Steve HarmisonSteve Harmison RSS Feed

England

Full name Stephen James Harmison

Born October 23, 1978, Ashington, Northumberland

Current age 30 years 262 days

Major teams England, Durham, ICC World XI, Lions

Nickname Harmy

Batting style Right-hand bat

Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Height 6 ft 4 in

Education Ashington High School

Relation Brother - J Harmison, Brother - BW Harmison

Stephen James Harmison
Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 4s 6s Ct St
Tests 61 83 21 712 49* 11.48 1253 56.82 0 0 90 10 7 0
ODIs 58 25 14 91 18* 8.27 141 64.53 0 0 3 0 10 0
T20Is 2 - - - - - - - - - - - 1 0
First-class 180 240 66 1743 49* 10.01 0 0 26 0
List A 140 66 34 259 25* 8.09 0 0 22 0
Twenty20 16 4 0 11 6 2.75 12 91.66 0 0 2 0 3 0
Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 61 112 13117 7025 221 7/12 11/76 31.78 3.21 59.3 11 8 1
ODIs 58 57 2899 2481 76 5/33 5/33 32.64 5.13 38.1 2 1 0
T20Is 2 2 39 42 1 1/13 1/13 42.00 6.46 39.0 0 0 0
First-class 180 35019 18283 653 7/12 27.99 3.13 53.6 24 1
List A 140 6760 5595 182 5/33 5/33 30.74 4.96 37.1 6 1 0
Twenty20 16 15 307 385 15 4/38 4/38 25.66 7.52 20.4 1 0 0
Career statistics
Test debut England v India at Nottingham, Aug 8-12, 2002 scorecard
Last Test West Indies v England at St John's, Feb 15-19, 2009 scorecard
Test statistics
ODI debut England v Sri Lanka at Brisbane, Dec 17, 2002 scorecard
Last ODI West Indies v England at Gros Islet, Apr 3, 2009 scorecard
ODI statistics
T20I debut England v Australia at Southampton, Jun 13, 2005 scorecard
Last T20I England v Sri Lanka at Southampton, Jun 15, 2006 scorecard
T20I statistics
First-class debut 1996
Last First-class England Lions v Australians at Worcester, Jul 1-4, 2009 scorecard
List A debut 1998
Last List A Sussex v Durham at Hove, May 11, 2009 scorecard
Twenty20 debut Durham v Yorkshire at Chester-le-Street, Jul 15, 2004 scorecard
Last Twenty20 Durham v Derbyshire at Chester-le-Street, May 26, 2009 scorecard
Profile

With his lofty, loose-limbed gait and his painful capacity for jamming fingers against bat-handles, Steve Harmison had for some time been drawing tongue-in-cheek comparisons to the great Curtly Ambrose, when suddenly, in Jamaica in March 2004, he loped in to produce a spell of irresistible fast bowling that Ambrose himself could hardly have bettered. West Indies were blown away for 47, and Harmison's figures of 7 for 12 were the best in Tests at Sabina Park. It was a stunning riposte from a man who, only months earlier, had flown home injured from England's tour of Bangladesh with whispers about his diffidence chasing him all the way. However, as much as Jamaica 2004 set the benchmark, Brisbane 2006 proved a low point as his opening delivery of the Ashes series went straight to Andrew Flintoff at second slip and his desire was once again questioned.

Harmison, who was born in Ashington - the Northumberland village where the footballing Charlton brothers first saw the light of day - was barely 20 when he went with England A to South Africa in 1998-99, but after that he was held back by a series of niggling injuries - including somehow dislocating his shoulder when he caught his hand in his trouser pocket while bowling - and a tendency to fall homesick when confined to barracks on overseas tours. He eventually broke into the Test team in mid-2002, after an injury to another tearaway, Simon Jones, but for a long time he was no better than promising, with a tendency to mix magical spells with moments when the radar would go badly awry. But, in the Caribbean, the spiritual home of the fast bowler, he seemed to have finally come of age.

This was borne out in the 2004 Test series against West Indies and New Zealand, where he plundered wickets aplenty as England completed a 7-0 clean sweep of victories. But in South Africa the following winter, the doubts crept back in and he after ending a miserable Test series with a niggling calf strain, he admitted to the press that he had been hoping to fail his fitness test in order to be allowed home early. Against Bangladesh the following summer, he took a cathartic five-wicket haul in front of his home crowd in Durham, before tearing into Australia's top-order with five wickets on the first morning of the Ashes series at Lord's.

He couldn't secure victory on that occasion, but popped up with the most vital strike of his life one Test later, to seal a thrilling two-run win at Edgbaston and set England on their way to an historic Ashes triumph. Persistent shin problems hampered his form for the rest of the year, but against Pakistan at Old Trafford in July 2006, he was back to his rampant best, taking 11 wickets in a thumping innings win. That didn't last as his one-day nightmares continued at the Champions Trophy and he entered the first Test at Brisbane woefully short of match fitness. The result was that wide which, as much as his striking of Justin Langer at Lord's in 2005, set the tone for the series. Harmison was anonymous for the first two Tests before finally showing some form in the final three matches - but by then it was too late. After the Perth defeat handed the Ashes back to Australia, Harmison announced his retirement from ODIs, a decision he'd made after the Champions Trophy. It continued to leave more questions than answers. A reputation, and a career, hung in the balance and although he began 2007 in fine style for Durham, his winter nightmares continued to hamper him in the opening Tests against West Indies. A back injury ended his summer prematurely and, in October, was asked by the England management to prove his fitness and form by playing in South African domestic cricket. He came through the subsequent tour of Sri Lanka with credit, despite missing the first Test with back problems, but he was dropped one Test later in New Zealand, after an abject display in a humiliating England defeat at Hamilton. After being sent back to Durham, he found fiery form for his county and earned a recall for the fourthTest against South Africa. Following a successful return to international colours at the Oval, he was subsequently persuaded by new captain Kevin Pietersen to come out of one-day retirement to face South Africa.
Cricinfo staff August 2008

Notes

NBC Denis Compton Award 1998

Wisden Cricketer of the Year 2005

Awarded the MBE on 31st December 2005

Latest Articles
Latest Photos

Jul 3, 2009

Steve Harmison picked up Ricky Ponting during an impressive spell, England Lions v Australians, New Road, July 3, 2009

Steve Harmison picked up Ricky Ponting during an impressive spell

© Getty Images

Jul 1, 2009

Steve Harmison is congratulated on the wicket of Phillip Hughes, England Lions v Australians, New Road, July 1, 2009

Steve Harmison is congratulated on the wicket of Phillip Hughes

© AFP

Jul 1, 2009

Phillip Hughes didn't last long against Steve Harmison, England Lions v Australians, New Road, July 1, 2009

Phillip Hughes didn't last long against Steve Harmison

© Getty Images

Country Fixtures Country Results
Only Test: Eng Women v Aus Women at Worcester - Jul 10-13
Aus Women 309 & 128/1 Eng Women 268
Lancashire v Worcs at Manchester - Jul 10-12
Lancashire won by 7 wkts
Leics v Middlesex at Leicester - Jul 10-12
Leics won by 8 wkts
Somerset v Hampshire at Taunton - Jul 10-13
Somerset 510 Hampshire 264 & 122/3 (f/o)
Surrey v Kent at The Oval - Jul 10-13
Surrey 386 Kent 509/5
Yorkshire v Durham at Leeds - Jul 10-13
Durham 178 & 288/7 Yorkshire 313
Complete fixtures »
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