Thursday, March 01, 2007

Michael Kasprowicz

Michael Kasprowicz

Australia

Full name Michael Scott Kasprowicz
Born February 10, 1972, South Brisbane, Queensland
Current age 35 years 19 days
Major teams Australia, Essex, Glamorgan, Leicestershire, Queensland
Nickname Kasper
Playing role Bowler
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium
Height 1.94 m

Statsguru

Batting and fielding averages

Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 4s 6s Ct St
Tests 38 54 12 445 25 10.59 966 46.06 0 0 46 3 16 0
ODIs 43 13 9 74 28* 18.50 89 83.14 0 0 6 1 13 0
Twenty20 Int. 2 1 1 3 3* - 5 60.00 0 0 0 0 2 0
First-class 237 319 74 4342 92 17.72

0 11

95 0
List A 220 106 40 955 40 14.46

0 0

47 0
Twenty20 9 8 2 71 31 11.83 61 116.39 0 0

3 0

Bowling averages

Mat Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4 5 10
Tests 38 7140 3716 113 7/36 8/92 32.88 3.12 63.18 4 4 0
ODIs 43 2225 1674 67 5/45 5/45 24.98 4.51 33.20 1 2 0
Twenty20 Int. 2 42 57 5 4/29 4/29 11.40 8.14 8.40 1 0 0
First-class 237 48551 25042 944 9/36
26.52 3.09 51.43
51 6
List A 220 10790 7769 293 5/45 5/45 26.51 4.32 36.82 8 3 0
Twenty20 9 192 240 10 4/29 4/29 24.00 7.50 19.20 1 0 0

Career statistics

Test debut Australia v West Indies at Brisbane - Nov 22-26, 1996
Last Test South Africa v Australia at Johannesburg - Mar 31-Apr 4, 2006
ODI debut Australia v West Indies at Melbourne - Dec 19, 1995
Last ODI England v Australia at The Oval - Jul 12, 2005
Twenty20 Int. debut New Zealand v Australia at Auckland - Feb 17, 2005
Last Twenty20 Int. England v Australia at Southampton - Jun 13, 2005
First-class span 1989/90 - 2005/06
List A span 1989/90 - 2006/07
Twenty20 span 2003 - 2005/06

Profile

Michael Kasprowicz seems to have been smiling appeals forever. As a 17-year-old he studied Western Australia's top order on Queensland debut in 1989-90 while his schoolmates were sitting final exams, and continued to pop up in unexpected places. Like India. A swing bowler who learned to weave outswingers on Gabba greentops, Kasprowicz matured into a subcontinental specialist with reverse-swing, heavy cut and a this-isn't-too-hot-for-another-over attitude. He bravely carried an injury-hit attack struck by Navjot Sidhu and Sachin Tendulkar in 1997-98, popped back in 2001 and returned in 2004 to help end India's 35-year hold. After three years mostly spent refining his efficient yet aggressive action with Queensland and Glamorgan, Kasprowicz celebrated his fifth recall in 2004 with 13 matches, his longest Test run. During the wildly successful year the prongs of McGrath, Gillespie and Kasprowicz were so sharp that Brett Lee ran their refreshments.

To call Kasprowicz a workhorse is unflattering even though the description matches his size - he was an Australian Schoolboys rugby forward - and stamina. Regularly clocked faster than his new-ball counterparts (excluding Lee) from a shorter run, Kasprowicz's angle and dart-perfect line causes constant headaches for left-handers in the style of Paul Reiffel, another under-rated third wheel. He has become an important clean-up or go-to man and only four times in 2004 did he leave an innings without a wicket as he collected 47 victims. An intimidating and muscular presence at county and state level - he often broke bones in England and peer pressure from Pura Cup batsmen hurried his Test and one-day returns - Kasprowicz became Queensland's leading wicket-taker in 2003-04.

Popular and cheerful off the field, `Kasper' has experienced the lows of being 12th man for Queensland's first Sheffield Shield win in 1994-95, waiting five months and three Tests for his first wicket and completing a regular do-si-do for a national place with his best man Andy Bichel. However, his greatest miss came during the 2005 Ashes series when his courageous 59-run partnership with Brett Lee at Edgbaston ended three short of victory. After adding 20 he gloved a contentious catch behind and England levelled the series 1-1. Returning from that tour on the outer, he responded with 44 Pura Cup wickets for The Bulls and was recalled for the trip to South Africa, where he and Lee reversed their Birmingham nightmare with a 19-run stand that earned a nail-biting two-wicket victory.