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Bryce McGain      

Full name Bryce Edward McGain

Born March 25, 1972, Mornington, Victoria

Current age 37 years 242 days

Major teams Australia, Denmark, Australia A, Victoria

Playing role Bowler

Batting style Right-hand bat

Bowling style Legbreak googly

Height 1.82 m

Bryce Edward McGain
Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 4s 6s Ct St
Tests 1 2 0 2 2 1.00 16 12.50 0 0 0 0 0 0
First-class 24 25 7 169 25 9.38 542 31.18 0 0 8 0
List A 17 9 5 96 51 24.00 183 52.45 0 1 6 0
Twenty20 7 2 2 7 6* - 7 100.00 0 0 0 0 4 0
Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 1 1 108 149 0 - - - 8.27 - 0 0 0
First-class 24 4704 2598 73 6/112 35.58 3.31 64.4 1 4 0
List A 17 923 672 28 3/11 3/11 24.00 4.36 32.9 0 0 0
Twenty20 7 7 156 168 9 2/10 2/10 18.66 6.46 17.3 0 0 0
Career statistics
Only Test South Africa v Australia at Cape Town, Mar 19-22, 2009 scorecard
Test statistics
First-class debut 2001/02
Last First-class Victoria v Western Australia at Melbourne, Nov 17-20, 2009 scorecard
List A debut 2003
Last List A Victoria v Western Australia at Melbourne, Nov 14, 2009 scorecard
Twenty20 debut Victoria v New South Wales at Melbourne, Jan 6, 2008 scorecard
Last Twenty20 New South Wales v Victoria at Sydney, Jan 24, 2009 scorecard
Profile

At the age of 35, Bryce McGain went from IT worker to professional cricketer and he did it with such success that within a year he was part of Australia's Test squad to tour India. The call-up came as Australia searched the country for their next long-term spinner and McGain's promising effort during Australia A's rain-affected trip to India helped his cause. He embarked on the trip as the No. 1 spinner and was almost certain to make his debut but was forced home due to an unusual injury to the tendons in his right armpit. Surgery was required but despite his advanced age, McGain did not give up on his Test dream. When he returned to state action in January 2009, he managed a timely five-wicket Sheffield Shield haul that earned him a place on the Test tour of South Africa. However, when his opportunity finally came at Cape Town, where at 36 he became Australia's oldest Test debutant since Bob Holland, McGain struggled to find the right length and was treated harshly to finish with match figures of 0 for 149, and his hopes of further international action had faded.

The previous season McGain was the leading Pura Cup spinner, with 38 wickets at 34.15, and the equal highest FR Cup wicket-taker. He played every first-class game for Victoria in 2007-08 and also proved an unexpectedly valuable limited-overs bowler, with 15 victims at 24.40. Even more surprising was his Twenty20 worth; a collection of six wickets at 16.16 and an economy rate of 6.46 in the champion team suggested a relaxed legspinner with faith in his skills.

That confidence was built over 15 years in Melbourne's club cricket. It was near impossible for McGain to break into the state side while Shane Warne, Colin Miller and Cameron White filled the slow-bowling roles. He played three Pura Cup matches from 2001-02 to 2003-04 but had little effect and appeared destined to bowl out his career for his grade side Prahran while working in the ANZ Bank's IT section. However, when White was in the Australia side in January 2007, McGain was recalled for two games and grabbed his chance with a second-innings 6 for 112 to be one of the matchwinners against New South Wales in Sydney. He earned his first state contract, quit his day job and was still hoping for a lengthy career despite his age, declaring that: "Most first-class cricketers at 35 have had the workload of ten years of cricket and I haven't."

A lean spinner with a quick and low approach to the crease, McGain's strength is his consistency - his variations are used sparingly but loose balls are even rarer. He almost stole the FR Cup final from Tasmania in 2007-08 with a vicious late spell of 3 for 11 and he picked up first-class five-wicket hauls against the Tigers and the Blues. He struggled to use the SCG pitch to maximum effect in the Pura Cup decider, which may have in part cost him a place on Australia's tour to the West Indies, but following Stuart MacGill's retirement, he was widely regarded as the leading legspinner in the country.
Brydon Coverdale September 2009

Latest Articles
Latest Photos

Nov 18, 2009

Bryce McGain bowls during his four-wicket haul, Victoria v Western Australia, Sheffield Shield, Melbourne, 2nd day, November 18, 2009

Bryce McGain bowls during his four-wicket haul

© Getty Images

Mar 21, 2009

AB de Villiers carts Bryce McGain over midwicket, South Africa v Australia, 3rd Test, 3rd day, Cape Town, March 21, 2009

AB de Villiers carts Bryce McGain over midwicket

© Getty Images

Mar 20, 2009

Ricky Ponting has a chat with Bryce McGain, South Africa v Australia, 3rd Test, 2nd day, Cape Town, March 20, 2009

Ricky Ponting has a chat with Bryce McGain

© Getty Images

Tour Results
South Africa v Australia at Johannesburg - Apr 17
Australia won by 47 runs
South Africa v Australia at Port Elizabeth - Apr 13
South Africa won by 61 runs
South Africa v Australia at Cape Town - Apr 9
South Africa won by 25 runs
South Africa v Australia at Centurion - Apr 5
South Africa won by 7 wkts (with 142 balls remaining)
South Africa v Australia at Durban - Apr 3
Australia won by 141 runs
More results »
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