Sunday, July 3, 2011

Profile "Brad Haddin"


Brad Haddin

Brad Haddin

Australia

Full name Bradley James Haddin
Born October 23, 1977, Cowra, New South Wales
Current age 33 years
Major teams Australia, Australian Capital Territory, Kolkata Knight Riders, New South Wales
Nickname BJ
Playing role Wicketkeeper batsman
Batting style Right-hand bat
Fielding position Wicketkeeper
Height 1.80m 
Brad Haddin
Statistics before July 03-2011

Mat
Inns
NO
Runs
HS
Ave
SR
100
50
4s
6s
Ct
St
Tests
32
54
6
1905
169
39.68
58.74
3
8
213
32
118
3
ODIs
85
79
6
2429
110
33.27
82.36
2
15
228
54
117
7
T20Is
23
21
4
335
47
19.70
111.66
0
0
26
10
12
4
First-class
130
215
26
7713
169
40.80

13
42


408
29
List A
187
178
14
5560
138*
33.90

8
34


258
44
Twenty20
36
34
4
576
54
19.20
114.51
0
2
44
17
21
11

Bowling averages

Mat
Inns
Balls
Runs
Wkts
BBI
BBM
Ave
Econ
SR
4w
5w
10
Tests
32
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
ODIs
85
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
T20Is
23
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
First-class
130
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
List A
187
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Twenty20
36
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-

Career statistics
Test debut
West Indies v Australia at Kingston, May 22-26, 2008
Last Test
Australia v England at Sydney, Jan 3-7, 2011
ODI debut
Australia v Zimbabwe at Hobart, Jan 30, 2001
Last ODI
Bangladesh v Australia at Dhaka, Apr 11, 2011
T20I debut
Australia v South Africa at Brisbane, Jan 9, 2006
Last T20I
Australia v Sri Lanka at Perth, Oct 31, 2010
First-class debut
1999/00
Last First-class
Australia v England at Sydney, Jan 3-7, 2011
List A debut
1997/98
Last List A
Bangladesh v Australia at Dhaka, Apr 11, 2011
Twenty20 debut
Australia A v Pakistanis at Adelaide, Jan 13, 2005
Last Twenty20
Kolkata Knight Riders v Royal Challengers Bangalore at Kolkata, Apr 22, 2011

Recent matches
Bat & Bowl
Team
Opposition
Ground
Match Date
18, 0c/0s
Kolkata
v Bangalore
Kolkata
22 Apr 2011
0c/0s, 8
Australia
v Bangladesh
Dhaka
11 Apr 2011
10, 1c/0s
Australia
v Bangladesh
Dhaka
9 Apr 2011
66*, 1c/0s
Australians
v BCB XI
Fatullah
7 Apr 2011
53, 1c/0s
Australia
v India
Ahmedabad
24 Mar 2011
42, 2c/0s
Australia
v Pakistan
Colombo (RPS)
19 Mar 2011
2c/0s, 88
Australia
v Canada
Bangalore
16 Mar 2011
65, 1c/0s
Australia
v Kenya
Bangalore
13 Mar 2011
0c/0s
Australia
v Sri Lanka
Colombo (RPS)
5 Mar 2011
4c/0s, 55
Australia
v New Zealand
Nagpur
25 Feb 2011

Profile
Brad Haddin displayed impressive courage during his opening Test series in the West Indies when he played through the pain of a broken finger, and by the end of his first year was one of the national team's most important assets. At that time he was indispensable, shuffling around the one-day order, proving himself as a productive Test run-maker and slowly improving on his glovework. There were even a couple of Twenty20 captaincy engagements when Ponting, Clarke and Hussey were rested. The only serious break Haddin got in that time was to his finger.
Having waited seven years for an opening after gaining one-day international status in 2001, he was not going to return the chance to stamp himself as Adam Gilchrist's long-term replacement. The fracture to his right ring finger occurred in his debut Test, but he played through the final two games of the series, despite being in further discomfort when an infection developed. He eventually succumbed during the one-day series and went home with 16 Test catches and 151 runs at 30.20, including a confident double of 33 and 45 not out in the third contest.
Life in India was tougher and the flaws in his keeping were on show, but when he started contributing with the bat he was able to relax and both aspects of his game improved. The breakthrough occurred against New Zealand in Adelaide, where he passed 50 for the first time in Tests and went on to 169, showing flashes Gilchrist would have accepted. A hundred was narrowly missed at the WACA when he was fighting with the tail and there was only one single-figure score in six Tests against the Proteas.
In England in 2009 Haddin began in great form with the bat, scoring 121 at Cardiff and 80 at Lord's, where he gave up 20 byes as he struggled to deal with the late movement. He broke a finger shortly before the start of the Edgbaston Test and was replaced by Graham Manou, but bravely came back for the final two games. He remained a useful contributor with the bat during the 2009-10 campaign, but his highlight was the spectacular, one-handed take at full stretch down the legside off Salman Butt. It was a hugely impressive catch that helped Australia to an unbelievable win at the SCG in 2009-10. (New Zealand supporters find it hard to forget the glove-assisted bowled of Neil Broom in a one-day game the previous summer.) Another injury, a batting-related elbow problem, rubbed him out of the Pakistan series in England.
When fit, Haddin is also a highly valuable presence in the limited-overs sides, and owns a couple of one-day centuries as an opener. He is a clean, effortless hitter and his lofted straight drive is among the best shots in the game. Haddin deserved his international chance after holding the most nerve-fraying position in Australian cricket for years. Once he had seen off the highly rated Darren Berry, Wade Seccombe and Ryan Campbell, he was the wicketkeeper-in-waiting and entrusted with warming the seat whenever Gilchrist needed a rest. When Gilchrist left Haddin was handed the gloves at the first opportunity.
In 2004-05 he scored 916 first-class runs at 57.25 while leading the Blues to a one-wicket Pura Cup victory over Queensland and he also posted a limited-overs century for Australia A against Pakistan. A regular leader of Australia's 2nd XI, Haddin backed up in 2005-06 with 617 Pura Cup runs at 51.41 and added another 669 at 55.75 the following year. In 2007-08, which was interrupted by national tours to India and a series of one-day appointments, he kept his average above 50 while scoring three hundreds in seven first-class games.
Haddin was a tourist for the 2005 England trip but was used only once as a one-day Supersub and finished the game without having a hit. A former Australia Under-19 captain who grew up in Gundagai, he began his domestic career in 1997-98 with the Australian Capital Territory in their debut Mercantile Mutual Cup season, and two years later was playing for New South Wales.
Brad Haddin

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