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Paul Grayson      

Full name Adrian Paul Grayson

Born March 31, 1971, Ripon, Yorkshire

Current age 38 years 223 days

Major teams England, Essex, Suffolk, Yorkshire

Batting style Right-hand bat

Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox

Adrian Paul Grayson
Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 4s 6s Ct St
ODIs 2 2 0 6 6 3.00 13 46.15 0 0 0 0 1 0
First-class 181 298 25 8655 189 31.70 16 43 121 0
List A 246 201 33 3426 82* 20.39 0 11 68 0
Twenty20 9 8 3 154 55 30.80 124 124.19 0 1 17 0 1 0
Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
ODIs 2 2 90 60 3 3/40 3/40 20.00 4.00 30.0 0 0 0
First-class 181 12748 6038 136 5/20 44.39 2.84 93.7 1 0
List A 246 8477 6832 206 4/25 4/25 33.16 4.83 41.1 4 0 0
Twenty20 9 6 126 171 5 2/36 2/36 34.20 8.14 25.2 0 0 0
Career statistics
ODI debut England v South Africa at Nairobi (Gym), Oct 10, 2000 scorecard
Last ODI Zimbabwe v England at Bulawayo, Oct 10, 2001 scorecard
ODI statistics
First-class span 1990 - 2004
List A span 1991 - 2004
Twenty20 debut Surrey v Essex at East Molesey, Jun 14, 2003 scorecard
Last Twenty20 Leicestershire v Essex at Leicester, Jul 19, 2004 scorecard
Profile

Paul Grayson was as surprised as anybody when he was called up to the England squad for the ICC KnockOut tournament in Kenya in October 2000. He had been on the verge of quitting cricket and starting work at a brewery in Romford when the call came. He played just one game in that competition, England's quarter-final defeat against South Africa at Nairobi. It was an ignominious international debut; he made a golden duck and although his five overs were tidy enough, he failed to take a wicket.

Although his one-day batting in 2001 failed to reach the heights of his first-class efforts, Grayson was recalled for the England one-day squad to tour Zimbabwe in autumn 2001. He had limited opportunity there, appearing in just the fourth one-day international where he bowled well enough to take 3 for 40. However his batting is more suited to the longer version of the game, and he missed the opportunity to establish himself in the team, losing out to the off-spinner and specialist one-day lower order batsman, Jeremy Snape.

A Yorkshireman, Grayson made his debut for his native county in 1990, having already played for England Young Cricketers in 1989 and toured with them in Australia in 1989-90. He also represented the Young Cricketers against Pakistan in 1990. The slow left-arm bowler and right-hand bat had plumped for cricket despite boasting considerable football skills. At 16 he had been offered apprentice terms by Middlesbrough but turned them down. His elder brother Simon played regularly for Blackburn Rovers.

Unoriginally nicknamed Larry, Grayson scored 1,000 runs for the first time in 1994 and was named the club's player of the year, but Yorkshire released him at the end of the following season. He moved south to Essex in 1996, and was awarded his county cap that same year. His allround abilities have proved useful for in first-class cricket, but his skills have mainly come to the fore in the limited-overs version, where he is renowned for tying up opposing batsmen at the end of the innings.

After an extensive change of personnel during the winter of 2001-02, Grayson was appointed vice-captain of Essex and, while his season was disrupted to an extent by injury, he was at the helm at a crucial time. With Ronnie Irani away on international duty, Grayson was in charge when Essex won the Division Two title in the County Championship and gained promotion in the National League as well, but injury has continued to restrict his appearances and at the end of the 2005 summer decided to retire from first-class cricket.

Latest Articles
Latest Photos

Mar 31, 2004

Paul Grayson

Paul Grayson

© Getty Images

May 8, 2002

Nottinghamshire v Essex, Frizzell County Champioship, Division Two, Trent Bridge, 8 - 11 May 2002

It went where ? ; Essex slips from left to right, Hussain, Robinson, Cowan, keeper Flower and Paul Grayson

© Cricinfo Ltd

Oct 11, 2001

Zimbabwe v England, 4th   ODI, Queen's Sports Club, Bulawayo , 10 October 2001

Paul Grayson celebrates the wicket of Doug Marillier caught behind by Foster

© AFP

Country Fixtures Country Results
1st T20I: WI Women v Eng Women at Basseterre
Nov 9 (10:00 local, 14:00 GMT)
SAf A v England XI at Bloemfontein
Nov 10 (18:00 local, 16:00 GMT)
2nd T20I: WI Women v Eng Women at Basseterre
Nov 11 (10:00 local, 14:00 GMT)
3rd T20I: WI Women v Eng Women at Basseterre
Nov 12 (10:00 local, 14:00 GMT)
1st T20I: South Africa v England at Johannesburg
Nov 13 (18:00 local, 16:00 GMT)
Complete fixtures »
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