Kim BarnettKim Barnett RSS Feed

England

Full name Kim John Barnett

Born July 17, 1960, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire

Current age 48 years 357 days

Major teams England, Boland, Derbyshire, Gloucestershire, Staffordshire

Batting style Right-hand bat

Bowling style Legbreak

Height 6 ft 0 in

Education Leek High School, Staffordshire

Kim John Barnett
Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 4s 6s Ct St
Tests 4 7 0 207 80 29.57 360 57.50 0 2 28 0 1 0
ODIs 1 1 0 84 84 84.00 146 57.53 0 1 0 0 0 0
First-class 479 784 76 28593 239* 40.38 61 153 284 0
List A 525 500 54 15564 136 34.89 17 92 174 0
Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 4 1 36 32 0 - - - 5.33 - 0 0 0
ODIs 1 - - - - - - - - - - - -
First-class 479 14221 7108 188 6/28 37.80 2.99 75.6 3 0
List A 525 3770 2971 113 6/24 6/24 26.29 4.72 33.3 3 2 0
Career statistics
Test debut England v Sri Lanka at Lord's, Aug 25-30, 1988 scorecard
Last Test England v Australia at Birmingham, Jul 6-11, 1989 scorecard
Test statistics
Only ODI England v Sri Lanka at The Oval, Sep 4, 1988 scorecard
ODI statistics
First-class span 1979 - 2002
List A span 1979 - 2005
Profile

Born in Stoke-on-Trent in 1960, Kim Barnett was a youthful prodigy who matured into a senior pro. He represented Northamptonshire and Warwickshire 2nd XIs aged 15, as well as Staffordshire, as a legspinner, often batting at No. 11. He toured with English Schools to India in 1977-78, and England Young Cricketers to Australia in 1978-79.

He made his debut for Derbyshire in 1979, by then batting at No. 5, and won his county cap in 1982. The following season he became the club's youngest-ever captain, aged just 22, a post he held until 1995. Tipped as a future England captain, he was made vice-captain of England B in Sri Lanka (1985-86), but contracted a serious illness and was forced home early, losing two stone.

An idiosyncratic stance at the crease (he took guard several inches outside the leg-stump), an exaggerated shuffle as the bowler delivered and a thick moustache under a shiny, bald head (ironic considering his name) made Barnett one of the most recognisable figures on the county circuit. Usually an opening batsman, he represented England in the middle order. One of few batsmen to prosper on the seam-friendly Derby pitches (as illustrated by a career tally of over 26,000 runs with more than 50 first-class centuries), he led Derbyshire to the Sunday League title in 1990, and the Benson and Hedges Cup in 1993. He remained an important figure at the club after relinquishing the captaincy, although disagreements with Dean Jones and Chris Adams caused some unrest.

Barnett worked on his game assiduously between 1982-83 and 1987-88 when he represented Boland in South Africa. A prolific English summer in 1988 (during which he led Derby to the Benson and Hedges Cup final) saw him score over 1,600 first-class runs, including a career-best 239* against Leicestershire. Such form won him a Test call-up as well as a Wisden Cricketer of the Year award. He made his Test debut at Lord's against Sri Lanka, hitting 66 in his first innings, but 0 in the second. He made his one-day international debut shortly afterwards, against the same opposition, struck an attractive 84 and won the Man-of the-Match award. He was never selected again. His performances were enough to win selection on the tour to India in 1988-89, but the trip was subsequently cancelled.

Beginning the next Test summer with a fine 80 against Australia at Headingley, he struggled thereafter and was dropped after failures at Lord's and Edgbaston. He surprised many by accepting a highly profitable offer of a place on Mike Gatting's rebel tour of South Africa the following winter. The tour was cancelled in its infancy, but Barnett was banned from Test cricket until 1992. But he'd had enough time to show his class by scoring 136 in a one-day 'international' at the Wanderers.

A useful legspiner with nearly 200 first-class wickets to his name, Barnett returned career-beat figures of 6-28 against Glamorgan at Chesterfield in 1991. In 1994 he finished on top of the national bowling averages. Though his fielding is not as sharp as it once was, he boasted a sharp pair of hands through his thirties and into his forties. A high profile feud at Derby, where Barnett stuck by skipper Dominic Cork in the face of a near mutiny, pushed him away from his county home of twenty years.

To the surprise of some, Barnett was not lured by lucrative offers by fashionable counties, and moved south west to Gloucestershire. Members were immediately impressed by his enthusiasm, work ethic and fitness. A key figure in Gloucestershire's recent success, Barnett's eccentric form of batting continued unabated. He was on top of his game in the club's one-day finals, regularly forging good opening stands with Tim Hancock, peppering the cover boundary with regularity.

Barnett finally retired at the end of 2002 when Gloucestershire did not offer him a contract, even though he was keen to continue. He moved into league cricket, appretite undiminsihed, and in April 2004 entered the record books when he smacked nine successive sixes in the North Staffordshire/South Cheshire League.
Wisden Cricinfo staff June 2004

Notes

Wisden Cricketer of the Year 1989

Latest Articles
Latest Photos

Apr 21, 2004

Kim Barnett headshot, April 18, 2002

Kim Barnett

© Getty Images

Jul 16, 2001

Gloucs v Surrey, Benson and Hedges Cup Final, Lord's, 14 July 2001

Kim Barnett at the crease 2001

© Cricinfo Ltd

Jun 25, 2001

Kim Barnett of Gloucs has just inside edged a ball from Chris Silverwood but he is safe, Benson & Hedges Cup, 2001, 1st Semi Final

Kim Barnett of Gloucs has just inside edged a ball from Chris Silverwood but he is safe

© Cricinfo Ltd

Country Fixtures Country Results
Cambridge U v Oxford Uni at Cambridge - Jul 7-10
Oxford Uni 152 & 124/4 Cambridge U 339
Essex v Glamorgan at Chelmsford - Jul 7-10
Glamorgan 515/9d Essex 200 & 132/4 (f/o)
Northants v Derbyshire at Northampton - Jul 7-10
Northants 433/9d Derbyshire 371/4
Warwickshire v Sussex at Birmingham - Jul 7-10
Warwickshire 407 Sussex 276/4
England v Australia at Cardiff - Jul 8-12
England 435 Australia 249/1
Complete fixtures »
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