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Full name David Anthony Graveney
Born January 2, 1953, Westbury-on-Trym, Bristol
Current age 55 years 285 days
Major teams Durham,Gloucestershire,Somerset
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox
Other Administrator
Relations Father - JKR Graveney,Uncle - TW Graveney
Batting and fielding averages
Mat
Inns
NO
Runs
HS
Ave
100
50
Ct
St
First-class
457
580
178
7107
119
17.67
2
16
241
0
List A
382
226
92
2263
56*
16.88
0
1
102
0
Bowling averages
Mat
Balls
Runs
Wkts
BBI
BBM
Ave
Econ
SR
4w
5w
10
First-class
457
69517
29867
981
8/85
30.44
2.57
70.8
40
7
List A
382
13402
9187
287
5/11
5/11
32.01
4.11
46.6
6
1
0
Career statistics
First-class span
1972 - 1994
List A span
1972 - 1994
Profile
David Graveney's ruddy face has been a familiar sight in English cricket since he first played for Gloucestershire in 1972. These days he combines his day job, as chief executive of the Professional Cricketers' Association - the players' union - with the almost fulltime role of chairman of the England selectors. After initial doubts that he could combine the two roles, he took over the selection job from Ray Illingworth in 1997. His time has been characterised by greater continuity of selection, and fewer of the Yorkshire-based hunches in which Illy specialised - but still the results have been indifferent, especially against Australia. Reports that the advent of the Hussain-Fletcher partnership in 1999 had marginalised Graveney were pooh-poohed by the ECB, but the suspicion lingers that he wields less power than formerly and the important selection decisions are now made by the coach and the captain. His position, boosted by the Ashes success in 2005, looked increasingly shaky after England's dire winter in 2006-07 and he was moved aside in 2008 to a new role as Performance Manager, ending his 11-year reign. Geoff Miller, a selector since 2000, was named his replacement.
As a player Graveney was a stiff-backed left-arm spinner in the Ashley Giles mould, just short of Test class. After 19 seasons at Bristol, where he followed his father Ken and legendary uncle Tom, he had a year at Somerset before becoming Durham's first captain when they attained first-class status. He managed the so-called rebel tour of South Africa in 1989-90, but has taken charge of one or two more official jaunts since then. Andrew Miller January 2008