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Graham Manou      

Full name Graham Allan Manou

Born April 23, 1979, Modbury, South Australia

Current age 30 years 198 days

Major teams Australia, South Australia

Nickname Choc

Batting style Right-hand bat

Fielding position Wicketkeeper

Height 1.81 m

Graham Allan Manou
Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 4s 6s Ct St
Tests 1 2 1 21 13* 21.00 39 53.84 0 0 3 0 3 0
ODIs 3 1 0 7 7 7.00 6 116.66 0 0 0 0 5 0
First-class 90 154 18 3380 190 24.85 5819 58.08 5 16 283 20
List A 104 89 23 1414 63 21.42 0 4 136 14
Twenty20 16 15 2 146 43 11.23 144 101.38 0 0 10 1 10 2
Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 1 - - - - - - - - - - - -
ODIs 3 - - - - - - - - - - - -
First-class 90 12 8 0 - - - 4.00 - 0 0 0
List A 104 - - - - - - - - - - - -
Twenty20 16 - - - - - - - - - - - -
Career statistics
Only Test England v Australia at Birmingham, Jul 30-Aug 3, 2009 scorecard
Test statistics
ODI debut India v Australia at Delhi, Oct 31, 2009 scorecard
Last ODI India v Australia at Hyderabad (Decc), Nov 5, 2009 scorecard
ODI statistics
First-class debut 1998/99
Last First-class South Australia v Tasmania at Adelaide, Oct 13-16, 2009 scorecard
List A debut 1998/99
Last List A India v Australia at Hyderabad (Decc), Nov 5, 2009 scorecard
Twenty20 debut Victoria v South Australia at Melbourne, Jan 8, 2006 scorecard
Last Twenty20 Tasmania v South Australia at Launceston, Jan 15, 2009 scorecard
Profile

After years as a reliable domestic performer, the wicketkeeper Graham Manou surged in 2008-09 to win the recognition of the national selectors who rewarded him with a contract and the role of Ashes understudy to Brad Haddin. Incredibly, he replaced Haddin just moments before the Edgbaston Test when the former broke his finger. Few months later, he was flown in as an emergency replacement for Tim Paine during the ODI series in India.

Manou's promotion came 10 years after his state debut and was sealed when he raised two Pura Cup centuries in a collection of 647 runs to go with 33 dismissals, staying ahead of Chris Hartley, Matthew Wade and the deposed Luke Ronchi. It was a rise built on hard work and recognition that he needed to mature after being dropped by South Australia two seasons ago.

In 2007-08 Manou not only overcame the major challenge to fight his way back into South Australia's Pura Cup team, he ended up as captain by the end of it after Nathan Adcock was dumped from the XI. He was the top runscorer by far, with 596 runs at 37.25, playing all ten Pura Cup matches after Shane Deitz was mysteriously overlooked. There were also eight one-day matches and a high score of 50.

Manou, who was then vice-captain, had been dropped the previous year after managing only 16 runs from two games early in the summer. He retained his one-day spot and led the team when Darren Lehmann was injured, but his return was a disappointing 117 runs at 14.62. His unexpected lull came after he was named Lehmann's deputy and he was immediately thrust into the leader's role in 2004-05, when he was a strong performer in a difficult campaign with 433 runs and 36 dismissals. The next year he took his keeping to new levels with a personal-best collection of 42 Pura Cup dismissals and added another 21, including six stumpings, in the ING Cup. That season he narrowly missed a second first-class century when reaching 91 against Tasmania but his batting wasn't as lucrative as in 2003-04, when he collected $50,000 for hitting an ING sign.

After a glittering junior career, he made his first appearance in interstate ranks at senior level in 1999-2000 when he replaced the recently-retired Tim Nielsen to become South Australia's top wicketkeeper. He created a favourable impression with tidy and athletic glovework and his obvious comfort in keeping to all types of bowling. Manou struggled initially with the bat - he registered ducks in four of his opening five innings on the first-class stage - but grew into an important role player and picked up 130 as an opener in 2003-04. Manou's under-age career reached its highest point when he was the Player of the Tournament as his state's captain at the 1997-98 national under-19 carnival in Melbourne.
Cricinfo staff May 2009

Notes

First-class Debut: Commonwealth Bank Cricket Academy v Matabeleland Invitation XI at Bulawayo, 1998/99

List A Debut: Commonwealth Bank Cricket Academy v Matabeleland at Bulawayo, 1998/99

Commonwealth Bank Cricket Academy 1998

Latest Articles
Latest Photos

Nov 5, 2009

Graham Manou runs out Praveen Kumar, India v Australia, 5th ODI, Hyderabad, November 5, 2009

Graham Manou runs out Praveen Kumar

© Getty Images

Nov 2, 2009

Suresh Raina is undone by Nathan Hauritz, India v Australia, 4th ODI, Mohali, November 2, 2009

Suresh Raina is undone by Nathan Hauritz

© Getty Images

Oct 31, 2009

Graham Manou is congratulated on making his debut, India v Australia, 3rd ODI, Delhi, October 31, 2009

Graham Manou is congratulated on making his debut

© Getty Images

Country Fixtures Country Results
South Aust v Queensland at Adelaide
Nov 8-11 (10:30 local, 00:00 GMT)
6th ODI: India v Australia at Guwahati
Nov 8 (08:30 local, 03:00 GMT)
7th ODI: India v Australia at Mumbai
Nov 11 (14:30 local, 09:00 GMT)
South Aust v Queensland at Alice Springs
Nov 14
Victoria v Western Aust at Melbourne
Nov 14 (14:15 local, 03:15 GMT)
Complete fixtures »
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