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Andrew Strauss      

Full name Andrew John Strauss

Born March 2, 1977, Johannesburg, Transvaal, South Africa

Current age 32 years 268 days

Major teams England, Middlesex, Northern Districts

Nickname Straussy, Levi, Mareman, Muppet

Playing role Opening batsman

Batting style Left-hand bat

Bowling style Left-arm medium

Height 5 ft 11 in

Education Radley College, Durham University

Andrew John Strauss
Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 4s 6s Ct St
Tests 67 123 5 5266 177 44.62 10639 49.49 18 17 655 8 75 0
ODIs 97 96 8 2830 152 32.15 3698 76.52 3 18 304 10 37 0
T20Is 4 4 0 73 33 18.25 64 114.06 0 0 9 0 1 0
First-class 181 321 16 13090 177 42.91 35 56 148 0
List A 220 213 14 6189 163 31.10 7 40 70 0
Twenty20 28 28 0 519 60 18.53 442 117.42 0 2 73 3 12 0
Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 67 - - - - - - - - - - - -
ODIs 97 1 6 3 0 - - - 3.00 - 0 0 0
T20Is 4 - - - - - - - - - - - -
First-class 181 102 89 2 1/16 44.50 5.23 51.0 0 0
List A 220 6 3 0 - - - 3.00 - 0 0 0
Twenty20 28 - - - - - - - - - - - -
Career statistics
Test debut England v New Zealand at Lord's, May 20-24, 2004 scorecard
Last Test England v Australia at The Oval, Aug 20-23, 2009 scorecard
Test statistics
ODI debut Sri Lanka v England at Dambulla, Nov 18, 2003 scorecard
Last ODI South Africa v England at Centurion, Nov 22, 2009 scorecard
ODI statistics
T20I debut England v Australia at Southampton, Jun 13, 2005 scorecard
Last T20I West Indies v England at Port of Spain, Mar 15, 2009 scorecard
T20I statistics
First-class debut 1998
Last First-class England v Australia at The Oval, Aug 20-23, 2009 scorecard
List A debut 1997
Last List A South Africa v England at Centurion, Nov 22, 2009 scorecard
Twenty20 debut Surrey v Middlesex at The Oval, Jun 13, 2003 scorecard
Last Twenty20 West Indies v England at Port of Spain, Mar 15, 2009 scorecard
Profile

On May 21, 2004, playing against New Zealand, Andrew Strauss wrote his name into the record-books when he became only the fourth batsman to score a century at Lord's on his Test debut. It was the culmination of a rapid rise to prominence for Strauss, who as captain of Middlesex, was at least on familiar territory for the big occasion. As a fluid and attractive left-hand opener, Strauss knew all about pressure and how to handle it. His stock rose exponentially in 2002 and 2003, following the unforeseen retirement of Middlesex's captain, Angus Fraser, who swapped his sweater for a laptop and took up the role of cricket correspondent for the Independent newspaper.

Strauss filled the breach admirably, and 1400 runs in his first full season in charge in 2003 proved that he was not a man to be fazed by responsibility. After cementing his place with a pair of attractive sixties against West Indies, he confirmed his star quality - and his affinity for Lord's - with a hundred against the same opposition on his first one-day appearance in front of his home crowd. In doing so became only the fifth player to have scored their first Test and one-day international hundreds on the same ground, and later added a century there in his first game as captain as well.

Strauss went on to have a scintillating summer for England, ratcheting up runs against both New Zealand and West Indies, but that was only his warm-up act. In South Africa that same winter, he won the first Test single handedly with scores of 126 and 94 not out at Port Elizabeth, and added two further hundreds in recording a phenomenal tally of 656 runs. It was always going to be hard to cap that sort of a debut year, and yet Strauss managed it, as he overcame his uncertainties against both Glenn McGrath and Shane Warne to record two more centuries in England's historic Ashes victory.

The following summer he became England's captain by default, after both Michael Vaughan and Andrew Flintoff were ruled out with injuries. He started with a traumatic 5-0 whitewash against Sri Lanka in the one-day series, but another Test hundred at Lord's helped settle him into the role. Flintoff's absence handed him the captaincy for the subsequent Test series against Pakistan too, which England won 3-0, Strauss notching his second hundred as captain in the third Test. But, the following winter in Australia - overlooked as leader in favour of Flintoff - he suffered his first prolonged loss of form, managing a total of two fifties in 20 innings on tour. That led to him being dropped at the start of the World Cup before he eventually regained his place in a struggling top order.

The return, though, was equally swift as he was recalled for the New Zealand trip early in 2008 despite having no chance to show his form. With two forties in the first couple of Tests, falling to horribly weak strokes, his England future was in serious jeopardy going into the final Test in Napier, but he responded with a gritty and emotional 177 to seal his spot for the 2008 summer. When the teams reconvened in England, it was business as usual as Strauss produced a Man-of-the-Series performance to set up a 2-0 win. His form continued in the winter tour to India, where Strauss became the first England batsman to score two hundreds in a Test in India.

His return to form, combined with the startling resignation of Kevin Pietersen and the sacking of coach Peter Moores, led to his elevation as England captain at the start of 2009, and the start of a run of personal form that sustained his side throughout a momentous year. Three big hundreds in the Caribbean could not prevent an unexpected series defeat, after his fractured side had been bowled out for 51 to lose the first Test of his reign by an innings at Sabina Park. But steadily Strauss overcame the divisions within the squad, and in partnership with the new coach, Andy Flower, instilled a new belief. His ultimate reward came in August, when he became only the second England captain in two decades to regain the Ashes, after a hard-fought 2-1 victory.
Andrew Miller October 2009

Notes

Wisden Cricketer of the Year 2005
Awarded the MBE in 2005

Latest Articles
Latest Photos

Nov 22, 2009

Paul Collingwood was the pick of England's bowlers on a day for the medium-pacers, South Africa v England, 2nd ODI, Centurion, November 22, 2009

Paul Collingwood was the pick of England's bowlers on a day for the medium-pacers

© Getty Images

Nov 8, 2009

Andrew Strauss sweeps strongly as England motor, Warriors v England XI, Kimberley, November 8, 2009

Andrew Strauss sweeps strongly as England motor

© PA Photos

Nov 8, 2009

Andrew Strauss tucks off his pads during his hundred, Warriors v England XI, Kimberley, November 8, 2009

Andrew Strauss tucks off his pads during his hundred

© Getty Images

Series Results
England v India at Lord's - Sep 8
England won by 7 wkts (with 82 balls remaining)
England v India at The Oval - Sep 5
India won by 2 wkts (with 2 balls remaining)
England v India at Leeds - Sep 2
India won by 38 runs
England v India at Manchester - Aug 30
England won by 3 wkts (with 12 balls remaining)
England v India at Birmingham - Aug 27
England won by 42 runs
More results »
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