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Paul Collingwood      

Full name Paul David Collingwood

Born May 26, 1976, Shotley Bridge, Co Durham

Current age 33 years 180 days

Major teams England, Delhi Daredevils, Durham

Nickname Colly

Batting style Right-hand bat

Bowling style Right-arm medium

Height 5 ft 11 in

Education Blackfyne Comprehensive School

Paul David Collingwood
Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 4s 6s Ct St
Tests 53 93 9 3565 206 42.44 7718 46.19 9 16 394 16 67 0
ODIs 170 154 32 4285 120* 35.12 5594 76.59 4 23 319 59 97 0
T20Is 22 20 0 464 79 23.20 333 139.33 0 3 33 19 7 0
First-class 177 308 25 10354 206 36.58 23 52 194 0
List A 339 317 56 8667 120* 33.20 6 51 174 0
Twenty20 30 28 1 554 79 20.51 419 132.21 0 3 43 21 7 0
Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 53 46 1527 846 15 3/23 3/35 56.40 3.32 101.8 0 0 0
ODIs 170 129 4466 3742 97 6/31 6/31 38.57 5.02 46.0 3 1 0
T20Is 22 15 192 282 16 4/22 4/22 17.62 8.81 12.0 1 0 0
First-class 177 9431 4818 120 5/52 40.15 3.06 78.5 1 0
List A 339 8994 7287 212 6/31 6/31 34.37 4.86 42.4 4 1 0
Twenty20 30 21 306 397 27 5/14 5/14 14.70 7.78 11.3 1 1 0
Career statistics
Test debut Sri Lanka v England at Galle, Dec 2-6, 2003 scorecard
Last Test England v Australia at The Oval, Aug 20-23, 2009 scorecard
Test statistics
ODI debut England v Pakistan at Birmingham, Jun 7, 2001 scorecard
Last ODI Australia v England at Centurion, Oct 2, 2009 scorecard
ODI statistics
T20I debut England v Australia at Southampton, Jun 13, 2005 scorecard
Last T20I South Africa v England at Johannesburg, Nov 13, 2009 scorecard
T20I statistics
First-class debut 1996
Last First-class England v Australia at The Oval, Aug 20-23, 2009 scorecard
List A debut 1995
Last List A Eagles v England XI at Bloemfontein, Nov 6, 2009 scorecard
Twenty20 debut England v Australia at Southampton, Jun 13, 2005 scorecard
Last Twenty20 South Africa v England at Johannesburg, Nov 13, 2009 scorecard
Profile

A natural athlete, with a happy-go-lucky temperament, Paul Collingwood's appointment as England's one-day captain in 2007 was reward for six years of uncomplaining professionalism, in which time he fought his way through a melee of seemingly more talented opponents to make himself indispensable in both forms of the game. However, he lasted a little over a year in the role before resigning to concentrate on his own game following a controversial series against New Zealand.

Collingwood first played for England's one-day team in 2001, but four years and numerous tours later, he had played in just three Tests. The third of these, however, was the single biggest match of his generation - the decisive fifth Test against Australia at The Oval, where his responsible batting helped secure the draw that England needed for a first Ashes triumph in 18 years. His selection for this match, plus the award of an England central contract in 2001, spoke volumes of the esteem with which he was held by the management. In his wilderness years, he rose to become one of the finest fielders in the world, capable of breathtaking moments in the covers and backward point. As a batsman, he stands still at the crease, plays the ball straight and has a tantalising range of strokes up his sleeve. In Australia in 2002-03 he started the VB Series as 12th man, but soon confirmed his place in the 2003 World Cup squad with a memorable maiden century against Sri Lanka at Perth.

His bowling verges towards the dibbly-dobbly, but given the right conditions he can be irresistible, as he proved with a matchwinning display of swing bowling in the third one-day game against New Zealand in 2001-02. The final tick in his column is determination - realising he was treading water, he dispatched himself to Melbourne in the winter of 2000-01 to play grade cricket. He duly won the prestigious Jack Ryder Medal, and came close to making an Ashes debut at Perth in 2002-03. However, despite his late role in the 2005 Ashes he still seemed destined to be a fill-in player. But at Lahore that winter he stuck 96 and 80 before hitting a brilliant maiden century at Nagpur with England in the middle of an injury crisis. If Michael Vaughan and Marcus Trescothick had been available he wouldn't have played: instead he kicked on to become the rock of England's batting on the subsequent Ashes tour. His brilliant double-century at Adelaide ought to have been the defining moment of his career. Instead it was the preamble to one of the most devastating defeats in English Test history. But after an understandable period of introspection, Collingwood bounced back with back-to-back one-day centuries to secure the CB Series. It was England's first overseas one-day trophy for nine years, and his subsequent appointment to the captaincy in June 2007 was met with unanimous approval. He cemented the role with memorable victories over India at home and Sri Lanka away, but the 2008 season was less of a triumph.

Back-to-back series defeats against New Zealand were capped by a four-match ban for slow over-rates, and all the while his Test form crumbled. He was dropped for the first time in two years for the Headingley Test against South Africa, only to be recalled - in spite of a total of 92 first-class runs in nine innings - for the very next match. He duly celebrated with his sixth Test hundred, a triumph of will after failing in the first innings. However, two days later he followed Michael Vaughan's lead by resigning the one-day captaincy to concentrate on his own form.

He nevertheless took back the reins for the ICC World Twenty20 in 2009, a decision that didn't look too prudent when England were embarrassed by the Netherlands in the opening match of the tournament. However, England recovered their poise with victories over Pakistan and India, and moved onto their next assignment - the Ashes - with their momentum more or less intact. They were swiftly up against it, however, as Australia posted their highest score against England for 75 years, but Collingwood led them out of danger with typical determination, producing a backs-to-the-wall 74 that helped to change the course of the series.
Andrew Miller October 2009

Notes

Awarded the MBE on 31st December 2005
Wisden Cricketer of the Year 2007

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Latest Photos

Nov 13, 2009

Eoin Morgan adopted the daring approach England promised before the series, South Africa v England, 1st Twenty20, Johannesburg, November 13, 2009

Eoin Morgan adopted the daring approach England promised before the series

© Getty Images

Nov 13, 2009

Paul Collingwood scored a 27-ball half-century to power England's innings, South Africa v England, 1st Twenty20, Johannesburg, November 13, 2009

Paul Collingwood scored a 27-ball half-century to power England's innings

© Getty Images

Nov 13, 2009

Captain Paul Collingwood led England's recovery with a 50 from 27 balls, South Africa v England, 1st Twenty20, Johannesburg, November 13, 2009

Captain Paul Collingwood led England's recovery with a 50 from 27 balls

© Getty Images

Series Results
India v England at Indore - Apr 15
India won by 7 wkts (with 5 balls remaining)
India v England at Jamshedpur - Apr 12
England won by 5 wkts (with 44 balls remaining)
India v England at Guwahati - Apr 9
Match abandoned without a ball bowled
India v England at Kochi - Apr 6
India won by 4 wkts (with 16 balls remaining)
India v England at Margao - Apr 3
India won by 49 runs
More results »
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