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James Anderson      

Full name James Michael Anderson

Born July 30, 1982, Burnley, Lancashire

Current age 27 years 118 days

Major teams England, Auckland, Lancashire, Lancashire Cricket Board

Nickname Jimmy

Playing role Bowler

Batting style Left-hand bat

Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Height 6 ft 2 in

Education St Theodore's RC High School; St Theodore's RC Sixth Form Centre - Burnley

James Michael Anderson
Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 4s 6s Ct St
Tests 42 56 27 412 34 14.20 1116 36.91 0 0 48 0 17 0
ODIs 118 49 25 146 15 6.08 373 39.14 0 0 9 0 30 0
T20Is 19 4 3 1 1* 1.00 2 50.00 0 0 0 0 3 0
First-class 97 112 49 667 37* 10.58 0 0 40 0
List A 168 69 41 237 15 8.46 0 0 38 0
Twenty20 37 7 5 22 16 11.00 23 95.65 0 0 3 0 6 0
Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 42 76 8453 4883 140 7/43 9/98 34.87 3.46 60.3 7 7 0
ODIs 118 116 5742 4742 156 4/23 4/23 30.39 4.95 36.8 8 0 0
T20Is 19 19 422 552 18 3/23 3/23 30.66 7.84 23.4 0 0 0
First-class 97 17627 9910 345 7/43 28.72 3.37 51.0 16 18 2
List A 168 8014 6411 228 4/23 4/23 28.11 4.79 35.1 8 0 0
Twenty20 37 37 783 1059 33 3/23 3/23 32.09 8.11 23.7 0 0 0
Career statistics
Test debut England v Zimbabwe at Lord's, May 22-24, 2003 scorecard
Last Test England v Australia at The Oval, Aug 20-23, 2009 scorecard
Test statistics
ODI debut Australia v England at Melbourne, Dec 15, 2002 scorecard
Last ODI South Africa v England at Centurion, Nov 22, 2009 scorecard
ODI statistics
T20I debut Australia v England at Sydney, Jan 9, 2007 scorecard
Last T20I South Africa v England at Centurion, Nov 15, 2009 scorecard
T20I statistics
First-class debut 2002
Last First-class England v Australia at The Oval, Aug 20-23, 2009 scorecard
List A debut 2000
Last List A South Africa v England at Centurion, Nov 22, 2009 scorecard
Twenty20 debut Yorkshire v Lancashire at Leeds, Jul 14, 2004 scorecard
Last Twenty20 South Africa v England at Centurion, Nov 15, 2009 scorecard
Profile

A strapping, genuinely quick swing bowler, James Anderson had played only three one-day games for Lancashire in the 2002 season - he'd played more for his club Burnley - before being called into England's VB Series squad the following winter as cover for Andy Caddick, following an impressive stint at the Academy in Adelaide. An amazing 10-over stint in century heat at Adelaide, which cost just 12 runs, earned him a place in the 2003 World Cup, where he produced a matchwinning spell against Pakistan, before suffering a sobering last-over disaster against Australia. At this stage, however, his star was very much in the ascendancy, and when selected for the first Test of the new home season, he took five wickets in his debut innings almost to order.

An ODI hat-trick - the first by an English bowler - followed against South Africa at The Oval, but from that moment on, his fortunes began to wane. South Africa's Test team made his new go-faster hairstyle seem a little foolish, and though he retained his place for the winter tours to Bangladesh and Sri Lanka in 2003-04 and South Africa the following year, he was reduced to the most peripheral of net-bowling roles - and a shadow of his former self on his rare appearances in the middle. He seemed well out of the frame until injuries led to his recall at Mumbai in 2005-06 where he played a key part in England's success. But no sooner had he returned home than he broke down with a stress fracture of the lower back, ruling him out of the 2006 season.

A see-saw winter followed in Australia - he was thrown back in at the deep end for the series opener at Brisbane and suffered acutely for his lack of match practice as England were thumped by 277 runs. By the one-day series, however, he had rediscovered some of his best form, only to be rested as a precaution ahead of the World Cup. Shortly before England's opening match he broke his finger and although he played through the pain he was never at his best. He wasn't alone in that, but not for the first time the way he had been managed was in question.

He and Stuart Broad spearheaded a young England attack in place of the out-of-form Steve Harmison and Matthew Hoggard for the second Test of England's series against New Zealand in the winter of 2008, and it appeared to inspire him. His 5 for 73 helped England square the series, and though his old waywardness returned with depressing inevitability in the final Test, he was back among the wickets three games later against the Kiwis at Trent Bridge, when his hostile full-pitched late swing accounted for each of the first six wickets to fall. In addition, his batting - for so long superfluous - started to come into its own, as a brave career-best 34 against a rampant South Africa at Headingley would later prove.

By the time he bowled England to victory with 9 for 125 against West Indies at Chester-le-Street in May 2009, he had completed 48 Test innings without ever being dismissed for a duck. Though that particular record ended on 53, his batting still went on to provide one of the defining moments of his career, a final-day stonewall in the first Ashes Test at Cardiff, when he and Monty Panesar kept Australia at bay for the final 40 minutes of a dramatic contest. It was an escape that gave England the momentum to claim the series 2-1.
Rob Smyth October 2009

Notes

NBC Denis Compton Award 2002

Wisden Cricketer of the Year 2009

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Latest Photos

Nov 19, 2009

James Anderson at England's indoor net session at the Wanderers, November 19, 2009

James Anderson at England's indoor net session

© PA Photos

Sep 27, 2009

James Anderson was the pick of England's bowlers, South Africa v England, ICC Champions Trophy, Group B, Centurion, September 27, 2009

James Anderson was the pick of England's bowlers

© Getty Images

Sep 27, 2009

James Anderson understands the value of Herschelle Gibbs' wicket, South Africa v England, ICC Champions Trophy, Group B, Centurion, September 27, 2009

James Anderson understands the value of Herschelle Gibbs' wicket

© Getty Images

Country Fixtures Country Results
3rd ODI: South Africa v England at Cape Town
Nov 27 (14:30 local, 12:30 GMT)
4th ODI: South Africa v England at Port Elizabeth
Nov 29 (10:00 local, 08:00 GMT)
5th ODI: South Africa v England at Durban
Dec 4 (14:30 local, 12:30 GMT)
Sth Af In XI v England XI at East London
Dec 9-10 (10:30 local, 08:30 GMT)
Sth Af In XI v England XI at East London
Dec 11-12 (10:30 local, 08:30 GMT)
Complete fixtures »
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