 35 32 7 610 67* 24.40 512 119.14 0 3 35 22 15 0
Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
First-class 80 4390 2063 54 3/38 38.20 2.81 81.2 0 0 0
List A 94 1839 1601 50 3/17 3/17 32.02 5.22 36.7 0 0 0
Twenty20 35 21 389 501 23 4/22 4/22 21.78 7.72 16.9 1 0 0
Career statistics
First-class debut 2003/04
Last First-class New South Wales v Western Australia at Sydney, Mar 5-8, 2009 scorecard
List A debut 2001/02
Last List A Victoria v New South Wales at Melbourne, Feb 13, 2009 scorecard
Twenty20 debut Australia A v Pakistanis at Adelaide, Jan 13, 2005 scorecard
Last Twenty20 New South Wales v Victoria at Sydney, Jan 24, 2009 scorecard
Profile

Dominic Thornely was discussed as a possible Test player for the 2005 Ashes following a dramatic season of 1065 first-class runs, four centuries, five fifties and an average of 62.65. New South Wales needed someone to attempt to fill the massive holes left by the Waugh brothers, Michael Slater and Michael Bevan, who departed for retirement or Tasmania the previous off-season, and Thornely stepped in with aggressive responsibility to be a crucial factor in the Pura Cup-winning campaign. The highlight of the starry-eyed season was undoubtedly the 261 against Western Australia at the SCG and beating David Hookes' record for first-class sixes with 11. The innings also included a barely believable 219-run stand for the last wicket with Stuart MacGill, who scored 27 as they turned from trouble to triumph.

Nicknamed "The Dominator", Thornely can also defend when necessary, but he is at his best when driving, cutting and pulling boundaries. His next season was not as loud, although he still managed a highly credible 698 runs at 45.87 with a century against Tasmania. Another solid effort in 2006-07 brought 801 runs at 42.15 and he had the dubious honour of being stand-in captain as the Blues crashed to their lowest Pura Cup score of 53 against Tasmania. However, Thornely led the second-innings fightback with 138 and was also one of his side's better contributors in the lost final. In the following campaign he gained more responsibility and collected 551 runs and 11 wickets before more leadership opportunities came in 2008-09 with the international absences of Simon Katich and Brad Haddin. It was a tough year for the team - the Blues were last in the Sheffield Shield - but Thornely performed strongly, registering 680 first-class runs at 42.50, impressing in the FR Cup, and chipping in with the ball.

Rod Marsh, the then Academy director, said Thornely was one of the best graduates of the institution and recommended him for the state team aged 17. However, he did not make his debut until 25 and was working at the management company that looks after Brett Lee when asked to become a Blue. He made an early impression by compiling 143 against Victoria at Newcastle and earned Australia A selection in his first season. A superb catcher and handy medium pacer, Thornely is suited to the limited-overs game, but his major gains have come in the first-class arena. An overseas assignment at Surrey in 2005 placed him geographically close to the Test team without international reward, and he returned to England in 2006 for a stint with Hampshire. In 2008 he joined the Mumbai Indians in the Indian Premier League, playing six games for a squad which included Sachin Tendulkar and Sanath Jayasuriya.
Peter English May 2009

Notes

List A Debut: New South Wales v South Australia at Coffs Harbour, 2001/02

Australia Under-19s 1997/98 (Pakistan and World Cup)

Latest Articles
Latest Photos

Nov 3, 2008

Nathan Rees and Dominic Thornely admire the Sheffield Shield Trophy, Sydney, November 3, 2008

Nathan Rees and Dominic Thornely admire the Sheffield Shield Trophy

© Getty Images

Oct 12, 2008

Dominic Thornely goes onto the offensive , Western Australia v New South Wales, Sheffield Shield, 3rd day, Perth, October 12, 2008

Dominic Thornely goes onto the offensive

© Getty Images

Mar 16, 2008

Stuart Clark and Dominic Thornely appeal for a run-out against Nick Jewell, New South Wales v Victoria, Pura Cup final, Sydney, 2nd day, March 16, 2008

Stuart Clark and Dominic Thornely appeal for a run-out against Nick Jewell

© Getty Images

Country Fixtures Country Results
Tasmania v South Aust at Hobart
Nov 24-27 (10:30 local, 23:30 GMT)
Western Aust v NSW at Perth
Nov 25 (11:15 local, 03:15 GMT)
1st Test: Australia v West Indies at Brisbane
Nov 26-30 (10:00 local, 00:00 GMT)
Victoria v Queensland at Melbourne
Nov 27-30 (11:00 local, 00:00 GMT)
Western Aust v NSW at Perth
Nov 27-30 (10:30 local, 02:30 GMT)
Complete fixtures »
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